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Regency Period Satinwood Marquetry Inlaid Caddy
Located in Peterborough, Northamptonshire
Regency period satinwood marquetry inlaid caddy with mother-of-pearl escutcheon. The interior now
Category

Antique Late 19th Century English Regency Tea Caddies

19th Century Burl Wood with Inlay Shell Tea Caddy
Located in Cookeville, TN
Burl tea caddy with inlaid shells on Greenfield with inlaid diamond escutcheon. Painted interior on
Category

Antique Mid-19th Century British British Colonial Tea Caddies

Materials

Shell

Superb Sarcophagus Regency Rosewood Tea Caddy Antique, Circa 1820 s
Located in London, GB
A fine regency brass inlaid rosewood twin canister tea caddy. A lovely quality sarcophagus regency
Category

Antique 1820s European Regency Tea Caddies

Materials

Brass

Georgian Satinwood Tea Caddy
Located in Northampton, United Kingdom
Satinwood Tea caddy inlaid with two conch shells and bone escutcheon. The interior has two bone
Category

Antique 18th Century and Earlier British Boxes

Materials

Wood, Bone

Inlaid Tortoise Tea Caddy
Located in Charleston, SC
With beautiful floral Mother of Pearl inlay in tortoise with two compartments,this tea caddy is
Category

Antique 19th Century English Tea Caddies

Materials

Mother-of-Pearl, Ivory

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Inlaid Tea Caddy For Sale on 1stDibs

Choose from an assortment of styles, material and more with respect to the inlaid tea caddy you’re looking for at 1stDibs. Each inlaid tea caddy for sale was constructed with extraordinary care, often using wood, mahogany and hardwood. There are many kinds of the inlaid tea caddy you’re looking for, from those produced as long ago as the 18th Century to those made as recently as the 20th Century. An inlaid tea caddy, designed in the Georgian, Regency or Victorian style, is generally a popular piece of furniture.

How Much is a Inlaid Tea Caddy?

Prices for an inlaid tea caddy start at $198 and top out at $8,950 with the average selling for $1,695.

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.