Interior
The church is entered by the porch at the south: flagged floor, roof timbering exposed. The nave has braced high-collar-beam trusses and is separated from the south by a four-arch arcade on round columns. The chancel and vestry are two steps higher, the chancel with a pointed barrel ceiling. The chancel and aisle arches are of two orders, that to the chancel carried on short corbelled columns. A chancel screen was removed in 1928.
In the nave is a fine Jacobean style pulpit dated 1635 of octagonal form, two panels high, with abstract carving in the upper panels and allegorical figures in the lower, separated by crouching figures above and herms below. The panels represent Faith, Justice, Watchfulness, Mercy and Prudence, in round-headed arches. It is said to have been brought here from Lleweni. There is also a fine mediaeval parish chest, iron bound, with three locks, and an octagonal font re-carved in the C19.
The chancel is paved in patterns in coloured tiles, and the east wall is tiled as an extended reredos for its full width with returns to north and south, in patterns in coloured and encaustic tiles; lettered tile frieze at top from John 15:13, mosaic centre cross and flanking mosaic alpha and omega.
Wall memorials include a list of rectors and charitable donors at the south door; three C20 brass plaques on north wall. Memorial to John Mostyn over the pulpit, 1671: broken pediment with arms. Memorial in chancel to the Rev. E Hughes, 1850: broken column with garland, inscribed base. On the west wall of the nave are memorials to Elizabeth Eyton (1813): urn above inscribed and bracketted tablet; to Thomas Eyton (1837): ornate Grecian style; ornate memorial to Ann Hughes of Wern, Denbigh (1840), draped urn and acanthus consoles.
The east window is by Clayton and Bell, 1866, to Mrs Barrett of Pontruffydd; Christ and scenes of charity. At east of north side a window by Burlison and Grylls, to Elizabeth Mesham of Pontruffydd, 1909. At west of south aisle another by Burlison and Grylls, to Margaret Elizabeth Mesham, d.1873, with a scene of charity.