Late Summer 2009
Late Summer 2009 issue of Arts and Crafts Homes and the Revival magazine preview.
Here’s a preview of what’s inside of the Late Summer 2009 issue of Arts & Crafts Homes and the Revival:
WEB EXCLUSIVES
A note from the Editor:
Television on, one night last week I fell asleep early, only to wake up in the impossible humidity of two a.m. Very quietly, the TV was telling me about the secrets of the Parthenon on a repeat of a NOVA segment. It was so fascinating that I was soon wide awake, learning about the Common Foot and the way the human body informed ideal proportions in buildings. Click to continue reading the Editor's Note ->
From the Mind of Gustav Stickley
At Crab Tree Farm in Illinois, interiors like those in the Ellis Bungalow are filled with treasures, and designed based on suggestions from Stickley’s The Craftsman magazine.
Mile High Meandering
You can capture the flavor of old Denver in a three-day walkabout that includes bungalow neighborhoods and great 20th-century museums.
Calendar of Events
Check for upcoming Arts & Crafts events coming to an area near you. Have an event that isn't posted? Be sure to submit to our editors here

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.