Fluting (architecture) (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Fluting (architecture)" in English language version.

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academia.edu

books.google.com

  • Curl, James S.; Wilson, Susan (2015). The Oxford Dictionary of Architecture. Oxford University Press. p. 137. ISBN 978-0-19-967498-5. Cabled fluting, cabling, ribbed fluting, rudenture, or stopped flute, consisting of convex mouldings set in the flutes of Classical column- or pilaster-shafts. [...]occasionally on unfluted shafts, so the cables are in relief.
  • Millar, John Fitzhugh (2014). The Buildings of Peter Harrison. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-7962-7. Columns and pilasters [...] the flute-grooves were usually also "reeded" (partially filled by a fillet) for roughly the bottom one-third of their length. It is this reeding that was known in eighteenth-century Rhode Island as stop-fluting.
  • Powell, Christine; Allen, ZoĆ« (2010). Italian Renaissance Frames at the V&A. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-7506-8619-8. Stopped fluting where the flutes or channels of a column or pilaster, or any grooves, have been filled with rods

british-history.ac.uk

  • "The Nave", in "Durham cathedral: Description of church", in A History of the County of Durham: Volume 3, ed. William Page (London, 1928), pp. 96-123. British History Online; online [accessed 15 October 2023. In "the pair in the third double bay have vertical flutes and large beads separated by fillets" "beads" means convex flutes.

doi.org

  • Hemsoll, David, "Palladio's Architectural Orders: From Practice to Theory", 2015, pp. 12, 21 and 15 quoted in turn, Architectural History, Volume 58, 2015, pp. 1 - 54, DOI

lookingatbuildings.org.uk

  • "Glossary". Looking at Buildings. In fact a fillet will normally be very slightly curved, following the overall curvature of the column.