In the storey above the row are eight tall windows, each with four leaded lights, above which is a string course.
12.
By 1911 the Tarrant Works covered c . and included workshops for joinery, wrought iron and leaded lights, a stonemason's yard and a timber mill with drying sheds.
13.
The hall is noted for the fine oak panelling, of 15th century date and added in 1939 to the reception hall, dining room and the deep oak framed leaded light windows.
14.
Pinnacles, gables, crenellated towers, stained glass, plain glass and leaded light windows harmonised in a testimony to Norton's visionary skills and balance, and Plucknett's craftmanship.
15.
Allt-y-Bela was built as a hall house in the mid-15th century, originally as a traditional, single-storey, cruck-frame building with wooden mullions and leaded lights.
16.
This style of bookcase was either made in a Dickensian period, or harkens back to the style of such times, so they're most commonly glazed with a leaded light and small panes of glass.
17.
His houses are renowned for their use of quality materials such as hand-made tiles and leaded lights, oak window frames and doors with wrought iron fittings yet often remain relatively modestly proportioned and low-key rather than showy and grand.
18.
Possibly the questioner means a leaded light ( i . e . not coloured ) such as that used in the Clock Tower, Palace of Westminster, where there are pictures, but I doubt whether any clocks were made like that 400 years ago.
19.
Traditional green oak-framed buildings are designed to settle with time as the oak seasons and warps, lime mortar rather than Portland cement is used for its elastic properties and glazing will often employ small leaded lights which can accept movement more readily than larger panes.
20.
He also wrote that " the house [ has ] much old paneling and leaded lights ( even my goats have leaded lights in their stable . ) ", and he said that the gardens were tended by a pensioner who " came with the property ".