Friday, August 27, 2021

A Simple Architectural Tour

In the same neighborhood of South Salem as the tree and farmhouse I showed yesterday, I stopped several times to appreciate small architectural touches owners incorporated into otherwise ordinary buildings.

I liked the rich, dark paint job and the colorful sun within an arch engraved "Elmwood" (the name of the road) in the gable of this building.  I imagine it is a studio of some kind.

Someone took the time and bore the expense at this simple farmhouse to decorate the gable and space between the front windows with semi-circular shingles.  

This is a simple, well-maintained house with stained shingles (not especially common here). Hanging a huge American flag over an entrance is becoming increasingly common.  I don't know why.

Same idea, but in paint instead of cloth, and a heart substitutes for the field of stars.

I would like to see more of this big Craftsman-style house, but it is set back from the road, hidden behind a stone wall and unruly bushes that I peeked through, and obscured by inartfully planted trees.

7 comments:

RedPat said...

The Craftsman house looks intriguing. You will have to go back when the leaves are gone. ;-)

Taken For Granted said...

Interesting architectural details, some modern and some traditional like the fishtail shingles. The Prairie or Crafstman style house is a bit surprising as it is so far from its origin, but this style looks great. I am with RedPat hoping you will go back after the fall has removed the leaves to show us more.

Sharon said...

Beautiful area.

William Kendall said...

Terrific shots.

JudithK said...

I used to live in a house here in Texas with those shingles curved on the ends. All the gables were finished with those. I suspect you could buy them by the load, like regular wood shingles. This is due to my surmising from experience that my forbearers would not have done it themselves on a bet. Not that they were rich, and they could afford to build a house in 1911, and they were tending to sheep and cows. So somebody did it, but not them....would be interesting to know how they were made.

JudithK said...

P.S. I also suspect they weren't terribly expensive compared to the regular. But I could be wrong. Maybe for once they went for flair!

Mage said...

Very niice stuff.