Cangshan Old Mine Cloud Marble & Ebony Tea Tray – Dry Brew Gongfu Tea Tray | Ink Painting Stone Teapot Stand | Waterfall Landscape Serving Tray
Cangshan Old Mine Cloud Marble & Ebony Tea Tray – Dry Brew Gongfu Tea Tray | Ink Painting Stone Teapot Stand | Waterfall Landscape Serving Tray
Cangshan Old Mine Cloud Marble & Ebony Tea Tray – Dry Brew Gongfu Tea Tray | Ink Painting Stone Teapot Stand | Waterfall Landscape Serving Tray
Cangshan Old Mine Cloud Marble & Ebony Tea Tray – Dry Brew Gongfu Tea Tray | Ink Painting Stone Teapot Stand | Waterfall Landscape Serving Tray
Cangshan Old Mine Cloud Marble & Ebony Tea Tray – Dry Brew Gongfu Tea Tray | Ink Painting Stone Teapot Stand | Waterfall Landscape Serving Tray
Cangshan Old Mine Cloud Marble & Ebony Tea Tray – Dry Brew Gongfu Tea Tray | Ink Painting Stone Teapot Stand | Waterfall Landscape Serving Tray
Cangshan Old Mine Cloud Marble & Ebony Tea Tray – Dry Brew Gongfu Tea Tray | Ink Painting Stone Teapot Stand | Waterfall Landscape Serving Tray
Cangshan Old Mine Cloud Marble & Ebony Tea Tray – Dry Brew Gongfu Tea Tray | Ink Painting Stone Teapot Stand | Waterfall Landscape Serving Tray
Cangshan Old Mine Cloud Marble & Ebony Tea Tray – Dry Brew Gongfu Tea Tray | Ink Painting Stone Teapot Stand | Waterfall Landscape Serving Tray
Cangshan Old Mine Cloud Marble & Ebony Tea Tray – Dry Brew Gongfu Tea Tray | Ink Painting Stone Teapot Stand | Waterfall Landscape Serving Tray

Cangshan Old Mine Marble Tea Tray - Dry Brewing Tea Tray Teapot Holder | MoriMa Tea

$266.67

Encounter a heart-warming tea container, taking a sip or two of light and elegant tea in the middle of a busy schedule; between touch and vision, clearly comprehend heaven, earth and people of nature and ingenuity.

SIZE: S

S
L

Frequently Bought Together

Total price:$621.23
Description
  • Materials: Natural Marble + Purple Sandalwood
  • Design Style: Traditional Chinese
  • Texture: Natural Stone Grain
  • Large Size: 27.5 cm x 16.0 cm x 3.3 cm
  • Small Size: 26.5 cm x 13.2 cm x 3.3 cm
  • Your morning tea deserves more than just a surface to sit on. It deserves a canvas.

    There‘s something about watching tea steam rise against a naturally occurring ink-painting landscape. That quiet moment when you realize — this isn‘t just a tray. It’s a small piece of art that happens to hold your teapot.

  • This is the Cangshan Old Mine Cloud Marble Tea Tray. Carved from marble sourced from ancient Cangshan quarries — the same stone that has inspired Chinese landscape painters for over a thousand years — each tray carries a one-of-a-kind ink-wash mountain pattern that no other tray on earth can replicate. Set into a deep, velvety frame of African black ebony (Zitan wood), it sits on your coffee table or tea desk like a miniature zen garden.
  • And here‘s the honest truth: this is a dry-brewing tray. Not a wet one. That means it won’t hold gallons of rinse water or function like a sink. What it will do is elevate your Gongfu ritual, hold your gaiwan and cups with rock-solid stability, and give you a surface so visually arresting that every tea session feels like a ceremony.

    Whether you‘re a seasoned tea master or someone who just wants a beautiful marble serving tray for coffee table duties, this piece delivers something most trays don’t: soul.

  • A Canvas From the Cangshan Mountains

    Each slab of cloud marble is quarried from the legendary Cangshan mountain range in Yunnan, China — the same geological treasure that has supplied imperial scholars‘ desk objects and garden tables for centuries. The natural grey-to-cream veining swirls into forms that look deliberately painted: mountain peaks, drifting mist, a quiet river winding through a valley.

    No two trays are ever the same. What arrives at your door is truly unique — your personal slice of Chinese landscape painting, polished to a silky-smooth finish that catches light like water on a lake.

  • The Quiet Strength of African Ebony

    The outer frame is carved from African black ebony — known in Chinese classical furniture as “Zitan” for its legendary density and oil-rich surface. This is one of the heaviest, hardest woods on the planet. It won‘t warp. It won’t crack from humidity changes. It doesn‘t need varnish or lacquer; the wood’s natural oils create a deep, luminous patina that only gets richer with age.

    The frame isn‘t just decorative. It adds structural integrity to the marble slab and provides a visual contrast that’s both dramatic and harmonious — the dark, solid earth anchoring the fluid, cloud-like stone.

  • Traditional Inlay Craftsmanship

    This is not a mass-produced tray with marble sticker and plastic edge. The marble slab is cut to precise dimensions and inlaid into the ebony frame using traditional Chinese joinery techniques, reinforced with premium adhesive for long-term durability. The ebony frame wraps around the marble‘s edges, protecting them from chipping while creating a seamless transition from dark wood to pale stone.

    Important note: There may be microscopic gaps between the marble and ebony — this is characteristic of natural stone-in-wood construction and is not a defect. The tray is designed for dry brewing (Gan Pao), where only incidental drips contact the surface. It is not suitable for wet brewing with pooled water, as water may seep through these natural gaps or through the marble‘s natural pores.

  • Gongfu Tea Trays vs. Everything Else



    Feature This Marble & Ebony Tray Bamboo Trays Ceramic/Resin
    Unique pattern ✅ Each tray is one-of-a-kind ❌ Mass-produced ❌ Mass-produced
    Material density Extreme — won‘t warp or stain Moderate — prone to mold & warping Variable
    Sound when placing cups Clear, pleasing “clink” Dull wooden thud Harsh clatter
    Heat retention Natural stone stays cool Wood warms up Resin can discolor
    Longevity Heirloom quality 1-3 years typical 1-2 years typical
    Visual impact Art gallery level Utilitarian Casual

    Stone tea trays don‘t absorb water, don’t deform under heat, don‘t fade, and are significantly easier to keep clean than bamboo or wood alternatives. The dense crystalline structure of cloud marble resists staining when spills are wiped promptly, and the cool surface keeps your teaware at an ideal temperature throughout long sessions.

  • For Coffee Table, Tea Desk, or Display

    When you‘re not brewing tea, this works beautifully as a marble tray for coffee table — holding candles, a small plant, or a stack of coasters. It’s substantial enough to feel solid but compact enough to fit on a side table, nightstand, or office desk. The natural stone brings an organic warmth that manufactured trays simply can‘t fake.

    For tea enthusiasts, this is the centerpiece of your Cha Xi — the tea altar. Place your gaiwan or small teapot on the marble surface, arrange two tasting cups beside it, and let the ink-wash landscape beneath your teaware tell its own silent story while you pour your first infusion.

Reviews

Customer Reviews

Be the first to write a review
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)

Frequently Asked Questions

I’ve seen marble trays on Amazon that fell apart after a few months because the glue failed and the sides came off. Will this tray do the same?
That‘s a very legitimate concern. Many marble trays on the market use minimal glue on thin wood edging that simply isn’t designed to last. Our tray uses a different construction method: the marble slab is inlaid into the ebony frame rather than just glued to its edges. The ebony wood itself wraps around and supports the stone‘s perimeter. The adhesive we use is premium-grade and applied with traditional joinery principles — but more importantly, the frame‘s structural design means the wood isn‘t relying on glue alone to hold everything together. This is why we can confidently say this tray is built for years, not months.
Every stone tea tray I’ve tried leaks water through the edges or through the stone itself. It stains my table and ruins the surface underneath. Why would yours be different?
You‘re absolutely right — many stone tea trays claim to be waterproof but are actually porous. Marble has natural microscopic pores, and if a tray is constructed without proper sealing, water will absolutely seep through. Here’s the honest difference: this tray is designed for dry brewing only. We don‘t claim it’s waterproof, and we don‘t recommend leaving standing water on it. For dry brewing — where you’re only dealing with occasional drips from rinsing cups or a few drops of spilled tea — the marble surface performs beautifully. If you need a tray that holds significant amounts of water, you want a bamboo tray with a reservoir, not a natural stone tray. We‘d rather be honest about what this product is than overpromise and disappoint.
I see on Reddit that people complain about marble tea trays staining from tea spills. Does yours stain?
Marble is naturally porous, which means it can stain if you leave tea sitting on it for hours. Here‘s what we recommend: wipe spills promptly with a soft cloth, and your tray will stay beautiful for years. For stubborn tea marks, a gentle clean with mild soap and a soft brush works perfectly. What you won’t get with this tray is the kind of deep, permanent staining you see on cheap bamboo trays that soak up liquid like a sponge. If you‘re the type of tea drinker who lets spills sit and dry repeatedly, we recommend putting a small cloth coaster under your teapot — but even without that, the dense marble is far more stain-resistant than wood.
I’m worried about the tray arriving cracked or chipped. I‘ve ordered stone products before and they always show up damaged.
We take packaging extremely seriously. Each tray is wrapped in protective foam, placed in a rigid box, and then packed into a reinforced outer shipping carton. We’ve shipped hundreds of stone trays with a damage rate under 2%. That said, stone is stone — and if your tray does arrive damaged, we offer full replacements. No return hassles, no “was it damaged in shipping or was it defective” debates. Just send us photos and we‘ll make it right.
The pictures online look amazing, but will the actual tray I receive look like the photos?
This is the most important question for any natural stone product — and here‘s the honest answer: no two trays look identical. The photos show examples of the ink-painting patterns you can expect, but every slab of cloud marble is unique. Some have dramatic mountain peaks, others have soft drifting clouds, and some look like traditional Chinese brush paintings. If you want a product where every unit is exactly the same, natural stone is not for you. If you want something truly one-of-a-kind — a tray that no one else in the world owns — then you’ll love the surprise of seeing your specific stone pattern for the first time.
I‘ve heard that ebony wood can crack over time. How do I prevent that?
African black ebony is one of the most stable dense hardwoods available — far more resistant to cracking than bamboo or pine. However, like any natural wood, it responds to extreme environmental changes. Keep your tray away from direct sunlight, heating vents, and radiators. Avoid soaking the wood in water. Wipe dry after each use. Do these simple things, and your ebony frame will outlast you. One note: if you live in an extremely dry climate (Arizona desert, for example), consider running a humidifier in the room where you keep the tray. This isn’t a defect — it‘s just the nature of working with real wood.
What’s the difference between dry brewing and wet brewing? Why can‘t I use this tray for wet brewing?
Great question. Dry brewing (Gan Pao) is the traditional Gongfu method where you minimize spills, wipe away drips as they occur, and keep the tea surface mostly dry throughout the session. A tea towel sits nearby for quick wipes. Wet brewing involves pouring rinse water and excess tea directly onto the tray, which then drains into a reservoir below. This tray has no drainage system — because it‘s designed for dry brewing, where you’re not generating large amounts of wastewater. Using it for wet brewing would result in water pooling on the marble, potentially seeping through the marble‘s pores or the marble-ebony seam. If wet brewing is your style, this isn’t the tray for you. But if you appreciate the elegance of a clean, dry tea surface and the beauty of natural materials, you‘ll love this.
I saw a review where someone‘s marble tray had paint brush marks and the finish wore off after cleaning with soap. Does this happen with yours?
That review describes a painted or coated marble surface — not real natural stone. Our marble is 100% natural, with no paint, no artificial coloring, and no surface coating to wear off. The polish is achieved through mechanical stone polishing, not chemical sealants. Soap and water won’t remove anything because there‘s nothing to remove. The grey and cream patterns you see are the actual stone, all the way through. This is one of the key differences between authentic natural stone products and cheaper “marble look” alternatives.