Item# CH33359MR18
$390.00 $334.95
The Arts and Crafts Innes Floor Lamp is 64.8'' tall and shade width 18''. This lamp is handcrafted with 272 pieces of high quality stained glass, and is supported by a 60'' tall resin base coated in an antique bronze patina. Each example of the lamp will have unique aspects as differences are characteristic of hand crafted glass panels or lamps. The glass shade is constructed using the "copper foil" technique, a method made popular by Louis Comfort Tiffany that involves wrapping the pieces of glass with copper foil and soldering them together alone the length of seams. Takes two 100 watt max E26 Type A bulbs (not included).
This item can only be purchased for shipment within the contiguous United States. Delivery to a P.O. Box is not available on this item. Please note: coupon discount offers, expedited shipping, and gift wrap are not applicable.
$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,...
$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,...
$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...
$795.00
The original design for this Frank Lloyd Wright wall sconce lighting was for the interior of the Fredrick C. Robie House (1908) in Chicago, Illinois. Lighting always played an important role of Wright's architectural schemes. Wright would often incorporate wall sconce lamps that followed motifs of the interior theme. The form of these sconces is a sphere framed by a...