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.
$78.95 $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...
$17.95 $22.00
The Louis Sullivan Skylight Tapestry Placemat 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...
$63.95 $80.00
The Louis Sullivan Skylight Tapestry Pillow is inspired by a window designed by Louis Henry Sullivan. for 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...
$59.95 $80.00
The Louis Sullivan Skylight Tapestry Pillow is inspired by a window designed by Louis Henry Sullivan for 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...