Teacaddies
Tins
page 3 page 1 | page 2
| page 3 | page 4 | page 5|
 |
Toy Shop Tin
A peaked Village shoppe tin showing a toy shop in an English hamlet. This is often
found in a set. |
| Item Code |
Item Description |
Price |
| 50224 |
Toy Shop Tin |
$9.50 |
|
American Lines Tin
A British tin with a domed top featuring Barclays Sewing Machine Company in the design. |

|
| Item Code |
Item Description |
Price |
| 50492 |
American Lines Tin |
$9.50 |
|

|
Claremont Casket Tin This hinged tin
is unusual! It is the famous casket design and it has the British Claremont flower
design on the cover and the gold fleur D'Alis on the sides. A collectable! |
| Item Code |
Item Description |
Price |
| 50216 |
Claremont Casket Tin |
$12.75 |
|
| Dinwoodie's Tin A brilliant
yellow/gold British tea tin. The shape is unusual. This tin was made for
Dinwoodie Boiled Sweets and is a collectable British tin made by metal Box Company. |

|
| Item Code |
Item Description |
Price |
| 50420 |
Dinwoodie's Tin |
$16.50 |
|

|
Tea Caddy Tin
A crisp brightly colored tin with a mosiac on the tin. This scene shows n
Italian shoppe, complete with merchant and displays. |
| Item Code |
Item Description |
Price |
| 50240 |
Tea Caddy Tin |
$9.50 |
|
|
| One of the earliest uses of
the decorative tin was the stationery box. Many of the earlier English
tins were made to package stationery, envelops, and a pen for convenience. |
|
| The designs are more
feminine to appeal to the women. English tin companies were famous for making
rectangular snuff tins for the gentry, so it was a natural evolution to design a
decorative rectangular tin box with floral and mosaic designs lithographed on the sides
and cover. Fruit and floral vases were also extremely popular decorations on
the tins.
The Malverne tin shown above was a
classic as was the Claremont tin shown below. These were classic, timeless designs
that always were popular.
|
Unusual Shapes | Tea Caddies
| Pails | Stationery Boxes
| Theme Tins | Round Tins | Specialty Packaging | Wooden Crates
| Cardboard Boxes |Other
Nuts & Seeds | Mixtures
| Chocolates | Snacks | Candy | Fruit | Gifts |
Tins
|
|
| Tip of the
day Don't count your nuts before you crack them.
|
| Our
favorite recipes Chippie
Pie
who
needs chocolate chip cookies? Here's chocolate chip pie!
2 eggs
1/2 cup flour
1 cup melted butter, cooled to room temperature
6 oz. chocolate chips
1 cup chopped walnuts
1-9" unbaked pie shell
Preheat oven to 325 degrees.
In a large bowl beat eggs until foamy. Add flour, brown sugar and sugar. Beat until well
blended. Blend in melted butter. Stir in chocolate chips and walnuts. Pour into a pie
shell. Bake at 325C for one hour. Serve with ice cream. Variation: For an interesting idea
buy a package each of white chips, peanut butter chips, and chocolate chips and mix
together in a blend of colors. Add walnuts, pour into pie shell, and bake.
More recipes
|
Little known facts
4 ounces chopped almonds or similar nut - 2/3rds cup.
1 cup whole nuts - 1-1/8 cups coarse chopped
1 cup whole nuts - 1-1/4 cups fine chopped
1 cup whole nuts - 1-1/2 cups sliced nuts
More facts
|
Half a century of fun

We just completed building a new food processing plant. Our plant is located on the
western United States in Spokane, Washington.Greenacres is our official address and it is
a suburb of Spokane, just three miles west of the Idaho border.
Our history
|
|
Nut and Snack Commodity Market
An unusual nut site.
The Indian Cashew Association. |
|