Borrowed Light: The Appeal of Interior Glass Doors and Windows, Shaker Edition
March 22, 2023 | by Jenor Ricafort
Years back, on a shoot at Canterbury Shaker Village in New Hampshire (see In the Dwelling House: 16 Design Ideas to Steal from the Shakers), the docent leading photographer Erin Little and me through the buildings pointed to a bank of glass windows.
The Shakers had many ways of making their interiors feel brighter and warmer through long, dark winters, she explained. Painting millwork in shades of sunny yellow or marigold was one. Another was slipping interior windows into walls, a way to carry light from room to room. The Shakers called it, she said, âborrowed light.â
The phrase has stuck with me ever since, and when we noticed an uptick in interior windows in projects all over, it seemed fitting: an intentional way of bringing in the light on dim days.
Take a look at a few favorite examples.
Above: Paris interior designer Marianne Evennou has a trademark way with color, but interior windows also appear frequently in her work, as Margot noted in The Ultimate First Apartment in Paris: A Brother and Sisterâs Shared Quarters Designed by Marianne Evennou. Photography by Gregory Timsit, courtesy of Marianne Evennou.
Above: Architectural glass at the top of the wall carries light through; photograph by Serena Eller, courtesy of Mondador and Studio Strato, from Ping Pong House: An Architectâs Own Playful but Serene 19th-Century House in Rome.
Above: Glass partitions between kitchen and dining area bring extra light into a small carriage house. Photograph courtesy of The Modern House from Subtle Colors in a Former Victorian Carriage House in Hackney.
Above: Another Marianne Evennou project. âThe eye needs to be able to escape,â the designer once told us of her predilection for interior windows. Here is her own work space with see-through partitions; see Home at the Office: Designer Marianne Evennouâs Paris Work Quarters and Pied-Ă -Terre.
Above: A custom iron and glass door divides kitchen from living area in this Rome project by Studio Strato. Photograph by Serena Eller, courtesy of Mondadori and Studio Strato, from Roma: An Artful Twentieth-Century House in Italy in an Of-the-Moment Palette.
Above: In fixing up a delipidated Georgian row house, artist, illustrator, and âserial house remodelerâ Russell Loughlan salvaged a circa-1960s glass-paneled wall around the kitchen and painted it in Farrow & Ballâs Picture Gallery Red. Photograph courtesy of Russell Loughlan. (Read much more about the project in The House on Dolphin Street: A Remodeling Tale of Tenacity and High Style and Kitchen of the Week: A Characterful Kitchen in Kent, England, from an Under-the-Radar Design Savant.)
Above: Interior clerestory windows maximize natural light in this redone loft; photograph by Rory Gardiner, courtesy of Mark Lewis Interior Design, from A âModern Victorianâ Loft in London by Mark Lewis.
Above: Glass windows and doors divide spaces in the eclectic Amsterdam house of stylist, cook, and author Helma Bongenaar. (There are seven glass doors surrounding the living area, given to the couple by friends in exchange for a dinnerâone per courseâaccording to The Guardian.) Photograph by Helma Bongenaar (@helmabongenaar) from Dutch Light: A Collectorâs Vintage-Filled Home in a Former Tavern in Amsterdam.
Above: Another trick of interior windows? Never feeling that a room is closed off. Here, bright windows allow a view from the kitchen in A Moveable Feast: Two French Shop Ownersâ Whimsical, Always-Changing House in Reims. Photograph courtesy of Nomibis.
Above: A vintage, reclaimed window separates the kitchen in a guesthouse in Reims, France. Photograph courtesy of Les Penates Reims; for more, take a look at French Lessons: A Designer and an Antiquaryâs Remodeled Guesthouses in Reims.
Above: Studio Oink use interior windows in their work often, such as this partial glass wall, actually inspired by turn-of-century Parisian buildings, in A Luminous, Euro-Style Row House in Washington, DC, Courtesy of Studio Oink. Photography by Matthew Williams for Remodelista; styling by Alexa Hotz.
Above: And Elle Kemp and Martin Gane, the couple behind UK-based firm Ridge & Furrow, added room partitions made from reclaimed bead board and paned glass windows throughout their own barn conversion; they, too, help to disperse the light. Photograph courtesy of Ridge & Furrow from If a House Were a Well-Worn Coat: A Design Coupleâs Snug, Earthy, Reclaimed House in the UK.
For more trends weâre tracking of late, take a look at:
- Trend Alert: The Return of the Ruffle
- Trend Alert: Hand-Painted Details All Over
- Trend Alert: Tiger Beat, Chinese New Year Edition
N.B.: Featured photograph by Serena Eller, courtesy of Mondadori and Studio Strato, from Roma: An Artful Twentieth-Century House in Italy in an Of-the-Moment Palette.
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