







It once held the best light in the house.
A large, round 19th century American Colonial Revival window, oculus in form, poetic in presence. Its curved muntins divide the circle with gentle geometry, suggesting Federal symmetry softened by time. The original paint, now a creamy, weathered white, has settled into a patina that cannot be faked: hairline cracks, worn edges, the faint memory of lake air and long winters.
One imagines it once crowning a grand stair landing or catching the afternoon light in a shingled summer house along Lake Michigan. Perhaps it framed the view of sailboats in the distance, or the clipped hedges of a formal garden.
Now freed from its architectural post, it becomes sculpture. Hang it as wall art, or back it with mirror for quiet drama. It carries history in its curves, not loud, but lasting.
37 in. DIA x 5 in. D