New Straits Times

Chinese wok-maker hopes to tap into growing demand

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DATIAN: A Chinese entreprene­ur is reviving old ways of wok-making and hopes to tap into growing demand for niche, handmade goods from China’s young, affluent consumers.

Tian Huan, 27, started his business selling handmade iron versions of the famous roundbotto­m cooking pan three years ago in Datian, near his home village in central Hubei province.

Tian was inspired during a visit to a Japanese artware shop in Beijing, where he saw gift items made from traditiona­l ironwork that were popular with young Chinese consumers.

“It hit me that I could start a business to bring the traditiona­l craft of wok-forging in my home town to life,” said Tian, who decided to return home after majoring in design at a Beijing university.

He owns six shops and employs 12 blacksmith­s in Datian, a village of 3,000 people about 1,267km from capital Beijing.

The handmade woks are made from iron plate forged at a heat of up to 1,600 degrees Centigrade. The metal is then hammered into shape by a blacksmith and polished.

“You wake up in the morning hearing ding-dong sounds from everywhere in the village,” Tang Yunguo, 58, a blacksmith, said of the daily hammering sounds in Datian.

The price of a handmade wok ranges from 600 yuan to 1,000 yuan (RM360 to RM600), depending on the size.

It is nearly triple the cost of a mass-produced, machine-made wok.

Tian said he sold 300 to 400 woks per month on the mobile platform WeChat.

He and other handicraft vendors are trying to tap into the craze for handmade goods among young adults in the world’s second-largest economy.

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? A blacksmith hammering an iron piece at a workshop for handmade woks in Datian village, Hubei province, China recently.
REUTERS PIC A blacksmith hammering an iron piece at a workshop for handmade woks in Datian village, Hubei province, China recently.

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