By Angelia, Founder of Cheralle · Working with our Jingdezhen workshop since October 2024 · Last updated April 22, 2026
You don't need to be a potter to know what firing temperature did to the mug you're holding. The 400°F gap between 1800°F and 2200°F decides whether you're drinking from a 1-year mug or a 10-year mug. The same gap decides whether your cup absorbs coffee oils into its body, whether the glaze stays vivid through a decade of dishwasher cycles, and whether the bottom of the cup stays sterile or becomes a slow-growing colony of bacteria you cannot see.
This guide gives you what no kiln-supplier blog or dinnerware listicle covers: how to recognize firing temperature without a kiln, why it matters for the mug on your kitchen counter, and the 3 tests you can run at home in under 15 minutes.
A note from Angelia · Cheralle's founder
I started Cheralle in October 2024 in Jingdezhen — the city the Yuan, Ming, and Qing dynasties used as their imperial porcelain supplier for over 600 years. Last month I personally weighed and tested 12 of our Wave Series mugs against 12 mass-produced mugs from a US big-box retailer. The water absorption gap was even bigger than I expected: under 0.4% on every Cheralle piece, between 6% and 11% on the factory ones. The numbers in this guide come from that test, our workshop's pyrometer logs, and the FDA-certification testing we passed before launch. Where I'm citing external sources, I link them.
Porcelain Firing Temperature · The Short Answer
High-fired porcelain (≥ 2200°F / 1200°C) is fully vitrified — the clay body has melted into a glass-like density. Water absorption is under 0.5%, glaze is chemically fused into the body, and the cup will outlast 10 years of daily use. Typical price: $25–$300.
Low-fired porcelain or earthenware (≤ 1800°F / 980°C) is porous — the clay never fully vitrifies. Water absorption runs 5–10% by weight, glaze sits on the surface like paint, and visible wear (fading, micro-cracks, handle loosening) appears within 12–18 months. Typical price: $5–$20.
The five differences and three at-home tests below let you tell which one you actually have.
What Firing Temperature Actually Decides for You
Most articles about firing temperature talk to potters about cone numbers (Cone 6, Cone 10, Cone 13). For a buyer, you only need to know one thing: at 2200°F the silica in the clay melts into glass. Everything else — durability, water resistance, glaze permanence, food safety, lifespan — flows from that single physical event called vitrification.
Below that temperature, the clay stays porous like a sponge with microscopic holes you cannot see. Above it, the cup behaves like a sealed glass vessel. The 400°F gap between low-fire and high-fire is not gradual — it's a phase change.
The 4 Temperature Tiers · From 1800°F to 2400°F
Not every ceramic mug fires at the same temperature. Here's the full spectrum, in order of lifespan:
| Tier | Temperature | Cone | Water Absorption | Lifespan (Daily Use) | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low-fire Earthenware | ≤ 1800°F (980°C) | 06–04 | 5–15% | 1–2 years | Decorative, planters, cheap promo mugs |
| Mid-fire Stoneware | ~2100°F (1150°C) | 4–6 | 1–3% | 3–5 years | Studio pottery, café mugs |
| High-fire Stoneware ⭐ | ~2200°F (1200°C) | 8–10 | <0.5% | 10+ years | Premium daily-use mugs (Cheralle Wave Series) |
| High-fire Porcelain | ~2300°F+ (1260°C+) | 10–13 | <0.1% | Generational | Fine porcelain, hotel-grade tableware |
The line between "throwaway" and "lifetime keepsake" sits at the boundary between mid-fire and high-fire — roughly 2200°F. Below that, you're buying time-limited goods. Above it, you're buying glass dressed up as ceramic.
5 Things 2200°F Triggers in Your Mug
Once a porcelain or stoneware body crosses the 2200°F vitrification threshold, five measurable changes happen at once. Each is testable, observable, and decides how the cup behaves for the next decade.
1. Water Absorption Drops Below 0.5%
Below 2200°F, ceramic clay absorbs 5–10% of its weight in water. That's not metaphor — it's measurable on a kitchen scale. A 250g low-fired mug picks up 12.5–25g of water during a 12-hour soak. A high-fired mug picks up under 1g.
The practical consequence: low-fired ceramic absorbs the oils and acids of coffee over time, slowly developing odors and stains that no detergent can remove. High-fired ceramic stays as inert as a glass.
2. Glaze Becomes Part of the Body, Not a Coating
At 2200°F+, the silica in the glaze melts into the silica in the clay body — they fuse chemically. Glaze is no longer a paint layer; it's the same material as the cup itself. This is why a properly high-fired mug's color survives 10 years of dishwasher cycles while a low-fired mug fades within months.
For deeper background on glaze chemistry, see our colored ceramic mugs breakdown and the history of glaze chemistry.
3. Thermal Shock Resistance Multiplies
Vitrified ceramic handles abrupt temperature swings — pour boiling water into a chilled mug, run a dishwasher rinse cycle, microwave straight from the fridge. Low-fired ceramic micro-cracks at every cycle, even when you cannot see it. By year 2, the rim chips at the slightest bump.
4. Microbial Safety Becomes Real
This is the difference no other guide mentions. Low-fired porous ceramic absorbs water vapor each time you drink hot liquid — the moisture penetrates the clay body and stays there. Over months, this creates a microscopic environment where bacteria, mold, and biofilm can colonize inside the cup wall, not just on the surface. You cannot wash it out because you cannot reach it.
Vitrified high-fired ceramic does not absorb at all. The cup is sealed glass. It can be sterilized completely with detergent and heat, the same way a glass beaker can.
5. The Per-Year Cost Inverts
A $10 low-fired mug needs replacement every 1–2 years. Over 10 years that's $30–$50 in mugs plus the time to shop for the next one. A $99 high-fired mug lasts the full 10 years. Per year of use: handmade is $9.90/year; mass-produced is $10–$20/year — the premium category is actually the cheaper one.
This is the calculation that makes Cheralle's Wave Series at $99 a value purchase, not a luxury one. The full breakdown of this comparison is in our 7 differences between handmade and mass-produced guide.
Food Safety · FDA-Certified Lead-Free and Cadmium-Free
Firing temperature affects more than durability — it affects whether your mug leaches heavy metals into hot beverages. Low-fired ceramic with conventional decorative glazes can release lead and cadmium at concerning levels, especially when exposed to acidic liquids like coffee, citrus, or wine. The US FDA tracks ceramic-foodware lead exposure as a known consumer health risk.
Cheralle's Wave Series passes FDA food-safe certification — confirmed lead-free and cadmium-free at concentrations safe for daily food and beverage contact. Our certification details (lab name, certificate ID, test date) are available on request. The combination of high-fire vitrification (which seals the body) and certified lead-free glaze (which means no heavy metals to release in the first place) gives you both layers of protection.
If you're shopping for ceramic mugs from any brand, ask three questions: (1) Is the glaze certified lead-free and cadmium-free? (2) What temperature do you fire at? (3) Can you provide a lab certificate? A brand that cannot answer all three is one to avoid.
3 Tests You Can Do at Home in 15 Minutes
You do not need a kiln, a thermometer, or a chemistry degree to verify firing temperature on a mug you already own. Three tests, in order of speed.
Test 1 · The Tap Test (30 Seconds)
Hold the mug by its handle, suspended in air. With your fingernail or a metal spoon, tap the rim sharply once.
- High-fired (vitrified): A clear, ringing "ting" — like striking a glass. The sound sustains for 1–2 seconds.
- Low-fired (porous): A dull "thud" or "thunk." The sound dies within a fraction of a second.
The reason: vitrified ceramic transmits vibration like glass. Porous ceramic absorbs and damps the vibration internally. This single test correctly identifies firing temperature about 90% of the time.
Test 2 · The 12-Hour Water Test (Precise)
This is the laboratory standard, simplified for a kitchen.
- Weigh the mug dry on a kitchen scale (record to 1 gram precision).
- Submerge it fully in room-temperature water for 12 hours.
- Remove, pat dry the outside, weigh again.
- Calculate: (wet weight – dry weight) ÷ dry weight × 100 = absorption %
Result interpretation:
- Under 0.5%: True high-fired vitrified body
- 0.5%–3%: Mid-fire — decent but not premium
- Over 3%: Low-fired earthenware — replace within the year
Test 3 · The Light Translucency Test (Porcelain Only)
Hold the mug up to a strong light source — a window, a flashlight, or a phone torch held against the side. Look at the wall in the brightest area.
- True high-fired porcelain: The wall transmits a faint warm glow. You can sometimes see the silhouette of your hand through the thin sections.
- Stoneware (high-fired but not porcelain): Opaque — no light comes through. This is normal and not a quality issue.
- Low-fired earthenware: Opaque, with possible visible micro-pores when viewed against bright light at the rim.
This test only works for porcelain — stoneware mugs (including most of Cheralle's Wave Series) are intentionally opaque even when high-fired. Use Test 1 or Test 2 for stoneware.
Care for Your High-Fired Porcelain Mug
A vitrified ceramic mug is designed for daily use, not careful display. Here's what protects the 10-year lifespan:
- Dishwasher is fine for high-fired mugs without metallic trim. Top rack only — bottom rack heat cycles are harsh on every type of ceramic, including porcelain.
- Avoid stacking without padding. Even vitrified rims chip if a heavier mug drops onto them. A felt pad or paper towel between stacked mugs prevents this entirely.
- Skip metal utensils. Stirring with a steel spoon can leave gray pencil-line marks on the glaze. They wash off with Bar Keepers Friend, but a wooden spoon avoids the problem.
- Sudden temperature swings are mostly fine — high-fired ceramic handles thermal shock well — but don't pour boiling water into a frozen mug or take one from a hot oven straight to a cold counter.
- Hand wash mugs with gold or platinum trim. Dishwasher detergent and high heat strip metallic accents within months.
What 2200°F Means at Cheralle's Jingdezhen Workshop
📹 See the process: Watch a Wave Series mug being wheel-thrown and glazed at our Jingdezhen workshop on our official Instagram. Every cup starts as Jingdezhen kaolin clay on a master thrower's wheel — the video shows the steps before it ever reaches the kiln.
Our Wave Series fires at 2280°F (1249°C) — between high-fire stoneware and high-fire porcelain on the spectrum above. This is not arbitrary. We worked with our partner workshop in Jingdezhen — a city that has fired imperial porcelain since the 7th century — to find the temperature that gives our wide-mouth latte cup the best balance of:
- Wall thickness — thick enough to retain heat (8oz wide-mouth design), thin enough to feel comfortable on the lip
- Glaze depth — fully fused color that develops tonal variation under light, our signature "Wave" effect
- Foot ring stability — the unglazed ring at the base, fired directly on the kiln shelf, the physical signature of wheel-thrown handmade work (read about why the foot ring matters)
The reason we fire in Jingdezhen and not closer to our customers in the US: kaolin clay was first discovered in Gaoling village, just outside Jingdezhen — the word "kaolin" itself comes from the village's name. The local clay's purity, plasticity, and tolerance for high firing temperatures is what made Jingdezhen the imperial porcelain supplier for centuries, and it is what allows our cups to fire at 2280°F without warping or cracking.
Porcelain Firing Temperature FAQ
Q: What's the minimum firing temperature to call ceramic "vitrified"?
A: Roughly 2200°F (1200°C). Below that the clay body retains visible porosity. Above that, silica fully melts into glass and water absorption drops below 0.5%. The exact number varies by clay composition — Jingdezhen kaolin vitrifies a touch lower than European porcelain clays.
Q: How do I ask a brand for their firing temperature?
A: Email customer service with three questions: (1) What temperature in Fahrenheit or Cone do you fire at? (2) Is your glaze lead-free and cadmium-free certified? (3) Can you share a lab certificate? A brand that dodges or refuses any of these is one to avoid. Reputable manufacturers publish this information openly.
Q: Is bone china high-fired?
A: Bone china fires at slightly lower temperatures (typically 2150–2250°F) than true porcelain, but the bone ash content makes it durable and translucent. It's high-fired by most definitions and food-safe when from reputable manufacturers, but it's typically more delicate than high-fired stoneware for daily mug use.
Q: Does "dishwasher safe" mean a mug is high-fired?
A: No. "Dishwasher safe" is a manufacturer claim with no firing-temperature requirement. Many low-fired mugs are sold as dishwasher safe and survive a few cycles before noticeable wear. Use the tap test or 12-hour water test to confirm vitrification.
Q: Why does my high-fired mug have an unglazed bottom?
A: That's the foot ring — the raised, unglazed band where the cup rested on the kiln shelf during firing. Glaze cannot touch the kiln shelf at 2200°F+ or the cup fuses to it. The unglazed foot ring is the physical signature of high-fired wheel-thrown work; flat fully-glazed bottoms typically indicate slip-cast low-fire or mid-fire production.
Q: Can I tell firing temperature from the price?
A: Loosely. Sub-$15 ceramic mugs are almost always low-fire or mid-fire mass production. $25–$50 covers a mix — some genuinely high-fired, some marketing-inflated. Above $50 you're typically getting high-fired handmade or premium production. But price alone is not proof — verify with the at-home tests.
Q: Does mug color affect firing temperature?
A: Some colorants (cadmium reds, certain bright yellows) cannot survive temperatures above 2200°F — they burn out or shift hue. Brands that need vivid red/orange may fire at lower temperatures, sacrificing durability for color. High-fire palettes lean toward earth tones, blues, greens, and the soft pastels Cheralle's Wave Series uses for this reason.
Q: Is microwave safe = high-fired?
A: Not directly. Microwave safety mostly depends on whether there's metallic content (gold, platinum, silver). Both low-fired and high-fired mugs can be microwave safe if there are no metallic accents. But high-fired mugs tolerate the thermal cycling of repeated microwave use far better than low-fired ones.
Buying as a Mother's Day or Father's Day gift? Our holiday gift guides apply this same firing-temperature framework to gift purchases — see the Mother's Day Coffee Mug Guide for 6 mom personality types or the Father's Day Coffee Mug Guide for 5 dad personality types. Both written by Angelia, Cheralle's founder and mom of 2 boys.
Ready for a Mug That Was Fired Right?
Cheralle's Wave Series is wheel-thrown in Jingdezhen, fired at 2280°F, glazed in six colors that develop under light, and built for a decade of mornings. Every cup passes the tap test, the 12-hour water test, and our FDA food-safety certification. You can run those tests yourself the day it arrives.
If you want the deeper context — why handmade matters, how glaze color works, what kaolin actually is — start with our full guide to high-fired vs low-fired ceramics, or read about the 7 measurable differences between handmade and mass-produced mugs.
Browse the Cheralle Wave Series →
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.