Item# KHJQFLWCP
$18.00 $15.95
The Frank Lloyd Wright Coonley Playhouse Jacquard Tea Towel features a both beautiful and elegant woven design that is adapted from the windows of the Avery Coonley House, Riverside, IL (1908-1912). The Avery Coonley House was designed for Avery and Queene Coonley. It is unlike Wright's early glass designs with their nature derivations. This design may have been inspired by a parade, the colored glass simulates a haphazard, yet controlled, arrangement of balloons, confetti and flags. The windows were the focal point of the playhouse, actually a kindergarten operated by Mrs. Coonley. Material: 100% cotton. Dimensions: 30" x 20". Machine wash cold with like colors and tumble dry low.
$49.95 $54.95
The Frank Lloyd Wright Colored Tree of Life Design Doormat is inspired by several variations of this design with its strong horizontal lines and planes in Wright’s Darwin D. Martin House. This doormat is constructed in coir fiber pressed into rubber base. The generous proportions of this mat are 30 inches by 18 inches. PLEASE NOTE: This item is ONLY...
$49.95 $54.95
The Frank Lloyd Wright Darwin D. Martin House Welcome Mat Doormat is inspired by the Pier Cluster Windows design in Wright’s Darwin D. Martin House. This doormat is constructed in coir fiber pressed into a rubber base. The generous proportions of this mat are 30 inches by 18 inches. PLEASE NOTE: This item is ONLY available with the "GROUND" shipment...
$47.95 $60.95
The Frank Lloyd Wright Waterlilies Design Colored Doormat is inspired by a Wright drawing for an unrealized window design. The graceful pattern depicts flowers and lily pads floating on a tranquil pool of water. Developed in association with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, this doormat is constructed in coir fiber pressed into rubber base. The generous proportions of this mat...
$49.95 $60.95
The Frank Lloyd Wright Saguaro Forms Doormat recreates 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 fire in the Arizona Biltmore and "Saguaro Forms" was selected from the Frank Lloyd Wright Archive...