
The willow was always the first tree by the water's edge — swaying, unhurried, already there when everything else was still deciding.
Jang-i's Willow Tree Tumbler draws from a motif revered in Goryeo Celadon: the beodeunamu as a symbol of water, life, and the kind of resilience that bends rather than breaks. New Zealand abalone shell is hand-inlaid using the traditional Najeonchilgi (나전칠기) lacquerware technique, its Pacific iridescence — blue-green, layered, alive — capturing the shimmer of light through willow branches at the riverside. Available in white for a contemporary minimalist interior or black for the full traditional contrast that makes the nacre sing. This is Korean artisan craft in its uncompromised form — the same technique used for centuries, made by the same hands that practised it before lacquerware became an export category.
This 450ml double-walled, vacuum-insulated tumbler keeps its contents at temperature through the morning and into the afternoon. Set on a window ledge or beside a reading chair, the white or black finish holds naturally in a considered interior without demanding placement. Filled with coffee or green tea at the start of a day that is beginning something, the willow's connotation of new beginnings suits the first hour better than most objects manage. Given to mark a transition — a new chapter, a recovery, a season the recipient is finally moving through — it arrives already understood.
Handcrafted in South Korea using the Najeonchilgi tradition — offered in the spirit of the tree it carries.