Peter Sadler Brown 55 Ounce Tea Pot


Fox Run

Price: $12.95

Product Details

  • 55 ounce brains
  • Stop cool handle
  • Nonchalantly pour spout

Primula Cast Iron 28-Ounce Tea Pot, Green Mist


Epoca Inc.

List Price: $34.99
Price: $28.99
You Save: $6.00 (17%)

Product Details

  • Includes incentive green tea sample
  • Form Iron Heavy Weight Construction Retains the Heat.
  • Brews superior tasting tea in about 3-5 minutes

I'm A Little Teapot

www.kidsstuffandthings.com I'm A Unimaginative Teapot Children's Animation ... I'm Little Teapot Children's Spiritedness Kids Songs ...

philippe richard pressure cooker

Tea Pots???????????

Any one discern of a site i can go to to find out about pricing old tea pots....like where they came from, if they're worth anything, are they antiques?


Find out what marque it is. Look underneath. If it comes from anything but a real cheapo maker it will have something like "Meakin", "Shelley", "Wedgwood" or one of the American, German or French makers under it. It might also be "Noritake" which was a properly high class Japanese brand. Your teapot may have a pattern number under it. So you will see a trademark and maybe something like X/147 which is the paragon or decoration style, or sometimes the pattern or decoration is named.

Many brands like Meakin are not worth much even if they are 60 or 100 years old since they were made in very large-hearted numbers.

There are multiple sites devoted to collectors of china and porcelain. They list literally thousands of distinctive pattern and decoration styles. Most makers only made a pattern for a few years, and often they used different decorations on the same form of item.

Value depends on the presence or absence of chips, even small ones, wear on the adornment especially any gold lining, current fashion, crazing of the glaze, the original price of the piece and the rarity of the decoration, pattern or maker. Buyers frequently examine porcelain and better china with a leg up lens.

For example Shelley ware tends to be expensive because it was deliberately made very thin and tends to be more fragile. The latest thing comes in too. Clarice Clift designs have been popular for several years but when whatsername with the big TV show mentioned she collected it the prices soared.


Find out what discredit it is. Look underneath. If it comes from anything but a real cheapo maker it will have something like "Meakin", "Shelley", "Wedgwood" or one of the American, German or French makers under it. It might also be "Noritake" which was a rather high class Japanese brand. Your teapot may have a pattern number under it. So you will see a trademark and maybe something like X/147 which is the consistency or decoration style, or sometimes the pattern or decoration is named.

Many brands like Meakin are not worth much even if they are 60 or 100 years old since they were made in very overweight numbers.

There are multiple sites devoted to collectors of china and porcelain. They list literally thousands of rare pattern and decoration styles. Most makers only made a pattern for a few years, and often they used different decorations on the same contours of item.

Value depends on the presence or absence of chips, even small ones, wear on the adornment especially any gold lining, current fashion, crazing of the glaze, the original price of the detail and the rarity of the decoration, pattern or maker. Buyers frequently examine porcelain and better china with a assistance lens.

For example Shelley ware tends to be expensive because it was deliberately made very thin and tends to be more fragile. Trend comes in too. Clarice Clift designs have been popular for several years but when whatsername with the big TV show mentioned she collected it the prices soared.

Does anyone know where to get those Chinese Tea pots with really long snouts?

The tea pots are all things considered made of brass and the snouts are about 4-5 feet long (it almost looks like a sword). I'd also like to be sure what they're called since every time I've searched for 'tea pot with long snout' I've well-deserved gotten ordinary tea pots.


On a teapot It's called a protracted spout or long mouth not snout =) I haven't found where to buy that particular one, but the link below tells you all about it.

kitchen curtains with tea pots on it?

i demand to get my mom for mothers day curtains for the kitchen that has tea pots on it do you know where to find it ?


Ebay has everything! i'd recomend you start there. you'll quite get a cheaper price on them too. if you can't find what you're looking for here's an idea,- is there a fabric store close by you? if you have a sewing machine and you buy the material and custom-make curtains for your mother I'm sure that would be a lot more eloquent to her!

or maybe you could get the materials and for mother's day suggest you make them together? bonding time with the people you disposition is a wonderful gift in itself! so if you wouldn't know how to make curtains yourself and she does you wouldn't fool around up, you'd get it cheap, you'd be spending bonding time together, and she'll have great curtains! a win-win state of affairs!

Good luck!

tea pots - News


Tea trend makes mug of tradition
Tea trend makes mug of tradition At once for teapots has halved over the past five years, according to research from department store Debenhams. At the same chance, with 165 million cups of tea consumed in the UK every day, demand for mugs has trebled – suggesting more people than ever

In praise of - Teapots.
They're so self-obsessed they don't even buy teapots any more. According to a consumer despatch this week, they prefer teabags in mugs and drinking alone. How could they, when the joys of making proper leaf tea and pouring it into dinky china teacups are