Stained glass window on show after restoration

A four-month conservation project to restore a stained glass window has been completed.
The window is the centre piece of the stairwell at the Elizabethan House Museum in Great Yarmouth.
The museum says the window is unusual because it contains both locally-sourced and foreign glass, including from several countries in north-west Europe.
Johanna Jones, curator at Norfolk Museums Service, said: "We are delighted to see the return of the stunning stained glass."
The window contains 13 sections including panels made from 16th and 17th centuries, with glass from the low countries and some from the cloister of Premonstratensian Abbey of Steinfeld in the Eifel region of Germany.
The low countries usually refers to Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands.
Set within a timber frame dating back to the late 19th or early 20th Century, the window was last reglazed in 1952.


The window was reinstalled and special glazing was fitted to the outside of the glass to protect it from the weather and condensation.
Martha Infray, a National Trust conservator, said scaffolding needed to be put up around the museum to remove seven of the windows panels.
The project has been a collaboration between the National Trust, Norfolk Museums Service - run by Norfolk County Council - and conservators from Holy Well Glass in Somerset.
It was funded through the trust's remedial conservation fund.
Ms Jones, said: "Not only has this project restored and conserved this historic window for perpetuity but it has also enabled us to transform how we plan to interpret the histories of the building for our younger audiences."
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