• East Bay (California) homes for sale

  • for sale: restored Horseheads NY home, $199,500

    From Martha Horton’s recent article in the Star-Gazette‘s Twin Tiers Homes section:

    John
    Stevens, a Horseheads native, studied architecture at Cornell
    University, and his wife Rosemary, originally from Owego, is a Cornell
    graduate, but the two did not cross paths on campus. They met later,
    when Rosemary was employed with Corning Inc. and John, an independent
    electrician, was doing work there.

    John
    had purchased a Craftsman-style house in the Village of Horseheads in
    1993 from the Shappee estate. The original owner, who built the house
    in 1920, was James Shappee, a prominent citizen and foundry owner. His
    caricature by famed cartoonist Zim hangs in the Zim Center in
    Horseheads. James’ wife Febe was a Horseheads school principal.

    When
    Rosemary, an interior designer, first saw the house, she recognized its
    "good bones," and thought it was well worth preserving and updating. So
    the couple went to work on it, doing most of the labor themselves. "We
    worked on the house every day after work," Rosemary recalls, "and every
    weekend." They are still working on it.

    John
    did extensive rewiring and updated the heating system. Rosemary, who
    now operates her own interior design firm under the name of "Designs by
    Rody," masterminded the aesthetics. "I wanted to keep the house in
    character and bring it forward as it would have evolved through the
    years," she explains. "Houses talk to you," Rosemary adds.

    The 3+ bedroom, 4 full bath, almost 4000 square foot house is listed by Kristen Dininny, a real estate agent with Signature Properties. There’s a map here.

    Of course, where I live, a house like this would sell for well over $450,000, even with the market falling a bit in the past year. It’s almost tempting to move to New York and try to make a living doing freelance work or by beefing up this site and trying to make some money from the advertising … the $200,000 cash I’d walk away with from the sale of my own smaller home would cover expenses for several years.

  • video, video and, what’s this? more video

    Lots of folks have put great videos up in the last few weeks on Google Video / YouTube / GooTube / whatever you want to call it.

  • Cole Pottery in Sanford, North Carolina

    Booth Mountain Retreat is a family blog "about establishing a family homestead outside of Chapel Hill, North Carolina." They "started with a two-story timber frame coach house and later will build an attached 1909 Gustav Stickley-designed main house." I enjoy their articles on various aspects of timber frame construction, but was especially struck by something last week – an account of the family’s visit to Cole Pottery in Sanford NC.

    Whenever I head into Sanford I need to stop at Cole Pottery. It is just
    before you get to Sanford and it is a great place. It is run by Neolia
    and Celia Cole and Neolia’s grandson Kenneth George. Today Neolia and
    Kenneth were there. It is an old building with dirt floors covered with
    tar paper. The exterior is cover in vinyl siding and it is not showy.
    They have a back room that they are usually throwing pots. Neolia will
    usually have a cigarette going and Kenneth is quietly working.

    Cole Pottery and its family owners was also the subject of New Life, a 55-minute documentary made by Jim Sharkey and distributed by folkfilms.com.

  • Hewn & Hammered on Flickr

    We have had lots and lots of additions to our photo pool on Flickr; if you want to see pictures of A&C neighborhoods all over the country, interior and exterior remodels, new homes and all sorts of other bits and pieces, please come on over and visit. Flickr accounts are free, too, so feel free to make your own and share your photos with us!

  • Tokyo’s Nihon Mingeikan & Mingei’s relationship to Arts & Crafts

    Japan’s Daily Yomiuri includes an English-language edition, and a recent issue includes a short article by Robert Reed on Tokyo’s Nihon Mingeikan, a small museum celebrating Mingei crafts and the life and work of Soetsu Yanagi, the founder of the Mingei movement. Mingei is sometimes associated with the Arts & Crafts movement by art historians who note both its chronological proximity to European A&C and its similar philosophical underpinnings (the recent International Arts & Crafts show, which originated at the Victoria & Albert and was at San Francisco’s De Young Museum in the middle of 2006, included a model room based on Mingei crafts and made a strong case for that movement’s inclusion as part of the ‘International Arts & Crafts’ milieu).

    From the museum’s website:

    Located
    in Tokyo, the Mingeikan Museum is housed in a beautiful traditional
    Japanese building completed in 1936. Founded in the same year, the
    Mingeikan has over 17,000 items in its collection made by anonymous crafts people mainly from Japan, but also from China, Korea, England, Africa, and elsewhere.

    Yanagi Soetsu
    (1889-1961), the first director and founder of the Museum, coined the
    term Mingei (folk art) in 1926 to refer to common crafts that had been
    brushed aside by the industrial revolution. Yanagi and his lifelong companions,
    the potters Bernard Leach, Hamada Shoji, and Kawai Kanjiro, sought to
    counteract the desire for cheap mass-produced products by pointing to
    the works of ordinary crafts people that spoke to the spiritual and
    practical needs of life. The Mingei Movement is responsible for keeping alive many traditions.

  • Architectural Salvage V: Turning Trash Into Treasure

    Warehouse222

    From Kaleena Cote at Yankee magazine comes this article on everyone's favorite weekend pastime, bargain-hunting at architectural salvage yards:

    Home salvage yards are like garage sales. Once you find that hidden treasure, the whole trip becomes worthwhile. For more than two decades, homeowners have searched for treasure at Vermont Salvage, an architectural Warehouse For Lease that has stores in White River Junction, Vermont, and Manchester, New Hampshire. Doors, windows, appliances – items that have outlived the houses and buildings they used to grace – fill each warehouse, much of it tagged with bargain prices.

    Bargains are what I’m after on a damp and dreary February afternoon as I drive up to the half-brick, half-concrete Vermont
    Salvage store in Manchester. Old toilets, tubs, and trash lie out in the yard, as well as a few abandoned vehicles and an old rusting trailer, while a few red spray-painted squiggles splatter the sides of the building. The place looks as if it needs to be salvaged itself.

    But inside, it’s easy to see why people enjoy searching through the rows of different colored doors, walking past the pastel pink and yellow toilets, and toying with the little trinkets ranging from outlet faces to small brass hooks for hanging clothes. The place has character, and the employees there are eager to please. They're not the in-your-face “buy this now” types of salesmen; they let the customers browse freely. At the same time, they're willing to help and offer suggestions. Just ask.

    Read the full article and see pictures at Yankee magazine’s site. They’ve also compiled a good list of New England salvage firms and shops, which follows the article.