. English ironwork of the XVIIth & XVIIIth centuries; an historical & analytical account of the development of exterior smithcraft. DOIS Q iSX h So OS aw> s ii d •§ 9. Oh O X m o> M ao HtnH > X. oo < ~ a «l <uo Huj £S The Work of Warren lOI acanthus, and beyond on each side is a tange of arroWrailings terminating in handsome pilasters. The fine interior gates in some ofthe colleges do not fall within the scopeof the present volume. Two similarly rich gates are probablyby the same hand, though perhaps alittle later in date. One of these wasat Chiswick, brought, as Mr. PheneSpiers
. English ironwork of the XVIIth & XVIIIth centuries; an historical & analytical account of the development of exterior smithcraft. DOIS Q iSX h So OS aw> s ii d •§ 9. Oh O X m o> M ao HtnH > X. oo < ~ a «l <uo Huj £S The Work of Warren lOI acanthus, and beyond on each side is a tange of arroWrailings terminating in handsome pilasters. The fine interior gates in some ofthe colleges do not fall within the scopeof the present volume. Two similarly rich gates are probablyby the same hand, though perhaps alittle later in date. One of these wasat Chiswick, brought, as Mr. PheneSpiers has now ascertained, from LordHeathfields house at Turnham Green,and quite recently to Devonshire House,Piccadilly (Plate xxxiv), and the otheris at Clandon Park and believed by itspossessor to have come from gates are practically alniost re-plicas, but the former has an ellipticaland the other a round arch top. Thosebrought from Chiswick have wickets, andat Clandon (Plate xxxv) there are rail-ings on either side (p. 230). Both areof plain bars with wide lock-rail formedof scrolls within circles, a fringe aboveand arrow-pointed dog-bars square quatrefoil panel on each side
Size: 1260px × 1983px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpub, booksubjectarchitecture