Antique Japanese Charcoalheated Copper Sake Bottle Warmer
Antique Japanese Charcoalheated Copper Sake Bottle Warmer
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Antique Japanese charcoal-heated sake warmer, likely dating to the late Meiji era or early 20th century. This beautifully hand-crafted metal vessel was designed to gently warm sake using a traditional water bath system heated by charcoal. The perforated inner chimney held the hot coals while the surrounding chamber was filled with water, allowing a sake bottle to warm gradually in the recessed opening beside it. The design reflects the quiet practicality and understated elegance of traditional Japanese dining culture.
The piece has a wonderful aged surface with rich patina, oxidation, and signs of honest use accumulated over many decades. Its utilitarian construction and hand-worked details give it a striking sculptural quality that works equally well as a display object, conversation piece, or addition to a collection of Japanese antiques and folk craft.
A scarce and unusual example of early Japanese hospitality ware, far less commonly encountered than hibachi or tobacco braziers. An excellent piece for collectors of Japanese metalwork, sake culture, izakaya décor, or rustic antique utilitarian objects.
Please review all photos carefully for condition details and overall character. Dimensions
H:8”
W:11”
D:6.5”
