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THE ARTISAN CHRONICLES
What goes on in the mind of an artisan? How does he work? How does she run the business? Read on. It's pretty interesting.
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Why Solo Window Restoration Can’t Save Historic House Communities
Recently, I watched a conversation unfold among a group of passionate, capable window restoration professionals. The topic wasn’t technique. It wasn’t materials. It wasn’t even historic theory. It was survival. People were talking about burnout. Feast-and-famine cycles. Pricing anxiety. Emotional exhaustion. The strain of doing everything alone. What struck me wasn’t the frustration—it was how universal it was. Nearly everyone identified as a solo operator. Nearly everyone ad

Steve Quillian
Feb 93 min read


Why Sarco Type M Is the Hidden Engine of Professional Window Restoration
A simple question came up recently in a Facebook group:
“Anyone ever use Red Devil window glazing? It says it’s oil based… not latex like DAP. I prefer Sarco but we’re in a bind and need to finish a job.”
It’s a familiar situation. Every window restorer eventually faces it.
Two respected voices offered thoughtful replies.
John Rodgers, president of the Window Preservation Alliance, explained that most traditional glazing compounds will technically work.

Steve Quillian
Feb 73 min read


Who Owns the Window?
Why historic windows keep falling through the cracks — and what Window Craft changes. Recently, a simple pricing conversation surfaced something much deeper about how historic windows are typically serviced. It started with numbers. Different restorers shared what they might charge to restore a set of damaged historic windows. The prices were all over the map — some higher, some surprisingly low. At first glance, it looked like a normal trade discussion. But as the conversati

Steve Quillian
Feb 53 min read


The Upward Spiral of Window Craft
I took a photo recently of a house in San Antonio that quietly says everything about what Window Craft really is.
At first glance, it just looks like a handsome historic façade. But if you actually look at it the way an artisan reads a job, you see something deeper:
Two small oval windows flanking the front door.
A lace-like transom over the entry.
Normal 6-over-6 and 8-over-8 double-hung windows above.
And gothic arched windows up in the attic that I personall

Steve Quillian
Jan 266 min read


It Takes a Community to Raise an Artisan Army
Across every historic neighborhood in America, the same truth quietly echoes through the cracks of peeling paint and the rattling of century-old sashes: our windows are calling out for help. And when the windows go, the rest of the house soon follows.
But here’s the good news—if we save the windows, we save the community.
Not just aesthetically. Not just symbolically. Literally.
Historic windows are the keystones of our built heritage.

Steve Quillian
Oct 9, 20253 min read
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