Item# YT9006
$140.00 $121.95
This Frank Lloyd Wright Hollyhock House Stained Glass adapted from the Hollyhock House, commissioned by Aline Barnsdall. Inspired by Barnsdall’s favorite flower, the house was built in honor of the flower. The geometric pattern in this product represents the design detail Wright used in four of the home’s adjacent living room sidelights. Aline Barnsdall asked that the purple be used to match the color in Japanese screens she owned. On this glass panel, enamel colors are individually applied to a single sheet of glass, which is then kiln fired to permanently fuse the enamels to the glass. The glass panel is then framed with a metal came and includes hanging chain and wood stand for desk or table display. Ht: 14". W: 7.75".
$9.95 Flat Rate Ground Shipping eligible within the contiguous U.S.
$162.50 $188.00
This Frank Lloyd Wright Saguaro Wood Framed Stained Glass vividly recreates one of Wright's most popular designs. The design is one of a number of Liberty Magazine cover designs from 1926-27 that the editors thought to be too "radical" and never used. In 1973 there was a fire in the Arizona Biltmore. This graphic was selected from the Frank Lloyd...
$121.95 $147.00
The Frank Lloyd Wright Martin Casement Window Stained Glass is adapted from an art glass window in the Darwin Martin House (Buffalo NY 1903-1905). The Martin House complex has more art glass in more patterns than any other house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright with nearly four hundred examples of Wright designed art glass, including the famous “Tree of Life”...
$108.95 $126.00
This Frank Lloyd Wright Thomas House Stained Glass is adapted from the art glass pattern Wright designed for three vestibule ceiling lights in the Frank Thomas House, Oak Park, Illinois (1901). This project was designed and built at the request of Mr. James Rogers as a wedding gift for the client’s daughter and son-in-law. Wright’s use of mother-of-pearl, small gilded...
$108.75 $130.00
The Frank Lloyd Wright Oak Park Skylight Wood Framed Stained Glass design is adapted from one of the matched pair of art glass skylights in the entrance to Frank Lloyd Wright's studio, attached to his home in Oak Park, IL. On this glass panel, enamel colors are individually applied to a single sheet of glass which is then kiln fired...