Item# WALVH05
$40.00 $29.95
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.
$39.95
The Frank Lloyd Wright Saguaro Forms Comfort Mat reduces stress on your joints and back with an anti-fatigue mat patterned with one of his one of Wright's most popular designs. Saguaro Forms 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...
$47.95 $52.95
The William Morris Strawberry Thief Arts & Crafts Doormat is part of the Victoria and Albert Museum Collection, and is inspired by one of the most iconic works of the 19th century by the great pioneer of the British Arts and Crafts Movement, William Morris (1834-96), who based this design on the thrushes he saw stealing strawberries from the grounds of Kelmscott...
$37.95 $50.00
The Japanese Aranami Wave Collection 9.75" Serving Bowl features a wave pattern repeated over a deep blue background, a motif iconic to traditional Japanese design. This beautifully crafted bowl is perfect for holding fruit or use as a serving bowl, but has the presence to be simply displayed as is in your home. : 9.75" diameter x 3" height. Microwave...
$35.95 $40.00
The Bathing Beauty Dish in Crystal from Mosser Glass is a delightful soap dish for the bathroom, or when filled with condiments, candy, nuts, and all sorts of other snacks, belongs anywhere. Length 9". Ht: 3”. The origins of Mosser Glass go back more than half a century when Orie Mosser was the plant manager of the Cambridge Glass Company...