Our doors and windows : how to decorate them . No. No. 16. Q SCREEN reaching from floor to ceiling may be introduced (as in the illus-J tration on this page), with doorway, dividing a room which is too large to becosey, and making a quiet nook. If for a studio, the side lights may all bedarkened with this decorative Lattice, and the light admitted from the top, asthis is most easily arranged for in those rooms which are built out at the back onthe ground floor. If the outlook be disagreeable, the window may be improvedby being screened off with lattice blinds.—From Art Amateur, ATew York.
Our doors and windows : how to decorate them . No. No. 16. Q SCREEN reaching from floor to ceiling may be introduced (as in the illus-J tration on this page), with doorway, dividing a room which is too large to becosey, and making a quiet nook. If for a studio, the side lights may all bedarkened with this decorative Lattice, and the light admitted from the top, asthis is most easily arranged for in those rooms which are built out at the back onthe ground floor. If the outlook be disagreeable, the window may be improvedby being screened off with lattice blinds.—From Art Amateur, ATew York. Ql RCHITECTS are now watching with much interest the possibilities of/? Moorish fret-work, which is used with rare effect over windows, archesand folding doors. Indeed, it is more and more necessary for the architect tobear well in mind the decorative features of a house when arranging its interior,for the one bears a close and tangent relation to the other. At a residencerecently visited by us, the door openings of the parlor and library have be
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectinteriordecoration