Monday 9 November 2015

The Beauty of Traditional Teapots

I have always liked classic pieces of furniture, crockery, cutlery and ceramics. Apart from it never ageing it is always made to be functional yet beautiful in its simplicity.

When I saw a Brown Betty teapot for the first time I just loved the simple lines and the brown glaze. The traditional Brown Betty is a round teapot with a manganese brown glaze known as a Rockingham glaze.

Brown Betty teapots with coloured stripes
Potteries used the red clay that was discovered near Stoke-on-Trent in England in 1695, to make the original teapots. The ceramics made from this clay retained heat better and was used as a material for teapots as early as the seventeenth century. The early pots were tall and looked more like coffee pots. It was only in the nineteenth century that the pots were made round.

The original Brown Betty teapots that started it all
It was the pot preferred by Queen Victoria who popularised tea drinking. The Brown Betty is considered the teapot that makes the best tea. The design of the pot allows the tea leaves more freedom to swirl around as the hot water is poured into the pot, releasing more flavour and less bitterness.

Mottled drip-less Brown Betty teapots
This combined with the better heat retention capabilities made it a popular teapot. The basic design of the pot is considered by many tea drinkers to be the best teapot design ever created.


The teapot was made for the general public as a utilitarian piece for daily use. It needed to be durable and cheap and was made from good terracotta clay which would hold the heat nicely.

I prefer the Brown Betty made by Alcock, Lindley and Bloore Ltd who were located in Clough Street in Hanley from where they operated from 1919 until 1979 when they closed down.

Brown striped Brown Betty teapots
Our collection of Brown Betty teapots has grown over the years, finding their way to Towerwater occasionally as gifts from friends.  Mostly, the collection has grown as a result of our forever being on the lookout for the familiar shape and lid at markets, second-hand and antique stores.


I still get excited when I see one and although I have a reserve price that I am prepared to pay, I have been known to succumb to my love for these pots and paid more.

The Brown Bettys in our collection have become functional pieces of art in commemoration of an era when tea drinking was a way of life.


“Strange how a teapot can represent at the same time the comforts of solitude and the pleasures of company” ~ Author Unknown

Advert for Alcock, Lindley and Bloore Ltd's drip-less teapots - Pottery Gazette, April 1953

7 comments:

  1. Stunning post - love the 1953 advert. Seeing those teapots has a Pavlov's bell effect on me. Now for a cuppa...

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  2. ALB teapots are wonderful, I only have 2.

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    1. Sunnyjim I agree, for me their beauty is in their simplicity. It is also true that they make the best tea.

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  3. Love this! I have a couple of vintage drip-less brown betty ALB teapots, one like the mottled version in your photos, one with plain brown glaze and one with orange and yellow flowers. Is there any way to date the different versions or a rule of thumb?

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    1. Hi Val. We have not been able to accurately date the various glaze treatments. The advert featured in this post of course gives one a clue for the pattern illustrated in 1953. The colour treatments seem to grow bolder in the 1960's and 1970's in line with general fashion trends of the period. The mottled drip glaze seemed a fashionable art deco treatment that featured on teapots between the two world wars. The plain brown seems to date from the 1940's. Another guideline for period would be the stamp beneath the teapot. The fairly plain ALB subscribed with "Made In England", seems to feature from the early 1950's. The more elaborate stamps indicate earlier productions.

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    2. That is absolutely fascinating - thank you!

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  4. Very nice article with good details on the beauty of traditional teapots .

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