Attractions
Hui (Huizhou) Ink
The Chinese writing brush, ink stick, ink stone and paper are known as the "Four Treasures of Chinese Study", and Anhui province can claim to be the place of origin of two of them: Xuan paper and Hui ink sticks.
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The most famous ink in China
Ink, as one of the Four Treasures of the Study (brush, ink, paper and inkstone), is a necessity in Chinese traditional painting or writing (calligraphy). Traditionally, ink is ground out from an ink stick with a little water. Ink stick, the solid form of ink, can last much longer than the liquid variety and is easier to transport.
The most famous ink sticks in China are the Hui Ink Sticks produced in Anhui Province. The sticks are made from pines that grow on Mt. Huangshan, which was originally belonged to Huizhou District, thus the ink got its name as Hui Ink. The trees are burned and the resulting soot is the perfect material for ink sticks. Xi, a famous ink maker, moved to Huizhou at the end of the Tang Dynasty (618-907 A.D.) and was credited for inventing this method. Since then, the process has been passed down from generation to generation for more than a thousand years. Old ink factories like the famous Hu Kaiwen Ink Factory are still in operation nowadays and continues to produce ink traditional ways.














