$9.95 Flat Rate Shipping! | See Details
Item# MGV007
$182.00 $129.95
Our striking new 20.5" Prairie Window Art Glass Panel is hand made in the USA with a color palette of Dark Moss Green, Burnt Sienna, Goldenrod and Pale Yellow. Ht: 20.5" W: 14". On this glass panel, enamel colors are individually applied to a single sheet of tempered glass giving each panel unique aspects of both color and texture. The glass is then framed with a patinated metal came and comes complete with mounting chain. This stained glass panel can only be purchased for shipment within the contiguous United States.
$9.95 Flat Rate Ground Shipping eligible within the contiguous U.S.
Gift wrap not available.
Expedited shipment not available.
$87.50 $123.00
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...
$100.00 $126.00
This Frank Lloyd Wright Tree of Life art glass pattern is found in several variations in Frank Lloyd Wright's Darwin D. Martin House. The four-pot variation is found on the central landing of the Martin House stairway. This exquisite adaptation of the Tree of Life stained glass window is framed with a copper patina frame for an antique feel and is...
$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...
$137.50 $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...