If you haven’t commented here before, your first comment will be held for MaryAnn’s approval. This is an anti-spam, anti-troll, anti-abuse measure. If your comment is not spam, trollish, or abusive, it will be approved, and all your future comments will post immediately. (Further comments may still be deleted if spammy, trollish, or abusive, and continued such behavior will get your account deleted and banned.)
If you’re logged in here to comment via Facebook and you’re having problems, please see this post.
PLEASE NOTE: The many many Disqus comments that were missing have mostly been restored! I continue to work with Disqus to resolve the lingering issues and will update you asap.
subscribe
notify of
4 Comments
oldest
newest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
view all comments
LaSargenta
LaSargenta
Wed, Oct 30, 2013 12:21pm

Nope, just the cheapest possible installation method for “art glass”, also known as stained glass. No difficult cuts. The lead channel is straight, quick solders at the joints. Mostly looks like relative inexpensive glass, too. (The ex made stained glass windows, very nice ones, and I picked up a lot from him.)

RogerBW
RogerBW
reply to  LaSargenta
Wed, Oct 30, 2013 2:49pm

Still, it looks as though there’s at least some red in there, which isn’t cheap even if it’s flash glass.

LaSargenta
LaSargenta
reply to  RogerBW
Wed, Oct 30, 2013 3:39pm

Yeah, that’s why I said “mostly”. I love having even crap stained glass to see light through, so I’m sure this made it nice inside; it’s just that there’s lots of ways to make it simple but more interesting. You can still have all straight cuts and make it a lot prettier with diamonds at each intersection…for instance…the big pieces would be 8-sided, an irregular octagon.

bronxbee
bronxbee
Wed, Oct 30, 2013 2:34pm

seems a shame that the building is abandoned. looks like it has some lovely architectural details.