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.
$10.95 Flat Rate Ground Shipping eligible within the contiguous U.S.
$135.95 $171.00
This Frank Lloyd Wright Saguaro Metal 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...
$74.95 $120.00
This Frank Lloyd Wright Waterlilies Stained Glass, depicting flowers and lily pads floating in a tranquil pool, is adapted from an unrealized leaded stained glass window designed by Wright circa 1893-95. 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...
$49.95 $52.95
The Frank Lloyd Wright Waterlilies doormat, depicting flowers and lily pads floating in a tranquil pool, has a design adapted from an unrealized leaded stained glass window designed by Wright circa 1893-95. In this early design, the organic forms and repeating motifs display Wright’s commitment to the integration of nature translated into geometric form manifested in his architectural work. Constructed...
$47.95 $52.95
The Frank Lloyd Wright Saguaro Forms doormat features a design adapted from Saguaro Forms and Cactus Flowers, created by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1927 as part of his Liberty magazine cover studies. Originally considered too avant-garde, the design reflects Wright's mastery of abstraction, geometry, and asymmetry inspired by the desert landscape. Now one of his most celebrated works, it continues...