| Bidder | Amount | Date |
|---|---|---|
| syko159 152 | $900.00 | 01.06.2026 04:05:07 |
| Gocrager 345 | $895.00 | 01.06.2026 04:05:07 |
| Gocrager 345 | $860.00 | 01.06.2026 04:04:59 |
| syko159 152 | $850.00 | 01.06.2026 04:04:59 |
| Gocrager 345 | $820.00 | 01.06.2026 04:04:44 |
| syko159 152 | $810.00 | 01.06.2026 04:04:44 |
| Gocrager 345 | $800.00 | 01.06.2026 03:18:47 |
Every now and then, a project arrives that refuses to be ordinary.
The foundation of this piece is an authentic 19th Century French Napoleon III tea caddy, crafted in the elegant style of the period with ebonized wood and decorative brass and mother-of-pearl inlay. Originally created to store and present tea, it has survived more than a century before finding its way into my workshop.
A note accompanying the caddy suggests that it passed through a 1979 auction connected to Chartwell, the historic home of Sir Winston Churchill. While I cannot verify the extent of its connection to Churchill, the note itself became part of the inspiration behind the transformation.
At this point, antique collectors may wish to avert their eyes.
I am not a conservator.
I am a puzzle maker.
Rather than preserve this tea caddy exactly as I found it, I chose to continue its story. In doing so, I have almost certainly diminished its value as an antique while creating something that never existed before: a mechanical puzzle experience retrofit within a historic object.
The exterior remains much as it was—a handsome relic from another era. The interior, however, has been completely reimagined.
Hidden within the tea caddy are two independent puzzle boxes concealed inside a larger puzzle structure. Multiple mechanisms, concealed pathways, and three keys stand between the new owner and the secrets contained within.
The journey unfolds in layers. One discovery leads to another. One solution reveals a fresh mystery. The box rewards patience, observation, and curiosity while resisting haste and assumption.
As I built this piece, I often found myself imagining Sir Winston Churchill seated before it.
Churchill was known to appreciate fine boxes, particularly those associated with his cigars. This tea caddy, despite its beauty, may have occupied little more than a quiet corner of a cabinet in comparison. After all, history remembers Churchill more readily for his cigars and Scotch than for any affection toward tea.
I imagine him approaching the puzzle with confidence.
The first few minutes would be curiosity.
The next few would be determination.
Then suspicion.
Then frustration.
Each apparent solution would reveal another challenge. Each answer would simply uncover a deeper question.
Eventually, after exhausting both his patience and perhaps a few choice words, I imagine him pushing back from the table and declaring:
"F the Tea... Where's the Scotch?"
That moment became the spirit of the piece.
This is not simply an antique.
It is not simply a puzzle box.
It is the meeting point between history, craftsmanship, curiosity, and mischief.
A Victorian tea caddy that forgot its original purpose and chose instead to become an adventure.
Authentic 19th Century French Napoleon III tea caddy
Ebonized wood with brass and mother-of-pearl inlay
Two hidden puzzle boxes concealed within the primary structure
Three functional keys incorporated into the solving experience
One-of-a-kind mechanical puzzle by Kel Snake
No tea included
Scotch recommended
Good luck.