This pencil and watercolour drawing by the British architect James William Wild (1814–1892) shows three stucco and glass windows with geometric motifs. The window on the left consists of two parts, framed by ribbon ornament: the larger lower area is ornamented with eight-pointed stars in blue and red, and above there is a rectangle with three stylized blossoms; the colours blue, red, and yellow predominate, and some smaller pieces of glass are in green. The centre window has geometric ornament, also in blue, yellow, green, and red; in the cartouche above, the artist may have attempted to trace an Arabic script in yellow. The window on the right-hand side shows delicate ornament in yellow, red, and blue, consisting of alternating yellow and blue eight-pointed stars surrounded by red squares. Wild has added pencil notes in the upper left corner of the drawing and below the central window that are barely legible.
window of the mandarah Bayt. Sheikh Mahdee (in the upper left corner of the drawing)
This large glass [...] / [has a low?] effect and does not / seem to retain the plaster / ribs as well as the smaller window (below the central window)

