Naming a tea blend is part poetry, part shorthand for what is in the cup. A good name hints at flavour, mood, and origin before the first sip. This tool builds artisan-style tea blend names locally in your browser, tuned to the base tea you choose.
How it works
Each name is assembled from three parts. First, a modifier drawn from a word bank specific to your base tea — green teas pull airy, botanical words like Jade and Misty, while black teas lean dark and roasted with words like Midnight and Smoked. Second, a noun that names the leaf or style, such as Sencha, Assam, or Silver Needle. Third, an optional line suffix like Reserve or No. 7, which is left off most of the time so names stay clean.
The generator de-duplicates within a batch, so a run of ten names gives you ten distinct ideas rather than repeats.
Tips and example
- Run a few batches per base tea — the best names often appear after a couple of rerolls.
- A suffix like
ReserveorHarvestsignals a premium line; drop it for everyday blends. - Read the name aloud. “Misty Sencha” sells calm; “Volcanic Roast” would not — so the base tea you pick matters.
Example green-tea names: Jade Grove, Morning Needle Reserve, Misty Matcha. Once you have a shortlist, check trademark and domain availability before using a name in public.