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From the category archives:

House Styles

Photo by Paul Crosby

Like this new house in Iowa, recent projects show that the Arts & Crafts Revival continues to thrive — and evolve with the resurgence of craftsmanship and sustainable design.

Custom home-builders Mike and Susan Hoien created a house of timeless design for themselves in Iowa. Bradbury’s ‘Oakleaf Frieze’ is one of several revival papers in the house. (Bradbury & Bradbury Art Wallpapers: www.bradbury.com)

Custom home-builders Mike and Susan Hoien created a house of timeless design for themselves in Iowa. Bradbury’s ‘Oakleaf Frieze’ is one of several revival papers in the house. (Bradbury & Bradbury Art Wallpapers: www.bradbury.com)

Custom home-builders Mike and Susan Hoien created a house of timeless design for themselves in Iowa. The entry features custom art glass with an oak-tree motif.

Custom home-builders Mike and Susan Hoien created a house of timeless design for themselves in Iowa. The entry features custom art glass with an oak-tree motif.

Mike and Susan Hoien (Hoien Construction, Spirit Lake, IA) were diligent in their research once they committed to building themselves an Arts & Crafts-inspired home. Motifs throughout show a command of the original style and even of the movement’s antecedents in Great Britain. Although they incorporated aspects of Prairie School, Shingle Style, and Craftsman houses, the interior maintains a consistent flow through the use of nature imagery and a naturalistic palette.

Photos by Paul Crosby

Architect Matthew Bialecki designed this rough stone and cedar shingle retreat in upstate New York -- it’s both elegant and in the vernacular.

Architect Matthew Bialecki designed this rough stone and cedar shingle retreat in upstate New York -- it’s both elegant and in the vernacular.

An open floor plan hearkens back to the classic Adirondack lodge. The two-sided fireplace warms both the kitchen and the screened porch.

An open floor plan hearkens back to the classic Adirondack lodge. The two-sided fireplace warms both the kitchen and the screened porch.

Proving that American A&C goes beyond Stickley’s Mission style, this house by architect Matthew Bialecki drew inspiration from Adirondack lodges, some of the work of Greene and Greene, and his client’s pleasant memories of a lakefront vacation home. The result is a spacious house that blends the Craftsman vocabulary and a rough-hewn, organic aura with the latest in energy efficiency.

Photos by Gross and Daley

An artist couple created this Craftsman-inspired house in Mahwah, N.J., complete with meandering brick walks and superb gardens.

An artist couple created this Craftsman-inspired house in Mahwah, N.J., complete with meandering brick walks and superb gardens.

Their hand-applied ceiling treatments are a highlight in the dining room, great room, and kitchen.  Dining room furniture is reproduction.

Their hand-applied ceiling treatments are a highlight in the dining room, great room, and kitchen. Dining room furniture is reproduction.

Revival magic happened in this New Jersey house completed by two artist-decorators. They distressed oak cabinets, created stencils (using state-of-the-art software and materials) to make hand-painting go faster, glazed exterior shingles (made of a modern product, not wood), and added shredded raffia to sandstone plaster. The result is a house that looks old world – anything but new. Learn more at www.specfindesigns.com

Photos by Bob Skinner

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A Look at the Best New Work of the Revival

by Arts & Crafts Editor
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This contemporary bungalow in Flagstaff, Arizona, is a lovely and livable interpretation that relies on a repetitive arch and Native American motifs.

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Exterior Color Schemes for Foursquares, Bungalows, and Tudors

by Arts & Crafts Editor

The concept of “architectural colors” involves selecting, then placing, appropriate colors to reveal and enhance the logic of a building. Here are one expert’s suggestions for pleasing, historical schemes.

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Don’t Discount Your House’s Exterior Statement…

by Arts & Crafts Editor
Don't Discount Your House's Exterior Statement...

Material often defines the architecture not just of bridges and skyscrapers but even of the most common American houses. Federal homes are brick in the South, wood- frame and clapboard in the North. International Style is concrete, and Shingle Style speaks for itself. But what of Arts & Crafts buildings?

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Swiss Chalet

by Arts and Crafts Editor

Those picturesque wood details people tend to call “Craftsman” are actually chalet details: the wide, overhanging eaves, big brackets and knee braces, whimsical balustrades, exposed rafter tails, corbels and banding.Widely considered to be rare in the United States, the Swiss Chalet deserves more credit for its influence on bungalows.
HALLMARKS
• Alpine Swiss Chalets and Swiss Chalet [...]

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Shingle Style 1874–1910

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Shingle Style has variously been described as the first modern American house style.

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Tudorbethan (Tudor Gothic, Tudor Revival) 1890–1920

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Fewer examples of these English-inspired houses of the Arts and Crafts period are to be found than, say, bungalows and foursquares.

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The Prairie School Style 1889–1919

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Lowered ceilings, using a change in level to demarcate space, open planning, indirect lighting—all these can be traced to this modern, American style.

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The Bungalow 1890-1939

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The word “bungalow” may seem today like a synonym for cottage, but in its heyday it was prized both for its exotic,
Anglo–Indian associations and its artistic naturalism.

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The American Foursquare 1895–1929

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The epitome of the post-Victorian “comfortable house,” the Foursquare is about dignified self-containment.

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The Craftsman Home 1902–1930

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The word “Craftsman” has long been used to mean a style—somewhat synonymous with “American Arts and Crafts.”

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California Ranch 1932–1970

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Also called the Western Ranch or the early Ranch, these modern houses architect-designed, built for casual family living and an outdoors lifestyle.

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