• September Craigslist finds, west coast-centric

    It’s interesting how some communities really embrace Craigslist and use it regularly, and some areas hardly touch it. I’ve noticed that many of the midwest and southern states use it rarely – mostly only for employment and rental advertising, while even small cities on both coasts have extremely active Craigslist communities. So, just in case you were wondering why I give short schrift to certain parts of the country in these monthly reports, that’s your answer. Meanwhile, today’s crop:

    • library desk with shelves, interesting detail, excellent condition: $950, San Ramon CA
    • sideboard with good grain and unique round mirror: $365, Hollywood CA
    • Limbert dresser, good condition & nice hardware: $900, San Jose CA
    • armchair with high spindle back & leather seat, signed Stickley: $450, Santa Ana CA
    • partner desk with shelves and "tug-of-war" drawers: $650, Santa Cruz CA
    • pedestal / plant stand, attractive grain: $275, Portland OR
    • rocker, leather seat & nice wide slat back: $250, Salinas CA
    • rocker, slat back, with velvet seat and back: $40, Tacoma WA
    • library table & side chair with some interesting details: $150 for both, Templeton CA
    • armoire with interesting detail, mirror on door: $1850, Spokane WA
    • settle & armchair, Stickley, matching upholstery: $2500, Northridge CA
    • dining table and four spindle-backed sidechairs: $500, Molalla OR
    • piano bench designed after a 1910 Stickley design, very attractive: $450, Estacada OR
    • cabinet doors or entry door sidelights with pretty stained glass: $275, Seattle WA
  • Arts & Crafts on Ebay: August 2007

    There are plenty of interesting pieces of A&C furniture and ceramics on Ebay right now – almost 50% more than I usually see up there, with some neat Roycroft pieces and pretty tiles too. Maybe people are cleaning out their own collections this summer, or trying to cover the costs of their rising mortgages by selling off family treasures (I hope not!). Here are some items closing soon that caught my eye:

  • Arts & Crafts ceramic tile on ebay

    three tiles

    I’ve been getting lots of emails asking for more links to interesting items for sale – on Craigslist, Ebay, at auction or wherever. So this week and next I’ll be posting a lot more like this.

    Today, pretty A&C tiles on Ebay – some in bulk, some in frames, some individually:

  • Oaklawn Portal, South Pasadena


    Greene & Greene’s 1906 portal to the Oaklawn neighborhood in Pasadena; found in mins3rdkid’s Flickr photostream. Unfortunately, this pretty bit of stonework, wood and masonry is often overlooked in books and studies of the work of the brothers Greene; local artists, however, know it well – here’s Liz Reday’s painting.

  • “one beautiful bungalow” in Sacramento CA

    Gabby Hyman at RenovatorsPlace.com had the following story about Don Fox, who lives not far from me in Sacramento. Read the whole article here.

    When Don Fox took his first look at a 1910 Craftsman-style bungalow in Sacramento, CA, he knew he had found his long-sought fixer-upper. The home had "good bones," Fox said, but it was in miserable shape. A homeless man was sleeping on the porch, the windows were shattered, and there was so much grime on the kitchen walls that it "smelled like a restaurant grease trap." After gutting the home to bare studs and rafters, Fox and his wife, Amanda, completed a renovation project that won an award from the Association for the Preservation of Historic Homes.

    The remodeled kitchen, bathrooms, and living room were the true stars of what the Sacramento Bee called "One Beautiful Bungalow." An Italian-American from Brooklyn, Don has a particular fondness for the kitchen renovation, which resulted in a room where he spends a lot of his time whipping up traditional culinary faire.

    "The house felt good when I first saw it," he explains. "It was a spiritual feeling. That’s despite its having been sad, neglected, and uninhabited for years." Fox, a former journeyman carpenter, furniture-maker, and aficionado of period architecture, saw the potential to create a showpiece.

  • John Hudson Thomas

    There’s been a resurgence of interest lately in one of my favorite Bay Area architects, a fellow who was just as comfortable with classically Arts & Crafts structures as he was with Art Deco, Mission Revival and less orthodox (or harder to pigeonhole) styles.

    John Hudson Thomas grew up in the Bay Area and returned to Berkeley after graduating from Yale. While in the Architecture MA program at Berkeley, he studied under and became friends with both Bernard Maybeck and John Galen Howard, and worked for Howard for a few years after graduation.

    A member of Berkeley’s Hillside Club, he socialized with Maybeck, Julia Morgan and others, and certainly elements of their own styles are visible in his early work. He was especially interested in the tall, thin and somewhat whimsical forms of European designers like Mackintosh and Voysey, and incorporated these lines – along with those of the fledgeling Prairie movement and those of the Viennese Seccessionists – into his own style, which in more recent years been called part of the "First Bay" school. Eventually, his work became a bit softer and more orthodox, but he still kept his knack for interior architecture – lots of detail – and tall structures with long uninterrupted lines well into the 1920s and 30s.

    By this time, he was working for more established clients, on more complex and high-paying projects – mostly large homes – but his attention to landscape, environment and view was still paramount, and slightly odd or purposely out-of-place elements – friezes, odd finishes, unexpected combinations of materials, nooks and crannies and whimsical woodwork – remained. Luckily, many of his best buildings are still standing; a few are listed below:

  • Eco-Friendly remodel in Austin TX on This Old House

    Photos_kenny_braun
    The Healthy House Institute has an interesting article on a recent series of eight episodes of This Old House devoted to the "greening" of a 1926 Craftsman bungalow in Austin, Texas:

    Taking on its first-ever project in Austin, Texas, This Old House shares
    strategies and solutions for transforming a historic house into a low
    maintenance, healthy, and comfortable eco-friendly home.

    The renovation of a 1926 Craftsman-style bungalow for newly married
    homeowners Michele Grieshaber and Michael Klug will be “green” in
    nature, while making room for a growing family — including Michael’s two
    young sons, Sam and David — with the addition of two bedrooms and a
    modest full bath on a new second floor.

    By using
    technologies that conserve energy and water, and opting for durable and
    sustainable materials, This Old House is taking an outdated house and
    giving it an energy-efficient future, while showing that “green” does
    not have to be experimental, or expensive.

    Since this ground-up remodel included low-maintenance, low-water xeriscaping, that became one episode all by itself;  another was dedicated solely to the planning process – something worthy of extra attention whenever you’re working with new and unorthodox materials and techniques. The episode also generated plenty of materials for articles on subjects as varied as lighting and remodeling with and for families with children on the TOH website.

    photograph by Kenny Braun for This Old House

  • Rich Baumhofer & Cindy Bechtel’s Curtis Park firehouse, part II

    Yesterday, HGTV ran an episode of their reZONED program on Richard Baumhofer & Cindy Bechtel’s beautiful Curtis Park home in a remodeled and restored firehouse, which we originally wrote about this week last year. Marybeth Bizjak has more on the house in her September 2006 article in Sacramento Magazine. Later in the article, Rich notes his favorite northern California salvage yards – which happen to be mine, too – Ohmega Salvage and Urban Ore, both in Berkeley:

    Vision. Some people have it; some don’t.

    Rich Baumhofer and
    Cindy Bechtel fall squarely into the “have vision” category. When the
    couple stumbled upon a dilapidated old house in Curtis Park, they could
    see it had major potential.

    Their friends told them they were
    crazy to consider buying the structure, which had been built in 1917 as
    a fire station and later converted to a private home. But buy it they
    did, setting out to restore its “firehouse charm.”

    They
    succeeded so spectacularly that HGTV will feature their house on an
    upcoming episode of “reZONED,” a show about people who turn commercial
    spaces into one-of-a-kind homes.

    “My intention was to
    rebuild in the spirit of the original firehouse,” says Baumhofer, a
    builder and general contractor who has worked on many old houses. He
    kept the shell of the Craftsman-style building intact while gutting the
    inside to create a spacious, family-friendly home.

       

    Congratulations to both Rich and Cindy – it’s nice when the rest of the world acknowledges all your hard work. And thanks, too, for sharing your home with all of us!