Galland and Gibelin

In 1893 the painter Jacque Galland and glassmaker Espirt Gibelin won a competition to create 10 stained glass windows, at Orleans Cathedral, depicting the life of Joan of Arc.

In 1893 the painter Jacque Galland and glassmaker Espirt Gibelin won a competition to create 10 stained glass windows, at Orleans Cathedral, depicting the life of Joan of Arc.
This tomb in Worcester Cathedral is of Lord George Lyttelton (d1876) by James Forsyth.

Alexander Gibbs was a British stained-glass maker active in the mid to late 19th century. Working from London, he established a workshop that produced ecclesiastical stained glass during a period of rapid church building and restoration in Victorian Britain. His firm contributed windows to parish churches and larger ecclesiastical commissions, often favouring clear figural presentation and conservative Gothic revival idioms.
John Hardman and Co., installed a number of stained glass windows in Gloucester Cathedral during the 1860s, and in the north and south transepts there are some large studies on the Life of St Paul ⓘ and St Peter ⓘ in the 1870s. The cloisters in particular contain a large number of stained glass windows dating from the 1860s including a large extent of glass in the Lavatorium in the north arcade, and other scenes in the east arcade.
This stained-glass window is the Good Samaritan Window at St Mary’s Church, Lutterworth, Leicestershire, designed and made by the firm of Burlison & Grylls ⓘ, one of the foremost English stained glass studios of the late 19th century.
This vibrant Victorian stained glass window, created by the prolific English glass painter William Wailes (1808–1881) around 1850–1860, is located in the east window of the south aisle at St. Peter ⓘ and St. Mary's Church in Market Bosworth
This three-light stained-glass window of 1873, made by Jones & Willis, is located in the church at Tiffield. The composition centres upon Christ as the Good Shepherd, framed by richly ornamented geometric glazing.
Grisaille design by Noël Lavergne Church of Saint Hilaire Châteauvieux.

John Hardman and Company, began to design and manufacture stained-glass windows in 1845, following a partnership with Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin to produce metalwork for St. Chad's Cathedral, Birmingham. In the early days Pugin was the principle designer.