Tea isn’t just a drink. It’s a moment. It’s a ritual. It’s a story waiting to be told. Eighty believes tea is a lens through which we can see the world differently—more thoughtfully, more deeply.
Free shipping to Portugal & Spain Mainland over 100€ with coupon FREESHIP100. Dismiss
€27.00
Tea isn’t just a drink. It’s a moment. It’s a ritual. It’s a story waiting to be told. Eighty believes tea is a lens through which we can see the world differently—more thoughtfully, more deeply.
Out of stock
STILLNESS
This issue opens in two cities at once — a café in Lisbon where a few minutes are stolen from a hectic day over a coffee, and a small restaurant in Tokyo where a cup of hōjicha offers the same quality of pause on the other side of the world. Two observations, one shared understanding of what stillness actually means.
From there, Issue 17 travels to Guangxi in southern China to follow jasmine tea through a single harvest — the flowers must be picked before they open, and the window is narrow. It’s a story about timing, patience, and the kind of knowledge that only practice makes possible.
Beirut-based landscape architect Vladimir Djurovic, whose Gulbenkian Garden extension sits just down the road in Lisbon, talks about what it means to design spaces that work with people rather than for them — gardens that earn their quiet, and why harmony between a place and its inhabitants can never be forced.
In Miami, Mike Ortiz has built a tea practice around hip hop and has spent years dismantling the idea that tea has a dress code. His conversation is about pleasure, accessibility, and refusing the quiet room.
In Tokyo, a centuries-old collection of tea utensils at the Mitsui Museum tells a different kind of story — how objects accumulate meaning, shape the cultures that made them, and record a moment in time that nothing else quite captures.
Will Shears from A Mug of Life has been stopping strangers in parks and asking if they’d like a cup of tea. This issue looks at what happens when they say yes — and what people talk about when they finally stop moving.
And in Iranian homes, tea has never needed explaining. This feature is about the habits, the glasses, and the particular rhythm of a culture where tea is simply always there.