Browse Items (102 total)

Sort by Title [A-Z] | [Z-A]

Bracket of pinnacle, with moulding comprising: free-standing fillet, free-standing fillet, free-standing fillet.

Moulded frame of Arma Christi panel. Moulding comprises, from inside edge: hollow chamfer, hollow chamfer, scroll, angle fillet.

Piscina in south wall of choir, the simple moulding of the jamb and arch comprises from intrados: chamfer, hollow, chamfer.

Mullion of tracery in canopied tomb niche. Moulding comprises: central fillet flanked at either side by hollow, quadrant, right-angled rebate, quadrant, hollow.

Arches of rood screen, moulding from soffit comprises: quadrant, fillet, quarter-hollow, fillet, right-angled rebate, fillet, ogee, right-angled rebate, ogee, fillet, hollow chamfer, quadrant, ogee, fillet. Extensive use of ogees here, a late Gothic moulding rarely found in Ireland. When found it is often in association with very high quality work.

Jamb of tomb niche, larger rolls topped by capitals and bases. Moulding from inner face comprises: large roll, hollow, roll, hollow, roll, hollow, large roll, hollow, roll, hollow, roll - this roll runs into the flat wall surface. Few of these western tomb niches have separate straight jambs with shafts provided with capitals and bases - this…

Jamb of sedilia, moulding from intrados comprises: hollow, roll-and-fillet, flat surface, roll-and-fillet, chamfer. The hood, from the outer edge, comprises: roll with frontal fillet, hollow flanked by fillets, quadrant. Few hollows flanked by fillets occur in Irish architecture, in England, Morris sees them as the progenitor of the casement -…

Door in south nave wall, jamb and arch moulding comprises: hollow chamfer, spike, hollow chamfer.

Jamb and arch moulding of tomb niche, from intrados moulding comprises chamfer, quadrant, hollow chamfer, broken quadrant.

Tracery bar of tomb niche. Moulding comprises: centre frontal roll flanked at either side by hollow chamfer, quadrant. They rear of the tracery bar is rectangular.

Door jamb and arch moulding comprising: hollow chamfer, quadrant. The door was inserted by Archbishop Hugh Inge in 1523 and restored in the eighteenth century. Fragments of window found during recent excavations have the same scale moulding and are likely to associated with the door. The door is unusual in that it has a three centred head.

Door jamb, arch and hood of the detatched castle chapel. Jamb and arch moulding from intrados comprise: hollow chamfer, right-angled rebate, quadrant. The hood, which is placed at some distance from the jamb, comprises from outside in: frontal fillet, hollow chamfer, right-angled rebate, hollow chamfer.

Jamb arch and hood moulding. From intrados, jamb moulding comprises:quadrant, hollow chamfer, quadrant. The splayed jamb and hood are separated by a small hollow. The hood, from outside in, comprises: angle-fillet, angle-fillet, angle-fillet, angle-fillet.

Jamb and arch moulding of east window, the intrados includes a glass groove and the moulding running along the chamfer plane comprises: hollow chamfer, quadrant.

Hood moulding of tomb niche. From upper face down and inward the moulding comprises frontal fillet, quadrant, hollow chamfer, flat surface.

Hood mould of tomb niche, from outside in the moulding comprises: frontal fillet, fillet, roll-and-fillet, fillet, hollow, flat surface running into wall.

Tracery bar from reconstructed tomb niche. Moulding comprises frontal fillet flanked at either side by hollow chamfer, quadrant and hollow chamfer. The rear of the tracery bar is rectangular.

My Gothic Past Login | Register

© 2024 Trinity College Dublin