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English Sterling Silver Tea Box
Located in Hudson, NY
Enlgish Sterling Silver Tea Box with silver plate dog finial. 1921 10trz.
Category

20th Century British Sterling Silver

Materials

Sterling Silver

Small English Two Compartment Tortoishell Tea Box
Located in Natchez, MS
Lovely Small two compartment tortoishell tea box with ivory trim and feet and silver keyhole cover
Category

Antique 19th Century English Decorative Objects

19th Century English Mahogany Tea Caddy Box
Located in Richmond, VA
Offered is a stunning, late 19th century English mahogany tea caddy box. Gorgeous brass hardware
Category

Antique 19th Century British Victorian Tea Caddies

Materials

Brass

English 19th Century Elaborately Inlaid Tea Caddy with Sugar Bowl and Tea Boxes
Located in Wells, ME
English mid-19th century inlaid tea caddy with cut and etched glass sugar bowl. This fanciful tea
Category

Antique Mid-19th Century English Victorian Tea Caddies

Materials

Birdseye Maple, Rosewood

English Inlay Tea Caddy
Located in Summerland, CA
Late 1800s beautiful and intricate wood inlay work with mother-of-pearl key plaque. Two interior compartments with lids. Wonderful outer condition for age and use. But does not shut...
Category

Antique 1890s English Tea Caddies

Materials

Wood

19th Century English Tea Caddy
Located in San Antonio, TX
English tea caddy with original glass inserts and resting on small bun feet.
Category

Antique 19th Century English Tea Caddies

Materials

Wood

18th Century English Tea Caddy
Located in Highland Park, IL
18th century tea caddy mahogany with satinwood and kingwood inlay.
Category

Antique 18th Century English Hepplewhite Tea Caddies

Materials

Kingwood, Mahogany, Satinwood

18th Century English Mahogany Tea Caddy
Located in Salt Lake City, UT
An 18th century English tea caddy, with a stepped top, brass handle, velvet lined lid interior
Category

Antique 18th Century Tea Caddies

Materials

Silver

English Georgian Period Burwood Tea Caddy
Located in West Palm Beach, FL
Generously scaled and appointed with fine inlays both on its interior and exterior.
Category

Antique Early 19th Century English Georgian Tea Caddies

Materials

Metal

19th Century English Regency Penwork Tea Caddy
Located in Los Angeles, CA
This beautiful tea caddy top depicts a naive Chinese scene with a few figures, three buildings and
Category

Antique 19th Century English Regency Tea Caddies

Materials

Sycamore

English George III Tortoiseshell Dome-Top Tea Caddy
Located in Natchez, MS
English George III Tortoiseshell Domed-Top Tea caddy with two compartments.
Category

Antique Late 18th Century English George III Tea Caddies

19TH Century English Mother of Pearl Tea Caddy
Located in West Palm Beach, FL
Generously scaled with an attractive dome form top. The mother-of-pearl interior lids are original - adorned with " floral " handles. The interior is lined with silk. A superb exa...
Category

Antique 19th Century English Tea Caddies

Materials

Mother-of-Pearl, Silk, Wood

English Georgian Mahogany Single Tea Caddy Inlaid with Large Shell Motifs
Located in Wells, ME
English 18th century Georgian mahogany single teacaddy with large shell inlaid in an oval sycamore
Category

Antique Late 18th Century English George III Tea Caddies

Materials

Mahogany

Pair of English Tin Biscuit Boxes with Classical Figures by Huntley Palmers
By Huntley Palmers
Located in Pittsburgh, PA
An early pair (1909) of Huntley and Palmers collectable biscuit tins in the shape of architectural pedestals, with four female figures in classical costume in the niches on each side...
Category

Antique Early 1900s Great Britain (UK) Late Victorian Tea Caddies

Materials

Tin

19th Century Regency Mahogany Tea Caddy with Brass Inlay
By Henry Thomas Hope
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Handsome early 19th century English wooden tea box with original key. The architectonic form
Category

Antique 1810s English Regency Tea Caddies

Materials

Brass

English Georgian Period Mahogany Teacaddy with Canon and Compass Rose Inlay
Located in Wells, ME
English Georgian military themed inlaid mahogany teacaddy. I believe this caddy must have been made
Category

Antique Late 18th Century English George III Tea Caddies

Materials

Boxwood, Mahogany, Satinwood

English Victorian Tortoiseshell Tea Caddy
Located in Natchez, MS
English Victorian Tortoiseshell Tea Caddy
Category

Antique Mid-19th Century English Victorian Boxes

Materials

Tortoise Shell

English Regency Pagoda Form Tea Caddy
Located in Natchez, MS
English Regency Pagoda Form Tea Caddy
Category

Antique Early 19th Century English Regency Boxes

English Shagreen Tea Caddy, circa 1760
Located in Nashville, TN
Black Shagreen Tea Caddy with Paktong mounts with red velvet lining
Category

Antique 18th Century and Earlier British Boxes

Materials

Metal

19th Century Federal-Style English Mahogany Tea Caddy
Located in Atlanta, GA
A 19th century Federal style English mahogany tea caddy. Tapered hinged lid with molded top above a
Category

Antique 19th Century English Federal Decorative Boxes

Materials

Mahogany

Japanese Marquetry Miniature Chest
By 1616 / Arita Japan
Located in Milton, DE
likely have lacquer, rosewood and English tea boxes. Now you need to have this one. It is probably used
Category

20th Century Japanese Anglo-Japanese Antiquities

Materials

Wood, Softwood

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English Tea Box For Sale on 1stDibs

With a vast inventory of beautiful furniture at 1stDibs, we’ve got just the English tea box you’re looking for. An English tea box — often made from wood, metal and mahogany — can elevate any home. You’ve searched high and low for the perfect English tea box — we have versions that date back to the 18th Century alongside those produced as recently as the 20th Century are available. When you’re browsing for the right English tea box, those designed in Georgian, Regency and Victorian styles are of considerable interest. A well-made English tea box has long been a part of the offerings for many furniture designers and manufacturers, but those produced by A.E. Poston Co. Ltd, Atkin Brothers and C S Harris Sons Ltd are consistently popular.

How Much is an English Tea Box?

Prices for an English tea box can differ depending upon size, time period and other attributes — at 1stDibs, they begin at $125 and can go as high as $42,500, while the average can fetch as much as $1,950.

Finding the Right Tea-caddies for You

There are lots of uses for your vintage, new or antique tea caddies, but they can certainly serve their original intended purpose if needed.

When tea first gained popularity during the 1800s, and teatime became commonplace in homes all over England, it was an expensive commodity owing to excessive taxation. (This, of course, inevitably yielded a black market for tea leaves.) Tea drinkers hoarded their precious goods, which began to arrive in London ports from China during the 17th century, under lock and key. In luxury homes, tea leaves were stowed away in a decorative jar or canister called a tea caddy that was fitted with a lock, or, alternatively, the container was kept in a secured chest or storage cabinet.

Tea was thought to be not just a delicious drink but also to have medicinal benefits. The Chinese had been praising the healthy properties of tea, and wealthy Europeans were eager to discover its benefits for themselves during their ritual afternoon tea. The idea of “teatime” wasn’t a social event in upper-class British homes until the 1830s or 1840s. During Queen Victoria’s reign, small baked treats might be served with your beverage, and teakettles and coffeepots were part of tea services that could include teacups, saucers, a milk pot and other accessories.

When tea cultivation was relegated to British colonies such as India, and the British East India Company could no longer hold onto its trade monopoly with China, tea was no longer a ritual confined to the wealthy. Today, antique and vintage tea caddies are collector’s items all over the world.

Tea caddies weren’t unique to Europeans. The earliest pieces originated in China. Surviving hand-painted examples from China or elsewhere in Asia made of porcelain might feature enameled landscapes or other designs. At the Taft Museum of Art, there are striking enameled 18th-century-era tea caddies of copper that were given to the institution in 2014. Wooden tea caddies materialized over time and were seen as sturdier than their ceramic counterparts.

Today, there are all kinds of ways to use a vintage tea caddy if you’re passing on tea. They’re a welcome decorative flourish on the mantel in your living room, for example. A metal tea caddy, lined with a plastic bag, can be used to cultivate an herb garden on your kitchen windowsill. An old wooden tea caddy can help keep your paper clips or pushpins organized on your desk too. If you’re always on the go, a tea tin is good for packing earbuds, hand sanitizer, gum or whatever else that might get easily lost in a roomy crossbody messenger bag or other shoulder bag.

Teatime or not, find antique and vintage mid-century modern tea caddies, tortoiseshell caddies and more on 1stDibs.