Project Development

Chapel of St. Nicholas – rose tinted glasses?


St. Nicholas - Be Ye Kind One to Another GIF.gifToday afforded me a moment to call in on the Chapel of St. Nicholas in order to compare my rendering of Be Ye Kind One to Another with the installation itself.

The concerns I had about the darkness of my image were well founded, and interestingly I had again oversaturated the reds and browns (as was the case with the Harris Manchester College Chapel light Courage).  Perhaps there is some truth to the  rose tinted glasses idiom?!

Such changes were quite easy to correct as was some fine detail in the colouring of the text and punctuation.  The animated GIF to the left demonstrates these subtle changes in a 2-second cycle (but does sacrifice quality):

There is a lot of quality loss in a GIF, so below is a JPEG of the final re-edited image:

St. Nicholas - Be Ye Kind One to Another v2 (low res).jpg

Be Ye Kind One to Another (Henry Holiday, 1901)

Project Development

Contemporary Tiles animated


While being creative with Henry Holiday’s glasswork, I was keen to see if there were any other ways that I could put to use the concept… here’s one:

Contemporary Tiles

Project Development

Designing New Glass


In mid-2020, the Chapel of St. Nicholas will undergo much needed refurbishment.  Ostensibly this will be no more than a deep clean and re-paint, but it will see the existing vinyl flooring replaced with something more fitting and an attempt to improve the acoustics of this rather dead space (acoustically speaking).

At the West End, below a mezzanine layer, there are three plain glass windows in  a rather bleak area of the chapel.  Having photographed an number of the stained glass windows within the chapel, I have been approached with regard to producing a series of three windows to replace the plain glass.  These would have to fit harmoniously within the chapel and have a design that is contemporaneous with the pre-existing Henry Holiday windows.

Frustratingly, the windows are landscape in nature – indeed, panoramic in aspect ratio, with a width of about 150cm and a height just under 50cm.  However, with thirteen other stained glass windows on-site, there is plenty of assorted grisaille and rinceau designs upon which to base the work.

The first vidimus borrows components from the Chapel of St Nicholas as well as Dorneywood House, the country home of the Chancellor of the Exchequer and former home of the 137th pupil at Summerfield (in which the Chapel of St Nicholas is located).

615 - Chapel of St Nicholas - DCP Glass

Dominic Price (2019) Vidimus of the proposed central West Window

To have three windows produced using traditional methods would be eye-wateringly expensive.  However, a sympathetic solution can be achieved using digital ceramic printing onto safety-toughened glass – a rare process with Washington Art Glass being the only UK practitioners.

The Architect has now received the vidimus, and if approved, must supply the precise dimensions of the glass (including the necessary margins).  This may result in a minor change in aspect ratio, but my design is such that it can absorb quite significant change (if necessary).  I will then start work on a design that will be shared by the other two windows.

Project Development

My work used for fundraising


The upcoming refurbishment of the Chapel of St Nicholas is being funded in by donation.  To help raise awareness of the project, as well as to generate some funds, I was approached regarding one of their fundraising ideas.  They planned to produce a high quality, double-skin umbrella: the outside looking smart and corporate, with an unexpected, sophisticated lining linked to the beautiful chapel that is both contemporary and eye-catching.

The design below is the montage I created from 144 photographs of the Henry Holiday stained glass within the chapel: reinterpreting 100+ year old pre-Raphaelite glass into an abstract, contemporary design.

12x12 composition (low res)

Dominic Price (2019) Abstract Quarries [Henry Holiday – Chapel of St Nicholas]

The umbrella has gone to production, available in two variants: a small folding umbrella and the larger golf umbrella below:

615 - Umbrella 02615 - Umbrella 01

The design was warmly received and the pre-production samples exceeded the expectations of the fundraisers.  I am certainly very pleased with the results – it is a use of my work that I had never anticipated.  As it was a charitable project, I made no charges for my work, but was delighted to be given one of the golf umbrellas as a small ‘thank you’.

615 - Umbrella sale


UPDATE: 10 December, 2010

The first batch was comparatively small (100 units) in order to test the water.  These sold out in a matter of days, so a larger second batch was ordered, which were delivered today and 30% were sold by the end of the day!

The design is also to be used in the production of drinks coasters for the reception rooms within Summer Fields.

Project Development

Designing New Glass – update


615 - Chapel of St Nicholas - DCP Glass

Dominic Price (2019) Vidimus of the proposed central West Window

The upcoming renovation and refurbishment of the Chapel of St Nicholas allowed my the opportunity to design a replacement for the central of the three plain glass windows, discussed here.  My original idea for the outer two windows was the production of a simple, complimenting design.  However, as we approach Remembrance Sunday and thoughts turn to those who lost their lives in conflict, I was inspired to propose an something more fitting: within the chapel there are large memorials to those former pupils who lost their lives in The Great War and in the Second World War.  However, there are some twenty names missing – those who lost their lives in the Boer War, the Zulu War and in conflicts after the Second World War.  It would seem appropriate to dedicate the space within the two windows to the memory of those currently not listed in the chapel.

Once my coursework is completed, this will be my immediate focus.