Welcome to Postcard Teas
WE WILL BE CLOSED SATURDAY MAY 25TH & BANK HOLIDAY MAY 27TH. APOLOGIES FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE.

At the end of September 2012, Victoria Wood and Lu were in the Wuyi Mountains filming Master Xu making his Rock Teas. The documentary which was first shown on BBC1 last night is called "Nice Cup of Tea".
Click HERE to see the programme.
In 2008 the tea world changed forever and for the better when Postcard Teas pioneered proper tea provenance by putting the maker or estate’s name and place of production on every tin of tea it sold. Imagine a fine wine world where companies sold bottles of wine labelled only with the wine’s country or region of origin but not the estate or maker's name! 99% of tea is still sold like this and we are dismayed that while the speciality tea market has grown, the provenance particularly of Japanese, Taiwanese, and Chinese teas has not improved.
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4 years on & we are still the only tea company in the world to offer proper provenance
The knowledge which comes from proper provenance is the first step towards connoisseurship in any subject. In tea, provenance also helps protect Asia's oldest tea cultures because with the right information people can choose between a truly traditionally made tea and a factory made speciality tea. If any tea described as rare, luxury, handmade or premium does not come with a maker's name, place, and information about the production or the age of the trees in photographic form, it is almost certainly a fancy factory farm tea. Remember the world's most sought after teas like genuine Wuyi and Phoenix Oolongs, and Xihu Long Jing and Uji Gyokuro are all handmade in quantities as low as 1-2 kg a day which is why your chances of buying the real thing are very very low! If you wish to avoid the mass produced speciality teas, please buy your tea carefully and ask your tea retailer detailed questions as your choice can help preserve Asia's oldest tea cultures and tea trees.
