Drinking some Simpson & Vail's "Fancy Darjeeling", a blend that was worked up (as far as I can tell) to taste like old-style Darjeeling. Not bad, although I don't have any old-style Darjeeling to compare it to.
It took me a little while to understand Simpson & Vail as most of their teas I have tried have been a little flat. (I would never recommend any tea meant for milk from them, for instance, or any green teas.) I've noticed however that they are very good at coaxing their teas into that "winey" flavor-window well-stored older black teas can get before they fade away. Maybe winey-lovers are their target tea-drinkers?
Since they rarely sell teas by date, they can be a little inconsistent flavor-wise, though. A fresh batch of their Morgan's Blend Earl Grey Lapsang Souchong is strong enough to be kind of unpleasant, for example. I had another batch recently where the smoke and bergamot flavors had faded away so thoroughly I would have been surprised if you'd told me that the tea contained either, yet it somehow hadn't reached the "tastes like the packaging" phase of flatness.
I'm guessing there must be something about the storage... On the other hand, I've also had a few that tasted suspiciously like they'd been stored too closely to flavored tea, without being able to pinpoint a particular flavor-taint. This may be a side-effect of the vintage-American-teashop smell that seems to get into all of their packaging, (sort of a Constant Comment undernote, maybe, not quite sure how to describe it) or maybe just surprise old-tea notes caused by the same procedure that makes so many of their teas winey.