First paragraph: Walpole’s interest in Gothic design continued beyond the style’s by-then-diminishing, though not entirely side-lined, popularity in mainstream fashionable furniture. He used antiquarian prints as the basis for Strawberry Hill’s architectural components; Wenceslaus Hollar’s depiction of the screen at Old St Paul’s, London, was instrumental in the design of the Library’s presses. This method — copying and recreating elements or whole architecture schemes — enabled Walpole to reproduce architecture that he and his friends in the Strawberry Committee had not seen first-hand, or which no longer existed (such as Old St Paul’s). Harnessing engravings of medieval architecture consequently allowed Walpole and his circle to overcome...