Item# MV66223
$9.95
The Modgy Frank Lloyd Wright Hoffman Expandable Vase is an attractive and economical option for both everyday use and special occasions. Made of translucent plastic, it arrives flat. Simply fill it with water and it expands it to a stable and reusable vase that's durable and strong enough to hold a flower bouquet with no worries about chipping or breaking. Approx. 10" high and 6" wide when filled. When not in use your vase stores flat in the reusable sleeve. Care: rinse with water and dish soap. Leave open to dry. Made from BPA-free plastic.
This vase features the Frank Lloyd Wright Hoffman Rug design made up of intersecting circles with square accents, which Wright designed for a rug in the Max Hoffman House in 1957, in Rye, New York. This rug was never executed for that house but, after Wright’s death, Mrs. Wright had it manufactured for their home. The completed rug can still be seen on the floor of the Living Room of Taliesin in Spring Green, Wisconsin.
$9.95 Flat Rate Ground Shipping eligible within the contiguous U.S.
$49.95
This Tiffany Peonies Cloisonné Blown Glass Ornament from the Metropolitan Museum of Art is based on Garden Landscapes, a luminous three-panel window produced for Tiffany Studios (1902-1932) by Agnes F. Northrop (1857-1953). The window panel, now in The Met Museum's American Wing, was commissioned by businesswoman and philanthropist Sarah Cochran to evoke the idyllic grounds of her grand estate, Linden Hall,...
$49.95
This Tiffany Hollyhocks Cloisonné Blown Glass Ornament from the Metropolitan Museum of Art is based on Garden Landscapes, a luminous three-panel window produced for Tiffany Studios (1902-1932) by Agnes F. Northrop (1857-1953). The window panel, now in The Met Museum's American Wing, was commissioned by businesswoman and philanthropist Sarah Cochran to evoke the idyllic grounds of her grand estate, Linden Hall,...
$49.95
This Tiffany Hydrangeas Cloisonné Blown Glass Ornament from the Metropolitan Museum of Art is based on Garden Landscapes, a luminous three-panel window produced for Tiffany Studios (1902-1932) by Agnes F. Northrop (1857-1953). The window panel, now in The Met Museum's American Wing, was commissioned by businesswoman and philanthropist Sarah Cochran to evoke the idyllic grounds of her grand estate, Linden Hall,...
$38.95 $45.00
The inspiration for the Frank Lloyd Wright Coonley Playhouse Earrings design is adapted from one of the many art glass windows in the Avery Coonley Playhouse, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright for Avery and Queen Coonley in 1912. Designed originally to appeal to children, each one of the designs is a unique abstract representation of elements seen in a parade:...