Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Several other points can be considered that contradict the "cathedral glass flow" theory:
Hence, the relaxation period (characteristic flow time) of cathedral glasses would be even longer."
Gothic cathedral glass and leadlight windows adorned the building.
It was extended in 1930 and the windows were replaced with steel frames and tinted cathedral glass.
It is often called cathedral glass, but this has nothing to do with medieval cathedrals, where the glass used was hand-blown.
On 2 May 2008, again the cathedral glasses were strongly hit and damaged by the Nargis cyclone.
St. Andrew's was renovated c1900, the roof surface was replaced and new Cathedral glass installed.
Ceremonies and receptions are held in its Beaux-Arts court, which has a cathedral glass ceiling with all the majestic beauty of a church.
The term cathedral glass is sometimes applied erroneously to the windows of cathedrals as an alternative to the term stained glass.
Many of these churches were initially glazed with leadlight, often in pastel cathedral glass or Powell's cast quarries with impressed designs.
Its leadlight windows are in an unusual perpendicular design and utilise cathedral glass in the Arts and Crafts tradition.
Cathedral glass comes in a very wide variety of colors and surface textures including hammered, rippled, seedy, and marine textures.
Other ways include erection of walls, fences, screens, use of cathedral glass, partitions, by maintaining a distance, beside other ways.
A single piece of glass from the original window can be seen in the second of the cathedral glass windows above and to the right of these windows.
In their simplest form they typically depict birds and flowers in small panels, often surrounded with machine-made 'cathedral glass', which, despite what the name suggests, is pale-coloured and textured.
Cathedral glass is the name given commercially to monochromatic sheet glass, which is thin by comparison with slab glass, may be coloured and is textured on one side.
The centre of the pediment boasts a rose window, the largest of its kind in Denmark, composed of cathedral glass in yellow, red and green nuances supported by cames of lead.
The exterior became a forest of vertical stone pinnacles, stretching up into the vaults of heaven; the interior a mystic chiaroscuro in stone, gently illuminated by shafts of sunlight gloriously coloured by their transition through the cathedral glass.
This trend continued until World War II, the style evolving from Art Nouveau to Art Deco, which both employed a great variety of glass, including cathedral glass and opalescent glass, as well as bevelled glass.
The use of "cathedral glass", coloured but unfigured glass pending the donation of a pictorial window for the rose window is characteristic of Otago's 19th century churches, where donors were relatively few reflecting the generally "low church" sentiments of the place.
Cathedral glass has been used extensively in churches (often for non-pictorial windows) and for decorative glass in domestic and commercial buildings, both leaded and not, often in conjunction with drawn sheet glass and sometimes with decorative sections of beveled glass.
Other companies like Thatcher Glass Manufacturing Corp (later Anchor Glass Containers) which began manufacturing milk bottles in 1909, the American Bottle Company in 1905, the Streator Cathedral Glass Company in 1890, Owens-Illinois and others soon followed.