Item# WALVH05
$40.00 $33.95
This new Frank Lloyd Wright Lake Geneva wood votive holder is precision laser cut for quality of finish and design accuracy. The design is adapted from a tulip window design that Wright created for the Lake Geneva Hotel, Lake Geneva, Wisconsin (1911, demolished 1970). It includes a glass votive holder and flameless tea light. Enjoy the understated mood lighting of a tea light without the risk of fire. Also works well as a bedside table night light. The votive holder is made from cherry veneered MDF with 1/4" thick walls. The tea light candle has an LED light source to replicate the effect of a flicker flame. Battery included. Dimensions: 3.75" square.
$9.95 Flat Rate Ground Shipping eligible within the contiguous U.S.
$81.25 $97.00
The Frank Lloyd Wright Lake Geneva Tulip Stained Glass is an adaptation of the tulip window created for the Lake Geneva Inn (now demolished), in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. This stained glass panel has been developed in association with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation. On this glass panel, enamel colors are individually applied to a single sheet of glass which is...
$37.95 $42.00
The design sources for the Frank Lloyd Wright Lake Geneva Night Light is adapted from art glass windows originally found in the now demolished Lake Geneva Inn, Lake Geneva, Wisconsin 1911. The night light is precision laser cut for quality of finish and design accuracy. The Frank Lloyd Wright night lights are made with cherry veneered MDF. The night light features...
$37.95 $42.00
The Frank Lloyd Wright Lake Geneva Tulip Pencil Pen Holder is also ideal to hold your keys and anything else you want to keep track of. Set it on your desk, by the front door or on a bedside table. The design is adapted from art glass windows originally found in the now demolished Lake Geneva Inn, Lake Geneva, Wisconsin...
$16.99 $22.00
The design of the Frank Lloyd Wright Lake Geneva Tulip small cube trinket box measuring 2.7" on each side, draws from Wright's adaptation of one of the original glass windows in the resort hotel overlooking Lake Geneva (1911). Wright designed the Lake Geneva Art Glass to make a natural transition from the inside to outside and named it the “Tulip”...