By Angelia, Founder of Cheralle — written from our workshop in Jingdezhen, the city where porcelain was perfected.
What is kaolin? The short answer
Kaolin is a soft, white clay made mostly of the mineral kaolinite (a hydrated aluminum silicate, chemical formula Al2Si2O5(OH)4). It is the raw material that makes true porcelain possible. Of the thousands of clays on Earth, kaolin is the one that stays pure white, holds its shape, and refuses to collapse even when fired above 2200°F — the exact properties you want in a cup you will hold every morning for the next ten years.
TL;DR: Kaolin (also called china clay) is the white clay behind porcelain. Its name comes from Gaoling, a hill near our home city of Jingdezhen, China. When fired above 2200°F, kaolin forms mullite crystals that make porcelain strong, non-porous (water absorption below 0.5%), and food-safe. Every Cheralle mug starts as kaolin and ends as a piece you can trace back to the birthplace of the material itself.
What kaolin actually is, at the mineral level
Most clay you have ever seen — the orange-brown earth of a riverbank, the gray clay of a school art room — is a mixture of minerals stained with iron and other impurities. Kaolin is different. It is dominated by a single clay mineral, kaolinite, and it is unusually clean. That purity is why it fires white instead of brown or buff.
Three properties define it:
| Property | What it means | Why it matters for a mug |
|---|---|---|
| Whiteness | Low iron content, so it fires to a clean white or near-white body | A true white that glaze color sits on cleanly, instead of muddy under-tones |
| Refractoriness | Stays stable at very high temperatures (kaolinite melts only around 3275°F) | Survives the 2200°F+ firing that makes porcelain dense and durable |
| Fine particle size | Extremely small, plate-like particles | A smooth, tight body with very low porosity once fired |
On its own, kaolin is not very plastic — it does not stretch and bend on the wheel as easily as common pottery clay. That is the trade-off potters accept in exchange for its purity and high-temperature strength, and it is part of why porcelain is considered the most demanding clay to work by hand. Our makers throw it on the wheel precisely because the material is unforgiving: a thin, even porcelain wall is hard-won evidence of skill.
Why is kaolin called “china clay”?
Here the story comes home for us. The English name china clay exists because this was the clay Chinese potters used to invent porcelain — the lustrous white ware that Europeans simply called “china” after the country that made it. For centuries, no one outside Asia could reproduce it.
The word kaolin goes one step deeper. It comes from Gaoling (高岭, “high ridge”), a hill that sits just outside Jingdezhen — the city where Cheralle is made. Gaoling was a historic source of this clay, and when the material became known in Europe, it carried the place name with it. In other words, the global term for the most important clay in ceramics is a transliteration of a hillside a short drive from our workshop.
The secret did not stay in China by accident. In 1712 and again in 1722, a French Jesuit missionary stationed in Jingdezhen, Père François Xavier d’Entrecolles, wrote detailed letters describing how local potters combined two ingredients — kaolin and a ground rock called petuntse (porcelain stone) — to make true porcelain. Those letters were among the first documents to reveal the recipe to the West. Jingdezhen had been the heart of imperial porcelain production for centuries; by some accounts the area has more than 1,400 years of ceramic history, and it supplied the royal courts through the Yuan to Qing dynasties (1271–1912).
When we tell customers that Cheralle is “made in Jingdezhen,” this is the weight behind the phrase. It is not a marketing flourish. It is the literal origin point of the word kaolin.
What kaolin does inside true porcelain
True hard-paste porcelain is not made from kaolin alone. The classic body combines kaolin (for whiteness and structure) with a flux like feldspar or petuntse (to lower the melting point and glassify) and often a little quartz. Kaolin typically makes up a large share of the recipe — the structural backbone that holds shape while the fluxes melt around it.
The magic happens in the kiln. As temperature climbs past roughly 1830°F, kaolinite breaks down and, with enough heat, begins to form mullite — long, needle-like crystals that interlock through the body like rebar in concrete. This is the single most important reason high-fired porcelain is so strong and so resistant to chipping. The fluxes, meanwhile, melt into glass and fill the gaps, sealing the body almost completely. The result is a material that is simultaneously hard, dense, and — when thin enough — translucent, because light passes through the glassy, low-pore structure.
We go deeper into the temperature side of this in our guide to porcelain firing temperature, but the short version is this: kaolin is what allows porcelain to be fired hot enough to vitrify without slumping. A clay that melted or deformed at those temperatures could never become a dense, ring-when-tapped cup.
Kaolin and the science of a better coffee mug
This is where the geology turns into something you can feel in your hand. The properties kaolin brings to porcelain are exactly the properties that separate a heirloom mug from a disposable one. At Cheralle we describe our cups in measurable terms rather than romantic ones, because the difference is physical:
| Measure | High-fired kaolin porcelain (Cheralle) | Typical mass-produced mug |
|---|---|---|
| Firing temperature | 2200°F+ | often around 1800°F |
| Water absorption | under 0.5% | roughly 5–10% |
| Glaze | glass-fused mineral-oxide color | frequently paint or decal over-glaze |
| Handle | wheel-thrown, slip-joined, twice fired | molded, single process |
The water absorption figure is the one most people overlook and the one that matters most day to day. A body that absorbs less than 0.5% of its weight in water is effectively sealed: it will not soak up coffee oils, hold stains, or trap moisture and odors. A porous, low-fired mug at 5–10% absorption slowly does all three. Because kaolin survives high firing, it makes that sealed, low-porosity body possible in the first place.
There is also a quiet safety story here. Fully vitrified, high-fired kaolin porcelain is chemically inert — it does not react with hot, acidic coffee. Combined with a true glass-fused glaze rather than a surface paint, the part of the cup that touches your drink is glass and stone, nothing else. (We hold food-safety certification for our glazes; details are available on request.)
Kaolin outside the pottery studio
One reason “what is kaolin” is searched so often is that the material shows up far beyond ceramics. The same fine, white, chemically stable particles that make good porcelain also make kaolin useful as:
- A coating and filler that gives glossy paper its smooth, bright surface
- An ingredient in cosmetics and skincare, where it is valued for absorbing oil
- A filler and brightener in paints
- A component in some pharmaceutical and personal-care products
For our purposes, though, the headline use is the original one: turning a hillside clay into a cup that outlives the trend cycle.
How to tell if your mug is real kaolin porcelain
You do not need a lab to spot true porcelain. Three quick checks get you most of the way there:
- Hold it to the light. Thin, high-fired kaolin porcelain is faintly translucent — you can often see a soft glow or the shadow of your fingers through the wall. A thick, opaque body is usually earthenware or stoneware, not porcelain.
- Tap it gently. A vitrified porcelain body rings with a clear, sustained note. A dull thud suggests a more porous, lower-fired clay.
- Look at the foot ring. Turn the cup over. A wheel-thrown piece has an unglazed foot ring that shows the fired clay body directly — the one place you can see the raw, vitrified kaolin and the maker’s hand. We treat that foot ring as a signature.
If you want to see these traits in finished pieces, our Wave latte cups show the translucency in an 8oz form, the larger Mountain mugs show it at 11oz, and the Dune series pairs the porcelain body with a warm-toned glaze and gold-finished handle. Each one began as kaolin and was fired in the city that gave the clay its name.
The thread that connects a hillside to your morning
It is easy to forget that a coffee cup is a geological object. The white body in your hand started as feldspar-rich rock that weathered into kaolin, was dug, cleaned, thrown, and fired past 2200°F until its kaolinite re-crystallized into mullite and glass. That is the same sequence that produced the imperial porcelain of Jingdezhen centuries ago, and it is the sequence behind every piece we make.
If you are weighing whether handmade porcelain is worth it, our piece on handmade vs. mass-produced coffee mugs runs the ten-year math. If you are curious why a mug’s color changes how the coffee tastes, the color and taste science guide covers it, with a closer look at our pink ceramic mugs. And when you are shopping for someone else, the Mother’s Day and Father’s Day gift guides start from the same principle: buy one good thing, made of real material, that lasts.
That is what kaolin really is — not just a clay, but the reason a cup can be both delicate and nearly unbreakable. You can see our porcelain here, or read more about where it comes from on our about page.
Frequently asked questions about kaolin
What is kaolin?
Kaolin is a soft, white clay made mostly of the mineral kaolinite, a hydrated aluminum silicate (Al2Si2O5(OH)4). Its whiteness, fine particle size, and stability at high temperatures make it the core raw material in true porcelain.
Why is kaolin called china clay?
Because it is the clay Chinese potters used to invent porcelain — the ware Europeans called “china.” The name kaolin itself comes from Gaoling, a hill near Jingdezhen where the clay was historically mined.
Where does kaolin come from?
Kaolin forms as feldspar-rich rocks like granite weather over long periods. The most famous historical source is Gaoling hill near Jingdezhen, China. Today it is also mined in the United States, the United Kingdom, Brazil, and elsewhere.
Why is kaolin used in porcelain?
It delivers three things at once: a pure white body, strength after high firing, and the ability to survive 2200°F+ without slumping. At those temperatures kaolin forms interlocking mullite crystals that make porcelain hard, low-porosity, and translucent.
Is kaolin safe for coffee and food?
Yes. Fired kaolin porcelain is chemically inert and non-porous, so it will not leach into or absorb your drink. A high-fired mug with water absorption under 0.5% will not trap moisture or flavors the way a porous, low-fired mug can.
Is kaolin the same as ceramic?
No. Kaolin is a raw clay; ceramic is the finished, fired object. Kaolin is the defining ingredient of the porcelain family of ceramics. A mug can be ceramic without being porcelain, but it cannot be true porcelain without kaolin.
What else is kaolin used for besides ceramics?
Kaolin is also used to coat glossy paper, as an oil-absorbing ingredient in cosmetics and skincare, as a filler in paints, and in some pharmaceutical products. Its fine particle size and chemical stability make it useful well beyond the studio.
CHERALLE
https://www.cheralle.comCheralle is a modern handcrafted ceramic drinkware brand dedicated to celebrating the artistry of everyday rituals. Every cup tells a story—from the clay’s origin to the final firing. Our signature handmade mugs are crafted through a meticulous 16-step process that ensures uniqueness, durability, and timeless elegance. Cheralle is more than a mug—it's your daily dose of calm and character.