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  2. Sacramento Masonic Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacramento_Masonic_Temple

    Two door panels, with glass above and solid metal below, slide behind the same styled outer door to access the cab. Its cab still displays the original open cage frame and meshwork. The outer frame of the elevator contains a cast bronze header of the same design on each floor.

  3. Autonomous stained glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autonomous_Stained_Glass

    The term "stained glass" commonly precedes "window" and is thus linked to architecture both linguistically and conceptually. The autonomous work is more like a painting than a stained glass window, and is a non-traditional use of the medium. [1] One critic somewhat pejoratively calls non-architectural stained glass "uncommissioned panels."

  4. Peter Mollica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Mollica

    Peter Mollica was a central figure, perhaps the earliest, of a generation of West Coast stained glass artists who emerged in the late 1960s and early ’70s. During his Massachusetts apprenticeship, Mollica was inspired by the contemporary German architectural glass he discovered when reading Robert Sowers’ Stained Glass: An Architectural Art ...

  5. Stained glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stained_glass

    Stained glass windows in houses were particularly popular in the Victorian era and many domestic examples survive. In their simplest form they typically depict birds and flowers in small panels, often surrounded with machine-made cathedral glass which, despite what the name suggests, is pale-coloured and textured. Some large homes have splendid ...

  6. Medieval stained glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_stained_glass

    Medieval stained glass is the colored and painted glass of medieval Europe from the 10th century to the 16th century. For much of this period stained glass windows were the major pictorial art form, particularly in northern France, Germany and England, where windows tended to be larger than in southern Europe (in Italy, for example, frescos were more common).

  7. Tristram and Isoude stained glass panels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tristram_and_Isoude...

    The 13 small [1] stained-glass panels depict scenes from the story of Sir Tristram and la Belle Isoude as told in Sir Thomas Malory's Morte d'Arthur. [2] [3] [4] They were commissioned by Walter Dunlop, a Bradford textile merchant, for a new music room to be built at Harden Grange, his house near Bingley, Yorkshire, and were designed and executed in 1862 by Morris, Marshall, Faulker & Co., the ...