- Simplicity of Form and Function in the Work of Christopher Dresser
- Christopher Dresser's Metalwork
- Charles F.A. Voysey's Reactionary Simplicity
- Charles Rennie Mackintosh's "Hill House"
- The Innovation and Legacy of Mackintosh in Furniture Design
- A Study of James Herbert MacNair's Furniture
- C.R Ashbee's Contribution to Social, Industrial, and Aesthetic Reform
- The Liberty Style's Combination of Art and Industry
- The Social and Political Implications of Baillie Scott's Work
- Arts and Crafts Jewelry Design
- Toward a Unified Style: William De Morgan and his Increasing Control of Ceramic Production
- Popular and Applied Arts in the Celtic Revival
- The Medieval Revival: An Influential Movement First Met by Opposition
- Japonaiserie: Discovery, Adoption, Assimilation and Creation
- Augustus Welby Pugin and the Gothic Revival
- Owen Jones and Moorish Design in the Victorian Era
- Innovations of the Future and Designs of the Past: The Wallpaper of the Victorian Age
- Fine Arts in the Celtic Revival
- The Eclecticism of William Burges
- Interior Design in the Victorian Era
- Philip Webb's Red House: Spatial Enclave of the Later Pre-Raphelites
Last modified 29 November 2004