Preservation Brief 33: Historic Stained Glass

I find that all of the National Park Service’s Preservation Briefs are interesting, and several have been especially useful in my own home repair projects; take, for instance, brief #33, which I had reason to consult this past month. It’s a general primer on historic stained glass, written specifically for those of us with stained glass windows or panels in our old homes and the need to either maintain or repair them. Neal Vogel & Rolf Achilles‘ essay on historic stained glass windows is full of extensive information on history, dating, identifying and documenting, composition (even going a bit into chemistry and other materials sciences issues), ways to halt deterioration, tips on photographing stained glass and various repair techniques. If you have stained glass in your home, you need to read this. And, like all the other briefs, it’s full of useful technical information but not written in an overly-technical style; it’s accessible, readable and (as always) interesting.

2 Comments on “Preservation Brief 33: Historic Stained Glass

  1. Hewn,
    Thanks for pointing out preservation brief #33. It has been a while since I browsed the NPS briefs. I have some stained glass windows in need of repair, so this will be good reading.

  2. Preservation of Historic Stained Glass

    I came across a blog entry on Hewn Hammered that led me to a very interesting article by the U.S. National Park Service about historic stained glass: specifically stained glass in old homes and how to date it, photograph it, clean, preserve, and…

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