The Old Norse
had a word for the simple openings in the walls of buildings that let
light in and arrows out -vindauga.
It translates
as `wind eye' the penalty obviously for anyone peering too long through
those draughty slits.
Almost 1,000
years later, vindauga had evolved into 'window' and arrow slits into
the classic sash window - a simple yet weatherproof closure offering
the perfect balance between illumination and ventilation. and for which
Mighton Products today specialises in providing a comprehensive
range of sash window ironmongery.
But for the
skills of London-based master joiner Thomas Kinward, it might have taken
longer for the development of the box framed sash window. In 1669 or
thereabouts, he was working in the Royal apartments at Whitehall Palace.
His employer, Sir Christopher Wren asked him to put 'a line and pulley
to the window in ye Queen's Stoole room.'It was the earliest recorded
specification of a fully developed sash window. Whether Kinward thought
up the characteristic counter-balancing feature or whether it was Wren
himself, is undecided. But for two centuries, the sash window reigned
supreme.
By the time
Anne was crowned in 1702, the traditional but inconvenient English casement
window with leaded lights had all but been abandoned in favour of the
sash that became the hallmark of Georgian architecture. Early versions
of the sash's classic arrangement of two lights independently held in
a box frame, were single hung; the upper light was fixed, only the lower
light was able to slide in the frame. By the mid 18th Century double-hung
sashes were supreme. Counter balancing was the hallmark of the era but
although `sash' derives from the French word `chassis', the French hadn't
figured out the counter-balancing innovation and held the lower sash
in place with a swivel block.
Each light
had its own cord and counter-balance weight or 'mouse' running within
the hollow frame of the whole window. Each light could slide independently
within the frame yet remain in an open position without props, pegs
or wedges. The early sashes held their small and expensive panes of
glass with thick glazing bars.Developments in the manufacture of Crown
Glass brought larger panes cut from large glass discs, sometimes up
to 3ft in diameter. The thick centre, where the blower's rod was attached
and which today is mimicked by the bull's eye panes, was discarded or
sold cheaply for use at the back of the house. With larger panes, glazing
bars became thinner, more intricately moulded and the classic six-over-six
pane design became the norm.
The Victorian
passion for things medieval revived gothic architecture and ostentatious
buildings.Mass production made ornamentation cheap and builders added
pattern book styles without hesitation. sash windows became highly decorated
with leaded lights, latticework,and ornate stone and wood tracery.
The Victorians
played the field with four,eight or twelve- pane sashes. the finest
would have been 16-pane double hung sashes that lent themselves to the
larger window openings and bay fronts. More than any other component,
the size, shape and number of windows created the essential style and
rhythm of these buildings - both inside and out. Vertically- proportioned
sash windows provided comfortable natural lighting conditions and avoided
excessive glare. A careful graduation in window size from street level
not only intensified the effect of perspective but allowed more light
into the more important rooms on lower floors.
Today at
Mighton Products we see windows as relevant to the personality
of a workman's terrace or the shopkeeper's villa as to the cleric's
manse and the gentry's hall. However,the doors and windows that created
this architectural impact and historic character are threatened. Conservationists
fear the legacy developed by the proportions,detailing, and materials
of windows and doors is being lost by the insensitive replacement with
modern designs.
The offenders?
Misinformation,financial incentives to modernise old houses and door-to-door
sales campaigns by home`improvement' companies.
Mighton Products
doesn't denounce all PVCu and aluminium products. The key word is `inappropriate'.
Generally new systems do not match the detailing of traditional windows.
False glazing bars and stuck-on lead look nothing like the real thing
and often are a crude parody. In many cases, simple repairs at relatively
low cost will extend the life of a door and window. Local surgery is
usually a far better bet than costly wholesale replacement. An overhaul
to timber windows coupled with draught proofing, using Mighton Products
sash window ironmongery, will provide a better financial return and
reduce the old problem of `wind eye' more than double glazing.
On this Website
we give details of the extensive range of sash window hardware developed
by Mighton Products for timber sash window requirements leading
into the 21st century.It includes for both new and renovation work.
Information is also given on the special Mighton services to give customers
speedy access to product information, current prices and simplified
ordering systems.