hoodmould การใช้
- It has a round-arched doorway with a simple hoodmould above.
- There are hoodmoulds with head stops, all different.
- It has an external hoodmould ( a decorative stone border ) around the top.
- The nineteenth century porch has a big ashlar triple-chamfered pointed arch, hoodmould and stone voussoirs.
- The lancet windows, tracery, hoodmoulds and blind arrow-slits are all borrowings from earlier building styles.
- The south side of the building has a number of arched windows, singularly or in pairs, also with hoodmoulds.
- On either side of the main arch there are two walkway arches, those to the right original, with hoodmoulds.
- The nave has two 2-light windows under hoodmoulds flanking a blocked, moulded round-headed door under a plaque dated 1627.
- The window on the north side of the church has a trefoil pattern at the top, and the hoodmould is decorated with faces.
- The two windows at the west end have single lights topped with tracery; the windows at the east end have three lights, tracery and hoodmoulds.
- The window at the eastern end of the south wall has three lights with tracery, set in a pointed arch frame with a plain hoodmould around it.
- The east window has two lights with three trefoils in the decorative stone tracery at the top, set in an arched frame with a hoodmould on the outer wall.
- It has three deeply moulded shafts each triple-roll with keel to centre roll and stiff-leaf capitals and matching triple mouldings to the pointed arch, with hoodmould.
- Along the south wall of the chancel is a pointed-arched window, a priest's door with a pointed arch, three lancet windows, and three hoodmould.
- Openings all are round-headed with moulded stone architraves and reveals, some with stop-block-labeled hoodmoulds, except basement openings are openings, which are pointed-arched.
- The east or chancel window has three stepped, lancet lights under a two-centred arch and a hoodmould with foliate stops, and above this is a relieving arch of dressed freestone.
- The largest window, which sits under a hoodmould, is in the east end of the chancel; it is a three-light lancet with prominent tracery in the curvilinear / reticulated style.
- The houses and shops in the village are constructed of the yellow limestone characteristic of the Cotswolds and they have the embellishments that make Cotswold architecture so picturesque : projecting gables, string-courses, windows with stone mullions and dripmoulds and stone hoodmoulds over the doors.