
This is a custom made
kaleidoscope on a butterfly stand, set atop a mirror framed base. The uniqueness of the
60mm beveled lead crystal hanging below the butterfly complements the design beautifully.
You not only get the color as you view the kaleidoscope, but on a sunny day the walls
shine with lots of colorful rainbows. This piece was designed for, and given as a gift to
DOLLY PARTON, in remembrance of the song she recorded for her mother, "Coat of many
colors".

Click on
these two thumbnails to get a closer look at these two extraordinary pieces.

This panel is
called Reflection and was custom designed to be put in the back door of an old farmhouse
in Villard MN. At a size of 24" x 24" it was one of the most expensive panels
per sq. ft. I had ever done.
This pair of windows was designed as part
of a refurbishing project in one of the first big homes built in
Alexandria, MN.

This pair of uniquely
intricate panels was designed and installed in an old antique door that we had
refinished. They now reside in Glenwood, MN home.


Check out this
beautiful door by clicking on the left thumbnail, and then check out the detail of
the glass panels by clicking on the thumbnail on the right.
This panel is called "Juke Box Saturday Night",
reminiscent of the old 1950s Wurilitzer style juke box and was designed to add
a little pazaz in a basement recroom. It was framed in a light box and
installed on an interior wall and used as a mood light on the dance floor.
The Blooming Iris was designed and
commissioned for a couple in Mpls., MN.
In this three
dimension peace I have installed lights inside so as to act as a night light or to be used
as accent. The reflections on the floor are because the long side panels are mirror.
The front panel is a transparent panel I call "Lady in Blue" in a contemporary
design.
This panel was designed and built for, and donated to a
Rotary fund raiser. It was purchased by a local attorney in Alexandria MN.
The random broken pieces of glass in this panel were brought to
me by an elderly lady. She explained to me that she had retrieved the broken glass from
the long since deserted farm house she had lived in for many years. She wanted me to make
something out of the broken glass. I couldn't think of anything that would be more
meaningful to her than to merle frame the broken pieces as is to best engage her memory of
the old homestead. She loved it.