My first yixing teapot was a gift from my husband used here as a sort of reference point..
Now I bought more hoping to have 1 for oolong and another for black/pu-erh. In my eBay surfings I ended up buying 3!!!
Avoiding the brand new mass produced merchandise I went for "unresearched" pré owned vintage types, hoping something good will come to me by chance.
1. Very small vivid red shiny number nearly round but hexagonal. No lid


Now: is it zhuni clay? Can I make tea in it without the lid successfully? Any guesses on age or kiln identity?
2. Second eBay teapot is in dark clay, squat flat top form. 160ml approx
Has toolmarks inside at the bottom and scrapings at the join of the flap top with rest of the body, so handmade?
Has seals inside lid, under on the base and at bottom of the handle. Handle comfortable, a lot thicker at the bottom, with little "bobble" for cantilevering and a simple tooled slashed decoration either side of the bobble. Lid fits very very well, finial is sort of conical (dissapointing uncomfortable and tends to easily slip out of my fingers) bit the whole finial and air hole are executed with care and quite tidy looking. The sound the lid makes is of stone flour mill wheels, not as hollow as terracotta, but still sounding a bit gritty. Visually the clay also seems to have minuscule shiny mica or other mineral flecks, when looking at angle it has shining microscopic inclusions. Ah, also turned out to be unused condition and looked too shiny, so I boiled the teapot- yes it was waxed? So that might give some idea to the people who know about these practices when it was made etc- finding reliable info on that proving difficult. Online research was low on detail so question is: Is it Zini clay? Is it faking to be Zini clay, or maybe some other type altogether. Would it be 1990s of after if it's Zini clay? Any idea on kiln, or any other info.
3. Third teapot I bought on eBay is a monster! Dark/black clay more of a jug than a teapot with pewter or tin metal overlay of dragons. Most definitely for export as unsuitable for Chinese tea style use. Too big, too heavy, hybrid type shape, mixed materials, no spout proper ?!?!?!!! Horror! Marked at bottom in chinese 6 characters in clay and clumsily in Latin alphabet on the metal rim "Hsin Cheng whiehiwei" by someone definitely not familiar with shape of Latin alphabet

Well, enough of my ramblings, please help if you have any info or guesses ?! I do like a mystery solving challenge. Time to put a kettle on!