THE CRAFTSMAN
STYLE HOUSE / ARTS AND CRAFTS HOME
If traced far enough, the roots of Arts and Crafts homes began with Hindi bangalas, thatched roof cottages with porches and low, heavily overhung roofs. British officers occupying India in the late 19th century brought the Indian architecture to England and adapted it to build summer retreats known as bungalows.
Initially used as resort lodging in England, the bungalow
style crossed the Atlantic and experienced a heyday
in the early 1900s during the mass migration to California.
With their low, extended roofs and shaded porches,
bungalows were particularly suited to the warm climate;
and Greene and Greene, two California architects, created
designs that became hugely popular.
At the same time, Gustav Stickley was publishing his
influential magazine, The Craftsman. Expounding the
philosophy of the English Arts and Crafts movement,
it advocated a revolt against the presumed evils of
the Industrial Revolution – namely, mass-produced,
shoddy goods – and espoused a return to honest,
hand craftsmanship. Working with architect Harvey Ellis,
Stickley (also an architect and a furniture maker)
designed 221 house plans which he published in The
Craftsman. Soon mail order companies like Montgomery
Wards and Sears, Roebuck and Company made the homes
affordable by selling complete kits that included all
of the building components right down to the paint
and finishing nails. Shipped by railcar, some 30,000
pre-milled and numbered pieces were delivered to a
homeowner’s lot, along with a comprehensive instruction
manual.

REGIONAL VARIATIONS
The original Craftsman bungalows were generally modest homes with a single story or an abbreviated second floor with one or two bedrooms, commonly with sloping ceilings and dormer windows. They were a wide departure from the ornate elegance of Victorian design and were also more rugged than their English Arts and Crafts counterparts– appealing to our nation’s frontier history.
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In true Craftsman style, this yellow ochre porch says WELCOME!
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Stalwart proportions created a sense of stability
and security. Wide porches were supported by
simple rails or stocky, tapered columns atop brick
or stone pedestals. Low slung, gabled roofs featured
overhanging eaves. Walls were often divided into
horizontal bands – brick
or stone along the bottom, topped with combinations
of stucco, split wood shingles and horizontal,
vertical or shake siding. Wood elements framing
the home, usually concealed in other architectural
styles, were not only
exposed but became celebrated, decorative details,
as seen in brackets supporting roofs.
As the Arts and Crafts style spread across the country
between 1905 and 1930, it was expressed in a wider
variety to accommodate varying budgets and express
regional differences.
In California, Texas and Florida,
it frequently included elements inspired by Spanish
missions – tile
roofs; rounded arches, windows and doors; stucco
walls with brick or masonry with rough-cut stones.
Frank Lloyd Wright and his school of Architects popularized
the Prairie home in the Midwest. Typically two stories
high, it featured a flat or low-hipped roof, alternating
bands of brick and concrete, and art or beveled glass
in doors and select windows. A relative of the Prairie
home, the Foursquare or Box House became one of the
most popular house styles in America. Its simple cube
shape featured a front porch of varying dimensions
and was topped with a hipped roof and a front roof
dormer.
Windows were often grouped in pairs. Arts and Crafts
homes were constructed in harmony with their landscape;
wood materials were often painted or stained brown
or dark green. They also utilized local materials.
Consequently, these homes featured yellow brick in
Chicago, dark red brick in Milwaukee, wood and brick
in the North and shingle sheathed bays and gable ends
in the Northeast.

WARM INTERIORS
In the late twentieth century, the Craftsman style,
in particular, began enjoying a resurgence that is
still going strong – with architects
remodeling historic homes and design firms offering updated plans for
new construction. Today’s homeowners are captivated by charming
elevations evoking images of quiet, tree-lined streets and these homes’ warm,
comfortable interiors. Compared to their Victorian predecessors’ stuffy,
segregated rooms, Craftsman homes’ casual floor plans encourage
informality and family togetherness.
Their efficient design makes them a highly practical
choice as well. The long hallways and entryways found
in Victorian

Double
columns top display cabinets in this historic Craftman home.
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homes were
eliminated; in Craftsman Style Homes, family and
friends pass from room to room directly.
Built-ins provide storage and make the most of available
space. In historic Craftsman homes, living and dining
rooms are divided by low display cabinets topped with
tapered columns. There may also be a built-in sideboard
in the dining room. Banquettes in kitchens and window
seats in bedrooms provide picturesque seating and storage.
Rear entries often include a mud room. Pocket doors
add flexibility, allowing homeowners to combine or
segregate spaces, closing a living room off from a
foyer or dining room, or revealing additional sleeping,
study or work spaces.
Another attribute that makes Craftsman
design so popular in today’s market is its
connection to nature. Most homes were positioned
to greet the sun and surrounded
by a generous garden. Large, shady front porches
and sleeping porches in the rear blurred the distinctions
between inside and outside living. An abundance of
windows grouped in units of two or three brought
in
natural light and cross breezes.

Sunlight streams through beveled, leaded glass
windows – creating whimsical prisms on
the dining room floor. |
Windows
themselves contribute to a Craftsman home’s
charm and beauty. With the exception of clerestory
windows
located above built-in cabinetry, most of the windows
are double hung with divided light panels in the
upper sash and a large pane in the lower sash (providing
a cleaner view). Selected windows in the front entry,
living room and dining room feature sparkling, beveled
glass or colorful, stained glass in geometric or
botanical
patterns.
Perhaps Craftsman homes are best known for their
warm woodwork. Ceilings are trimmed with crown moldings,
boxed beams, running beams or geometrically arranged
moldings. Kitchens, bathrooms and porches feature tongue-and-groove
paneling.
Living rooms sport built-in shelves or cabinets surrounding
the fireplace and tapered pillars on top of display
cabinets. Fireplace mantels and surrounds display unique,
individualized details. In addition to built-in buffets
or china cabinets, dining rooms often feature geometric
paneling or wainscoting with wide caps (that double
as display shelves). Picture rails and chair rails,
generous baseboards and window trim all add character
throughout the home.
Front entry doors are usually a focal point in and
outside the home, from picturesque board-and-batten
doors to a variety of panel configurations with art
glass windows. In addition to pocket doors, interior
doors include French doors with Prairie grid panes
and doors with recessed or raised, vertical or horizontal
panels; the most common being five horizontal recessed
panels.
Originally, woodwork was oak, red pine, gumwood, fir
or cypress. Higher end homes used quarter sawn oak.
Wood was often exposed to ammonia fumes or stained
in a dark finish to give it an aged patina. Influenced
by the Neo-Colonial style, painted trim became more
common by the 1920s, particularly in the South and
Southwest. Warm colors and textures make homes cozy
and inviting. In newer homes, walls may be faux painted
to look like plaster work in saturated terra cottas,
delicate sage greens and golden yellows. Lincrusta
and anaglypta wallpapers (heavily embossed papers)
can provide the look of tooled leather. Historically,
walls were also covered with burlap, grass cloth or
nature-inspired wallpapers.

REMODELING CHALLENGES
With their unique, handcrafted
charm, historic Craftsman homes can present some
common challenges,
including stripping and refinishing woodwork
and undoing makeshift changes previous homeowners made that may have
diminished the home’s original charm. Another major concern is
space. Let’s face it. We have a lot more stuff today than families
had in the early 1900’s: computers, electronics, microwaves and
considerably more clothes. Easier updates include building a new closet
in the corner of a bedroom, installing drawers under staircases and adding
shelving at the end of a narrow hallway. Built-in cabinets and bookcases
surrounding fireplaces may be modified to accommodate stereo equipment
and a small television.
Creating extra space requires more extensive projects,
such as: enclosing a sleeping porch to gain room for
a master bedroom or bath, finishing off an attic or
adding a second bath. Few original bungalows had a
casual family room. One possible solution is to convert
first-floor bedrooms into a family room and new kitchen
and turn unfinished attic space into bedrooms.
One of the difficulties in remodeling
is matching original woodwork. When adding on, the
challenge is
often finding space. Bungalows, in particular, were
often built on tight lots, so the only way to add
on is up. With their distinctively low roofs, it
can be
a challenge to raise the roof and maintain the home’s
original character.

TWO CRAFTSMAN FANS
Huge fans of the Craftsman home
style, Chris and David Knight have lived in a home
built
in 1905 using a kit ordered from the Sears and Roebuck
catalog and now reside in a home designed and built
to their specifications.
“My husband and I both love antiques,”Chris
Knight explains, “so I suppose it’s natural
to appreciate Craftsman architectural details. Most
of the windows in our previous home were leaded glass
and the woodwork was amazing. A plate rail circled
the entire dining room, which also had a built-in buffet.
The dining and living rooms were divided by wood columns
set on cabinets with leaded glass. The living room
had a wood burning stove with leaded glass cabinets
on both sides and a two-foot-wide mantle. There were
also beautiful French doors leading to a three season
porch.
“For a home of its age, it was in surprisingly
good condition, but we did undertake some remodeling
when we moved in. The previous owners had closed off
half of the home’s sleeping porch. We restored
it to its original dimensions, removed some paneling
that had been added and had the walls re-plastered.
We painted throughout the home, re-carpeted and refinished
the parquet wood floors in the kitchen.
“When we relocated, we decided
to build a new home incorporating many of the features
we loved from
our historic home. We didn’t want to be faced
with replacing plumbing, electrical and HVAC systems.
Our new home was actually built using Insulated
Concrete Forms (ICFs), so
it
is extremely energy efficient.
“Because we loved the warmth
of our first Craftsman house, we recreated a lot
of the woodwork in our new
house. We have wood columns on top of glass-fronted
cabinets at the entrance to our office (off the front
entry). The fireplace in the great room is surrounded
with built-in cabinetry. We included an updated, individualized
touch by mirroring the exterior columns inside our
entry. They’re tapered wood on top of stone pedestals.
(The pedestals on the outside of the home are topped
with stucco columns.)
“Our personal tastes follow the ‘less
is more’ approach, so we streamlined some of
the details. Too much trim can make rooms look smaller
and somewhat cluttered. I think we found a very peaceful
compromise. Finally, we chose warm, fall colors for
walls and furnishings.”

THE BEST OF OLD AND NEW
“Building
a new Craftsman house allows homeowners to enjoy
traditional, architectural charm along with modern
comfort,” notes Design Basics’ Custom
Home Designer Marshall Wallman. “We can
create more open floor plans, bigger rooms and
larger
closets. Rather than the historic eight to nine
foot ceilings, we can incorporate ten foot ceilings.
With beams or wood paneling, even cathedral ceilings
can look at home in a new Craftsman home.
“It’s important to balance modern design
with historic features. Even with an open floor plan,
for example, you can define the rooms with an opening
supported by columns or some short cabinets. In larger
spaces, it’s important not to skimp on trim,
since generous woodwork replicates the historic architecture
and provides warmth.
“Many of the homeowners I’ve worked with
have chosen medium-tone maple or cherry woodwork to
give their homes a lighter look. For those who prefer
oak, I recommend either quarter sawn plywood or solid
oak. Normal oak plywood often has a long, drawn out
grain that repeats itself because it’s created
with a rotary cut. Using an oil finish, instead of
polyurethane, can also tone the grain down and provide
a rich, aged look.“ Even with all of the modern
appliances, it’s fairly easy to maintain the
Craftsman feel in the kitchen. I often use recessed
panel cabinet doors and cover the floors with wood
or a slate tile; I’ve also seen linoleum or cork
used effectively.
“In the bathroom, it can be
tricky to achieve a historic look and still provide
all of the storage
we require today. In one home, I placed a nice storage
cabinet between two pedestal sinks and put mirrored
cabinets above the sinks. That bath also had a free-standing
tub, white subway tile on the walls and white hexagonal
tiles on the floor. Traditionally, baths in Craftsman
homes used a lot of white because it created a sense
of cleanliness.
“Ironically, Craftsman homes
originally came about in protest of mass-produced goods
but today’s
modern technology makes replicating the style easier
and more affordable,” observes Wallman. “For
instance, cultured stone is available at a fraction
of the cost of real stone. If you’re looking
for low maintenance, James Hardie® fiber cement
siding comes in vertical, horizontal and shingle styles – and
looks more like real wood and stucco than similar vinyl
products. There are a variety of authentic looking
shingles available, from shake composites to attractive
asphalt shingles. Many of the major window and door
manufacturers have Craftsman lines, including Andersen,
Pella and Marvin.
“The Internet makes research
easier and provides instant access to resources all
over the country. One
of my favorite sites for period lighting and hardware
is www.Rejuvenation.com.
Kichyyler® Lighting also has an extensive new line
of Tiffany fixtures. Sites such as www.CraftHome.com and www.Craftsmanhome.com offer
everything from door knobs, mail slots and heat registers
to tiles, towel bars and ceiling fans.”
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With its unpretentious, time-honored elements, solid
sense of security and cozy atmosphere, the Craftsman
home has become an American classic that adds character
to any neighborhood.
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