Osler and Farady Wall Light
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Description
Most of the glass on a Georgian chandelier will be cut all over. There is usually very little glass that is left plain (uncut). The cuts are produced with a flat cutting wheel and are distinctively shallow. The arms are solid (not hollow) and usually have flattened sides with thumb cuts above and below these. The candle sits into a socket (candletube) that is formed into the end of the arm. A "grease pan" slips over the candletube to collect the wax. The earliest chandeliers had neither canopies nor dressings. The receiver plate is a solid plate of brass with square or round holes into which the arms locate. Each arm has a correspondingly shaped pot (fixed with plaster) to attach it to the receiver plate. Metalwork is usually gilt finished, sometimes with silver plated tubes inside the glass stempieces to disguise the iron shaft.
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Osler and Farady Wall Light
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