Flora Jamieson's studio in Bridport, Dorset, may not actually be outside, but it's hard to imagine another space that does a better job of bringing the outside in. Wherever you look in her light and airy whitewashed workshop, it's a fleeting moment in nature that catches your eye. Here, for example, is a little wren that has just landed on a willow branch, where it has spied a juicy caterpillar. While over there sits a tiger moth on a hawkbit while a tiny ladybird creeps by. Elsewhere, there are frogs and dragonflies, lily pads and tangles of wildflowers, the familiar sights of any early summer stroll along a towpath in England, all captured on a piece of glass where Flora has painstakingly painted them.
"To me, this is what stained glass does so well,' Flora explains. 'It captures that snapshot when the English countryside is at its peak, those moments in nature where everything is perfect. It's that spring day in May when everything is bursting forth, before it all starts looking a bit past it; or that moment when the rose is in bloom before the petals start to wilt and fall off. It's a way of bringing those outside moments into the house and of holding on to them."
Flora has spent the last 20-odd years perfecting her art of painting such scenes on to glass roundels, or rendering them in stained and leaded glass, to create enchanting door and window panels for people's homes. They are works of art that bridge the space between inside and outside and capture rays of sunlight that light up the colours, splashing them onto surrounding walls and ceilings.
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Denne historien er fra June 2024-utgaven av Homes & Antiques.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Lisa Coppin
The Cotswold Company’s chief creative officer shares the pieces that mean so much to her
TRAVEL
Six of the best pineta, plus a festive trip to Covent Garden. Review of The Orange, Belgravia by Katie Pike, travel stories
OLD SHEFFIELD PLATE
Stumbled upon by chance, this ingenious material was a more affordable option than solid silver, and well-preserved examples are particularly desirable today
Merrily on high
Summoning servants since the 1700s, bell boards create instant English country-house style (even if you don't have any servants). Emma Longstaff dons her pinny
Let it snow
Nostalgic, magical and highly collectable, snow globes are curious objects of wonder that never fail to instil joy
Velvet Crush
Once the preserve of the wealthy, velvet finally touched all levels of society, thanks to advances in its production process
Celebrating in the Stable
Antiques dealer Julia von Hülsen specialises in Gustavian pieces - all of which look perfectly placed in her German home
THE SHOW MUST GO ON
Victorian toy theatres charming and exquisitely designed miniature worlds have inspired theatre royalty for decades. Today, the tradition is being kept alive by a small but talented network of makers
NICHOLAS LEES
The ceramic artist talks to Dominique Corlett about new ways of working with clay and blurring the edges of solid objects
Candy CHRISTMAS
Pastel hues, vintage decorations and bowls of sweet treats: the festive run-up is gloriously joyful at Bettina Færgeman's historic Copenhagen apartment, where there's an emphasis on entertaining...