Black in Japanese ceramics is not the absence of decision, it is often the most deliberate one. From the lacquerware (urushi) of the Heian period to the stark iron-black temmoku glazes prized by Song Dynasty tea masters and later adopted into Japanese chado, a deep, unreflective black has long signalled restraint, focus, and a particular kind of quiet authority. This matte black chasen holder sits within that tradition, not as a historical reproduction, but as a contemporary piece that shares its values.
The surface is unglazed matte stoneware, fired to produce a fine, even texture, closer to raw clay than polished ceramic. It absorbs light rather than reflecting it, which gives the form a sculptural solidity that the eye reads as grounded and calm. There are no mineral blooms, no colour variation, no kiln surprises. What you see is the shape itself: a clean teardrop body on a gently flared foot, with a circular opening at the top to receive your chasen.
What a chasen holder does:
A chasen tate, sometimes called a kuse-naoshi, protects and extends the life of your bamboo matcha whisk. After preparing a bowl of matcha, the tines of a chasen are damp and under slight tension. Resting the whisk tines-down on a hard surface, or storing it in a closed container, causes the tines to flatten, splay, or develop a permanent set. The raised dome of the holder supports the tines from within, allowing them to spring back to their correct position as they air-dry.
For anyone using a quality chasen, particularly 80-tine, 100-tine, or hon-kazari grade whisks where the tine work represents real craft, a holder is one of the most practical tools on your tea tray.
The case for matte black:
Where the speckled and coloured variants in this collection draw the eye, the matte black holder recedes, in the best possible way. It becomes infrastructure: present, purposeful, and never competing with the bowl, the matcha, or the moment. This makes it particularly well suited to minimalist and monochrome setups, where uniformity is the point. Modern interiors where the aesthetic leans Japandi, the Japanese-Scandinavian design sensibility that emphasises negative space, natural materials, and pared-back form. High-contrast pairings with bright white or celadon chawan, where the black holder anchors the palette.
Compatibility and care:
Fits all standard chasen sizes including 80-tine, 100-tine, and 120-tine whisks. The open footed base ensures full airflow around the tines during drying.
Hand wash only. Not dishwasher safe. The matte stoneware finish is food-safe and lead-free. As with all unglazed or matte-fired ceramics, the surface may develop a very slight sheen in areas of repeated contact over time , this is a natural characteristic of the material.
Sold separately from matcha bowls. Explore our full range of matcha tools, including chasen, chashaku, natsume, and chawan in both classic and contemporary glazes to complete your matcha practice.








