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  2. 20 Timeless Window Treatment Ideas for Sliding Glass Doors - AOL

    www.aol.com/20-timeless-window-treatment-ideas...

    Liven up your sliding glass doors with these designer-approved ideas on curtains, blinds, and other creative sliding glass door window treatments. 20 Timeless Window Treatment Ideas for Sliding ...

  3. Transom (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transom_(architecture)

    Door of 10 Downing Street, London, showing a transom separating the door from the window above. In architecture, a transom is a transverse horizontal structural beam or bar, or a crosspiece separating a door from a window above it. This contrasts with a mullion, a vertical structural member. [1] Transom or transom window is also the customary U ...

  4. Shoji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoji

    Sliding partitions (hiki-do, 引戸, literally "sliding door") did not come into use until the tail end of the Heian, and the beginning of the Kamakura period. [99] Early sliding doors were heavy; some were made of solid wood. [100] Initially used in expensive mansions, they eventually came to be used in more ordinary houses as well. [99]

  5. Sliding glass door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sliding_glass_door

    Another sliding doors design, glass pocket doors has all the glass panels sliding completely into open-wall pockets, totally disappearing for a wall-less 'wide open' indoor-outdoor room experience. This can include corner window walls, for even more blurring of the inside-outside open space distinction.

  6. Mullion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mullion

    A mullioned window in the church of San Francesco of Lodi, Lombardy. A mullion is a vertical element that forms a division between units of a window or screen, or is used decoratively. [1] It is also often used as a division between double doors. When dividing adjacent window units

  7. Window - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Window

    A window is an opening in a wall, door, roof, or vehicle that allows the exchange of light and may also allow the passage of sound and sometimes air.Modern windows are usually glazed or covered in some other transparent or translucent material, a sash set in a frame [1] in the opening; the sash and frame are also referred to as a window. [2]

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