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Item# MG116J
$36.00
The Bathing Beauty Dish in Jadeite from Mosser Glass comes in the same fun colors for which Mosser is famous. A delightful soap dish for the bathroom, or when filled with condiments, candy, nuts, and all sorts of other snacks, belongs anywhere. Length 9". Ht: 3”.
The origins of Mosser Glass go back more than half a century when Orie Mosser was the plant manager of the Cambridge Glass Company in Cambridge, Ohio. His son Thomas began working there as a teenager, learning the trade from the ground up. When Cambridge Glass closed in 1954, he decided to continue in the glass business building a company of his own. In 1959, he was finally able to begin manufacturing glassware. By 1971 he established Mosser Glass with a product line that blends new designs with timeless classics acquired from Viking, L.G. Wright and of course, Cambridge Glass. They are now the last hand-pressed glass manufacturer in the United States.
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$2,500.00
The original conception of the Taliesin 2 Floor Lamp was in 1933, when Frank Lloyd Wright converted the existing gymnasium of his Hillside Home School, located in Spring Green, Wisconsin, into a theater. He designed lighting pendants composed of rectangular light boxes and plywood shields to be suspended from the tall ceiling. These fixtures proved to be a lighting innovation,...
$1,250.00
The original conception of the Taliesin 3 Table Lamp was in 1933, when Frank Lloyd Wright converted the existing gymnasium of his Hillside Home School, located in Spring Green, Wisconsin, into a theater. He designed lighting pendants composed of rectangular light boxes and plywood shields to be suspended from the tall ceiling. These fixtures proved to be a lighting innovation, providing...
$850.00
Frank Lloyd Wright originally designed the wooden table lamp for the interior of his own home, Taliesin, built in Spring Green, Wisconsin in 1911. Engaged in a solid base, the shaft of the lamp supports a square shade in a design that evokes the sheltering roof of a pagoda, one of the architect's signature tectonic forms. Its soft, diffused light renders...
$795.00
Frank Lloyd Wright designed this wooden wall sconce lamp for the interior of the Fredrick C. Robie House (1908) in Chicago, Illinois. Lighting always played an important role of Wright's architectural schemes. He would often incorporate wall sconces that followed motifs in the interior theme. The form of these sconces is a sphere framed by a cross, framed by a...