Teapot Creature
Use the dropdown picker below to see which teapots are currently available for your Occamy adoption.
How to Adopt an Occamy
1. Choose a teapot
Select a vintage teapot (using the dropdown picker above) for your creature to nest in โ each one is unique and one of a kind.
2. Creation begins
After you place your order, I'll begin sculpting your creature, transforming the teapot into a fixed display piece. Each creation takes 4-6 weeks to complete.
3. Receive your companion
Your creature arrives with an official adoption certificate โ ready to meet their new guardian!
Details
Inspired by the magical beasts of wizarding lore, this handcrafted sculpture features a vibrant serpentine creature nestled safely in its teapot. Its iridescent feathers shimmer in hues of blues, teals, purples, and pinks, with just a hint of mischief in its watchful eyes.
A must-have for every witch or wizard, and fans of magical creatures.
Note: As each creature is handcrafted, there will be slight colour, pattern or shape differences depending on the size of the teapot.
Features:
- Hand-Sculpted & Cast: The head was hand-sculpted, molded, and cast in resin before being finished with a armature serpentine body, delicate feathering and hand-painted detail work.
- Fixed Display Piece: The creature is securely nestled inside the pot and is not removable. The lid (if available) is detached and positioned off to the side.
- Upcycled vintage teapot: Each teapot is thrifted and repurposed, making every home truly unique.ย Teapot sizes vary.
- Mixed Media Creation: Combines sculpting, resin, feathers, paint, and found materials to create a rich, layered art piece.
Photo credit: Photos taken at Epic Universe have lovingly been taken byย @theverybusybee.ย
Display and Gift Ideas
Perfect for any witch or wizardโs apothecary shelf, collector's display, or magical nook.
An ideal gift for fantasy lovers, Harry Potter fans, and collectors of magical decor.
Care Instructions
Avoid water exposure to preserve its finish and weathered charm.
Shipping
Every art piece is handcrafted and packaged with care from my Ottawa studio.
- Processing: 3โ5 business days before dispatch
- Canada: 3โ7 business days
- U.S.: 7โ14 business days (customs may apply)
- International: 2โ4 weeks (duties/VAT not included)
All orders include tracking so you can follow your magical parcelโs journey. If a package feels delayed, send me a message and weโll set the owls on it.
Upcycled Vintage Teapots
Drag the slider to see how I upcycle teapots into creature homes.
Vintage Teapots Selection โ Coming Soon
Claim a vessel and we'll make it a home. Teapot Creature commissions opening later in 2026. โ price: $350-750 USD.
The Amber Deco #031
Art Deco canary yellow, gold-banded, c.1940sโ50s
Est. vessel value: ~$80โ130 USD standalone
Once kept on the corner of a Transfiguration professor's desk, not for the tea, but for the warning. The gold bands said don't waste my time. Students who earned her favour were invited to sit across from it. Most never did.
The Autumn Rose #032
Fine china, hand-transfer amber rose motif, gold rim, c.1950s
Est. vessel value: ~$30โ60 USD standalone
A Herbology witch grew roses in colours that had no name and never wanted to be famous. This sat on her kitchen table every morning for forty years. Her students forgot almost everyone else. They never forgot her.
The Blue Garden #033
Cobalt blue lid, white body with dimensional raised white floral relief, c.1990sโ2000s
Est. vessel value: ~$40โ80 USD standalone
A Charms researcher whose cottage plants had started growing through the walls. She didn't see this as a problem. She made tea in this every afternoon, usually while something in the garden was definitely moving on its own.
The Strawberry Field #034
White fine china, embossed swirl body, botanical transfer, gold-tipped spout and rim, Royal Tuscan, England, c.1960sโ1970s
Est. vessel value: ~$80โ130 USD standalone
A Defence Against the Dark Arts teacher who played music during practicals because he believed it helped concentration. Her students consistently outperformed every other class. This pot played the loveliest tune when poured.
The Rococo Rosebud #035
White porcelain, sweeping gold scrollwork, scattered rosebuds, footed base, c.1950s
Est. vessel value: ~$45โ90 USD standalone
A duelling instructor who had opinions about everything, delivered without softening. This sat at the centre of her dining table like a declaration. Guests who admired it were offered tea. Guests who didn't were offered nothing. Everyone admired it.
The Lotus Lustre #036
Full iridescent pearl lustre, lotus-petal scalloped base, gold finial and spout tip, c.1950sโ1960s
Est. vessel value: ~$40โ80 USD standalone
A Divination witch who kept unusual hours and read the shimmer of this pot the way others read leaves. It caught light differently depending on who was looking, which she said was the pot's own gift. Her waiting list was seventeen years long. She never rushed.
The Gold Script #037
Round orb form, gold squiggle pattern, R. Sudlow & Sons, England, c.1930sโ50s
EST. VESSEL VALUE: ~$50โ100 USD STANDALONE
A linguist of ancient magical scripts who spent an afternoon convinced this gold pattern was a language she hadn't seen before. It wasn't. Or it was. She never published her conclusion. The pot has never offered one either.
The Quiet Correspondent #038
White ceramic, delicate pink rose and blue forget-me-not motif, c.1960sโ70s
EST. VESSEL VALUE: ~$20โ45 USD STANDALONE
A famous wizarding journalist's teapot โ soft pink roses on white, kept at the corner of a wide wooden desk in a house that smelled of ink and paper. She answered every letter by hand because she believed in the messy creative process of getting it wrong before getting it right.
The Tropical Greenhouse #039
White porcelain, hand-painted tropical palm fronds, lotus and calla lily, blue finial, c.1970sโ80s
EST. VESSEL VALUE: ~$35โ75 USD STANDALONE
Kept on the windowsill of a magical greenhouse where the light came through palm fronds and created whimsical shadows. She poured without looking up from her notes. The pot never spilled. She believed it knew how much she needed.