Weavers' windows![]() Weavers' windows are large horizontal windows on the top floor of a weavers' cottage that allowed the residents light to weave. Weavers' windows are associated with the Huguenot migration to Britain and Ireland.[1] OverviewBefore the Industrial Revolution, weaving was carried out in the homes of weavers, and their looms were typically on the top floor of their dwellings, lit by "Weavers' windows",[2] long windows that admitted the most sunlight.[3] Weavers' windows were also called "lights".[4] QuoteIn chapter 17 of A Child of the Jago Arthur Morrison wrote:
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