Item# B63565
$79.95
15% savings today on select designs by Blomus with code BLFIFTEEN.
The Blomus Navetta Parmesan Cheese Grater with Bowl is a stainless steel grater with a plastic rim. Its shape is great for comfortable handling, and the flat bottom helps it stay firmly in place on the table. The freshly grated cheese falls into the polished stainless steel bowl and can be sprinkled over pasta, risottos, or salads without needing any other utensil. Dimensions: 7.6" x 2.75" x 4".
Founded in 1961 and rooted in the German tradition of exceptional quality and highly skilled craftsmanship, Blomus is a fourth generation family run company that has built its success on a firm belief in honesty of materials, passion of approach, and purity of shape.
$74.95 $120.00
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...
$79.95 $86.00
The design of this Art Nouveau Spring Floral Tapestry Table Runner is based on an Arts & Crafts stained glass window. The design depicts a flower, springing up from its bulb through the surface of the ground to blossom in the sunlight with a sophisticated earth tone colorway. Each woven tapestry runner measures 76"x13.5". Cotton/polyester/acrylic blend fabric. Care instructions: Dry clean for best results. Made in...
$79.95 $86.00
The design of this Sullivan Table Runner is based on a window in the National Farmer's Bank, Owatonna, Minnesota, 1908, designed by Louis Henry Sullivan, with decorative elements by George Elmslie. It was the first of Sullivan's "jewel box" bank designs. A design from an important historic architectural building, brought to life for today’s modern homes with extraordinary weaving and...
$79.95 $86.00
The Louis Sullivan Skylight Tapestry Table Runner is inspired by a window designed by Louis Henry Sullivan. The window is from a branch of the Farmers Merchant & Union Bank, 1919. For a young Frank Lloyd Wright, his years working under Louis Sullivan, February of 1888 to June of 1893, undoubtedly shaped his design philosophy. Wright, who rarely acknowledged any direct influences called Sullivan his “Lieber...