Louis Comfort Tiffany used drapery glass to create natural-looking magnolia petals and employed the lead lines as part of the window design, creatively incorporated as the twigs and branches of the tree. Tiffany designers, working from studies of flowers in various stages of bloom, took great care to render nature realistically.
These three leaded-glass window panels, c. 1885, graced the library of Tiffany’s 72nd Street home in New York City and later the dining room of his Long Island estate, Laurelton Hall, serving as a transition between indoors and outdoors bringing inside the flowering magnolias Tiffany loved so much.
Louis Comfort Tiffany, 1848-1933
Magnolia window panels
c. 1885
The Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art
Included: 4 luminaries, 4 LED candles and 4 Lithium batteries per package. Luminaries arrive flat and expand with water.
Dimensions: 6" X 6.5"
Materials: BPA Free Plastic
Color: White, Black, Orange. Based on an Original Louis C. Tiffany piece of art in collaboration with the Morse Musuem of American Art
Care: Rinse with water and dish soap. Leave open to dry, store flat.