Windows

Windows fit for the home they belong to.

Six styles, the right material for the house. Every house, right across the region.

Close-up corner of a freshly painted flush sash window with polished brass furniture

The right window is a function of the house first, and the material second.

A Victorian terrace, a 1930s semi, a mock-Tudor on a leafy crescent, a modern new-build behind a hedge — each one asks for something different. We make windows for all of them: sash, flush casement, bay and bow, tilt and turn, shaped, and slim aluminium.

We walk through the options on a home visit, in the rooms they belong to. The house tells you what it wants. Our job is to listen, then draw it.

What we make them in.

uPVC

The better end of the uPVC market — flush sash and woodgrain foils for period properties and conservation areas, smooth profiles for modern homes. Matching the original detailing matters.

Aluminium

For modern new-builds, contemporary extensions, and slim-frame designs.

Composite

Alu-clad and composite frames where a tougher, lower-maintenance window is wanted, in any RAL colour.

01 · Sash

Traditional Sash

Vertically sliding sashes made to match the originals on a Victorian terrace or an Edwardian villa. Timber-effect uPVC, modern spiral balances, glazing bars drawn to the original profile. We replicate the moulding the house already wears, then quietly upgrade the performance.

  • Timber-effect uPVC, finished in the colour of your choice.
  • Modern spiral balances, sized to the sash weight.
  • Original-profile glazing bars, with slim double or single-glazed units.

Best for: Victorian, Edwardian and listed homes.

A traditional vertically sliding sash window painted off-white with brass sash lifts on a period façade

02 · Flush Casement

Flush Casement

A modern flush-fit window that sits in the frame without proud beading. From the outside it reads like a hand-made cottage window. From the inside it performs like a window made in 2026. Woodgrain-foil uPVC or aluminium for new-builds where movement matters.

  • Period look on the outside, modern performance on the inside.
  • Woodgrain-foil uPVC, composite, or aluminium.
  • Side-opening or top-hung lights, with concealed hinges.

Best for: 1930s semis, mock-Tudor, cottage-style homes, and modern new-builds wanting a soft heritage look.

A flush casement window in a soft cream woodgrain finish set in a cottage wall

03 · Tilt & Turn

Tilt & Turn

A continental window that tilts inward at the top for night ventilation, and swings fully open on a side hinge for cleaning and emergency egress. Particularly useful upstairs, above kitchen sinks, and on tight stairwells where you can't lean out to clean.

  • Two opening modes from a single handle position.
  • Clean to both sides from indoors. No ladders.
  • Slim aluminium or composite frames.

Best for: Modern homes, top-floor rooms, and any window where access matters.

A slim-frame grey aluminium tilt-and-turn window against a pale plastered wall

04 · Shaped

Shaped

Arched heads, segmental tops, eyebrow windows on attic gables, circular landing windows. We draw the shape from the existing opening, make it once, and fit it. Standard glazing units do not bend; ours are cut to the curve.

  • Arched, segmental, circular, or one-off geometries.
  • Drawn from your opening, not a catalogue.
  • uPVC, aluminium or composite, traditional or modern profile.

Best for: Period properties with original arched heads, and architect-designed new-builds.

An arched-head sash window painted off-white on the first floor of an Edwardian villa

05 · Bay & Bow

Bay & Bow

The bay window on the front of a 1930s semi, or the curved bow on an Edwardian villa, is the front of the house. We design and install bays as a structural set — one piece of carpentry, not a row of windows pretending to be a bay. The roof and corner posts are part of the drawing from day one.

  • Three-, four- and five-light bays. True bow geometry, not a faceted bay.
  • Structural posts and lead-clad roofs detailed in the drawing.
  • uPVC, aluminium or composite.

Best for: 1930s semis, Edwardian villas, and any house where the bay is the front.

A 1930s semi front bay window in pebbledash with painted flush casements

06 · Aluminium

Aluminium

Slim-frame aluminium for modern homes and contemporary rear extensions. Maximum glass, minimum frame. Powder-coated to any RAL colour, with concealed fixings and clean sight-lines. Particularly good as a counter-point to brick on a modern new-build, and as the right answer for a rear elevation pulled into the garden.

  • Slim sight-lines, large panes, concealed hardware.
  • Any RAL colour, matt or satin finish.
  • Pairs with bi-folds and patio doors from the same system.

Best for: Modern new-builds, contemporary extensions, and rear elevations.

A slim matt-black aluminium window set in a limewashed wall

Listed building? Original windows you can't replace?

Secondary glazing is the answer where the original window must stay. It sits quietly inside the existing frame, kills the draught, kills the street noise, and improves thermal performance — without touching the period detail or needing a planning application.

Book a home visit.

Book a home visit and we'll talk through your project at your house — no call centre, no hard sell. You'll get an itemised written quote, and every completed installation is backed by our ten-year written guarantee.