Fall 2008

Fall 2008 issue of Arts and Crafts Homes and the Revival magazine preview.

Here’s a preview of what’s inside of the Fall 2008 issue of Arts & Crafts Homes and the Revival:

IN THE MAGAZINE:

Restoration
Arts & Crafts in Salt Lake City
An appealing Tudor house (wih a Van Briggle tile fireplace) is nursed back from its disco fever. by Brian D. Coleman| photographs by William Wright

New Work
Vernacular Strength
The " Adirondack plu" stone and shingle houose called Tallquapie is neither bungalow nor mansion. by Catherine Lundie| photographs by Gridley + Graves

The Guild
The Roycrofters Today
The artisans qualified to use the Roycroft Renaissance mark form an extraordinary, if far-flung, guild. by Patricia Poore

Utility Spaces
Replica Kitchen
The ca. 1930 kitchen is perfect for this storybook Tudor house. by Nancy Hiller

Outside
A Garden Redefined
A small, dry-climate garden, once inhospitable, gets a practical makeover. by Brian D. Coleman

International
Thatch?
How there comes here, or the impact of Shakespeare on American roofs. by Douglas Keister

Patricia Poore is Editor-in-chief of Old House Journal and Arts & Crafts Homes, as well as editorial director at Active Interest Media’s Home Group, overseeing New Old House, Traditional Building, and special-interest publications.

Poore joined Old House Journal when it was a Brooklyn-brownstoner newsletter in the late 1970s. She became owner and publisher and, except for the years 2002–2013, has been its editor. Poore founded the magazines Old-House Interiors (1995–2013) and Early Homes (2004–2017); their content is now available online and folded into Old-House Journal’s wider coverage. Poore also created GARBAGE magazine (1989–1994), the first unaffiliated environmental consumer magazine.

Poore has participated, hands-on, in several restorations, including her own homes: a 1911 brownstone in Park Slope, Brooklyn, and a 1904 Tudor–Shingle Style house in Gloucester, Massachusetts, where she brought up her boys and their wonderful dogs.