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Simply sign up to the House & Home myFT Digest -- delivered directly to your inbox. In 1858, William Morris, a 24-year-old architectural draughtsman with some family money, bought an acre of land ...
Red House is a striking brick building that was the former home to William Morris and his wife. (Image: National Trust Images/Andrew Butler) With its striking appearance, many windows and ...
To William Morris, ‘the most important production of art’ was ‘a beautiful House’, followed by ‘a beautiful Book’. His ideal home, realised at Red House in Bexleyheath, Kent, and Kelmscott Manor in ...
This stained glass window, depicting Love and Hate, was one of many designed by friends and family of William Morris throughout Red House. ImageCourtesy of Flickr user KotomiCreations (licensed ...
Red House, owned by the National Trust since 2003, was commissioned by Morris and designed by Philip Webb, a fellow founder of the 19th Century arts and crafts movement.
The outline of a complex sub-divided garden that could rewrite horticultural history has been uncovered at the Red House, former home of the philosopher, poet and artist William Morris. Semi ...
The National Trust has bought into Britain's Red revolution. Red House, an otherwise anonymous home built in suburban Bexleyheath, south-east London, in 1859, was the stylistic time-bomb that ...
You can visit a 19th century house which was the former home of William Morris and is still studied by architects today.