Edward Frampton (1845-1928)


Stained glass designer. Edward Reginald Frampton worked with Clayton and Bell in the late 1860s, and designed windows made by Heaton, Butler & Bayne. He was briefly in partnership with W.F. Dixon and Charles Hean in the mid-late 1870s. He had established his studio on Buckingham Palace Road, London by 1881. His work is especially plentiful in North Wales, and, given his huge west window at the Church of St John the Baptist in Chester, it appears that he probably worked in close association with the Chester architect John Douglas.

His son, also Edward Reginald Frampton, was also an artist, and designed a smaller number of windows.

The dates given for the artist in the Journal of the British Society of Master Glass-Painters obituary are at variance with other sources.




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  St Bartholemew and Gregory the Illuminator St Bartholemew and Gregory the Illuminator
artist: Edward Frampton
1896
Church of St Deiniol, Hawarden, Flintshire
north wall by entrance to Gladstone Chapel (window number: nIX)
  King David with St Twrog and Edmwnd Prys King David with St Twrog and Edmwnd Prys
artist: Edward Frampton
1896
Church of St Twrog, Maentwrog, Gwynedd
west end of the nave
Further reading

Martin Crampin, Attributing Edward Frampton windows (2017).

Alfred L. Wilkinson, 'Edward Frampton, 1850–1929, Master Glass-Painter' Journal of the British Society of Master Glass-Painters, vol. xi, no. 2 (1952–3), 70–1.

'Obituary: Edward Frampton' Journal of the British Society of Master Glass-Painters, vol. iii, no. 1 (1929), 45.





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