Rooms, Halls, and Passages. 



157 



form you wish. A very simple contrivance is a copper 

 Avire twisted to form a ring at one end large enough to 

 hold the pot just helow the rim, with a loop at the 

 other end for hanging it on a nail. 



Vases, trumpet glasses, and stands, in terra-cotta, 

 china, and glass, of numerous designs, are extensively 



PIOWEE TABS POB TESTIBTJIE. 



used for the decoration of dinner-tables, rooms, halls, 

 stair-landings, and passages. When used in the deco- 

 ration of halls or vestibules cut-flower vases should be 

 larger in size and different in shape from those used in 

 (he decoration of rooms or dinner-tables ; many flowers 

 that would have too clumsy Sn appearance in a drawing- 

 room vase will suit a vestibule vase to perfection, for a 



