This term refers to Mishima tea bowls with carved patterns of hinokigaki, but in modern times it also refers to a type of Mishima-te that was fired from the end of the Goryeo Dynasty in Korea to the beginning of the Yi Dynasty, in which the surface of the clay was coated with white-lacquered clay, the patterns were drawn on with a spatula-like object, and the clay was further overglazed and then fired.
The patterns were very coarse and bold, and often used fish, leaves, arabesques, lotus petals, and so on.