What is the device?
Toomom is a horizontal cross mounted above the door. Transmission is used to separate door framing from windows for windows, suspended flaps, lights and other decorative accents that can be used above the door. People sometimes refer to such a decoration as "transoms". Many architecture styles use Transoms, and these architectural features can appear in a number of form, from decorated wood blocks to simple horizontal rays. Transom windows, as they are known, can have a shape similar to a fan that is traditional. Some are designed simply to provide light, while others can be made of colored or patterned glass to add ornaments. In some cases, the house number or building name can be integrated into the Tosom window. In the interior of the structure, the window provides light while maintaining privacy, as the door can be solid. These devices can be very useful in situations where people do not want to leave the door open but want to create a crossno inside the structure. They also inspired the phrase "over the benefit" to describe the material that addresses someone with unconventional means, refers to the idea that the material was literally worthy of transom to someone's home or office.
Light or fan light on the door that receives people into the building can also be mounted with the device. Lighting above the door is very common for aesthetics and safety in many regions of the world, and light is used to help people inside the structure to identify people at the door, provide light to open the door in the dark, and to discourage criminals who could lip, who could be lurked with dark doors waiting for victims.
door framing is independent of the device or other decorative elements that can surround the door. Transoms provide additional support, but primarily serve as a crossing for architectural features. Because they are not necessarily strUktural nature can be made of a wide range of materials and may include decorative features that could not be used for structural supports due to concern for fragility.