Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Bulletin of the Pennsylvania Museum, Vol. 5: July, 1907
Stained glass is pre-eminently a color art, an art almost exclusively ecclesiastical. A Window is formed of bits of colored glass which are cut into the shapes of faces, or figures, or robes, or canopies, or whatever you want and whatever the subject demands; then features are painted on the faces, folds on the robes, and so forth - not with color, but merely with brown shading; then, when this shading has been burnt into the glass in a kiln, the pieces are put together into a picture by means of grooved strips of lead, into which they fit (stained Glass Work. C W. Whall, p.
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