Family Album – Issue 45

Purcellville, Va., Jennifer and Peter Reynolds
When we built our bungalow in 1998, we were largely uneducated about the Arts and Crafts movement, but were moving from the Del Rey neighborhood in Alexandria and wanted to find a similar house. The interior moves away from a traditional bungalow design with an open floor plan and wall of windows that make it seem like you are sitting in the woods. It has a two-story stone fireplace and much wood inside and out. A favorite feature of this house is that the kitchen, eating area and great room are all one space so your entire family can enjoy time together.

Big Lake, Minn., Phil and Suzanne Hagen
My husband built our family a Craftsman-style home in a rural suburb of the Twin Cities. This was quite a change, but we’ve found it suits us. The theme of the porch railing is carried throughout the interior of the house. The main colors-subtle browns, tans and greens-were chosen to bring the outside in, Arts and Crafts style. We have a beautiful lot on the St. Francis River, and the surroundings match the house quite well.

Calgary, Alberta, Jude Polsky and Phil Hoffman
We bought and began renovating our 1915 bungalow in 1999. One of a string of identical, cottage-size workers’ houses on our block, we opted for a historic renovation on the outside and a modern interior featuring industrial touches and a vaulted ceiling. We removed asbestos tiles to expose the original cedar shingle exterior. Also note the dentil-block detail, which was common in both commercial and residential designs of the time. At 780 square feet, our house is tiny but full of charm and character.

Harrisburg, Penn., Edward Fox
This is my first home, a 1929 bungalow in Penbrook, a small borough just outside the Harrisburg city limits. I had a hard time pinning down what style it is, but many of your online readers suggest that it looks largely Colonial Revival. This summer I finished liberating my front porch enclosure from its aluminum siding. Next I’d like to replace the aluminum windows and return the kitchen and bath to period appropriate looks. An article in Issue No. 35 convinced me to track down the family of my home’s original owners; now my next-door neighbor wants to do the same. The passion for these charming little houses is contagious!

Byron, Ill., Greg and Christine Stark
After living in a ranch-style house for 20 years, we decided to try a bungalow. Designed by my wife, Christine, and modeled after a “Pomona” kit home, after four years of construction and my wife’s broken back, we finally finished our dream house. We did all of the construction with some help from family members, and used salvage items such as light fixtures, sinks, built-in bookcases, a newel post and hardware. We made our trim following dimensions from the Curtis Millwork Book 1914; our goal was to make it look old.

Portland, Ore., Karen Morris
Five years ago when I bought my 1909 bungalow, it was covered in asphalt “brick” siding. I have resided in cedar, replaced the roof and changed three windows from metal to wood. Although my one-bedroom bungalow, at just over 700 square feet, is tiny, it lives big, thanks to a sunporch adjoining the living room, a formal dining room and a windowed breakfast nook. It has oak and fir floors, cove moldings and original kitchen cupboards with glass doors. My next project is a bathroom remodel, complete with claw-foot tub and pedestal sink.

Chicago, Ill., Odessa White-Junious
I bought my 1930 Chicago brick bungalow in 2002. It has checkerboard face brick and supports for a missing window box on the front facade, and the interior woodwork is in beautiful mint condition. It is a story and a half, with four bedrooms. There is a bathroom addition in the basement, a wood-sided add-on at the rear and a hip-roof garage along the back alley.

Round Top, Texas, Russell Miller
We dreamed of a bungalow home for our rural acreage and found a late-1920s example in a nearby town and had it moved some 15 miles. It was expanded in the early ’30s and there were some minor ’50s updates to the bath and kitchen, but we started with a structure that still contained its original details. The house features longleaf pine floors and trim throughout, and is perfect for the Craftsman furnishings we’ve collected over the past 20 years. Landscaping with a focus on native plants occupies our time these days.

Eureka, Calif., RAdd an Imageaymond Smith
My California bungalow in the Hendersen Center area has two bedrooms and one bath in 1,450 square feet. I am only the second owner, and a lot of the original design is intact despite a ’60s update that I am slowly renovating. I’ve been told that it was built around 1925, but sat vacant for seven or eight years before I bought it. The Eureka area offers a wide variety of Victorian, Craftsman and other bungalow architecture, and I’m glad to own this little piece of the town’s past history.

Athens, Ga., Jim and Lane Norton
Our new home was finished in March 2003 on a lot adjoining the Bloomfield Historic District. We kept the exterior conforming to the area’s bungalow styles, while inside we have all the conveniences of a new home. Our interior woods are maple and mahogany rather than the oak that was the traditional finish in this area. Many refer to our new home as the “Hobbit House” or the “Storybook Home.” We love it.

Chicago, Ill., Anastasia and Frank Glapa
Our “jumbo” Chicago bungalow was built in 1924 for $10,000 and we bought it for 20 times that in 1990. The leaking tile roof was removed and a new 75-year concrete tile roof installed. We started a trend — six homes near us had their old roofs replaced with new tile instead of cheaper asphalt. Our home has beautiful crown moldings we are stripping, oak and maple floors, and leaded-glass windows. The sun rises in the dining room and sets in the solarium; we love our bungalow!

Malvern, Penn., Kurt and Isabel Leininger
After looking at about 30 houses in three days, we walked into this one and immediately said, “This is the house we want.” It is from a Sears kit, built in the early 1920s and we love it. The floors are gorgeous — warm, golden maple with very strong contrast from light to dark — and it has a few built-ins — simple bookshelves in the living room and a corner cupboard in the dining room. The kitchen was redone very poorly in the mid-’80s, so we did it over last year with a maple floor, butcher-block counters and subway tile.

Shell Beach, Calif., Charles and Evelyn Plemons
Our Greene and Greene-inspired home, built in 1998, is a testament to the Arts and Crafts philosophy of form following function. Our architect, Bruce Fraser, developed a floor plan to suit our lifestyle, then adapted it to a steep upsloping lot. Custom features include Greene and Greene-style light fixtures and doors, Honduran mahogany woodwork with finger joints and Bradbury & Bradbury wallpapers. Our home is truly a dream come true and we marvel every day at how lucky we are to live in it.

East Point, Ga., Randy Lauscher and John Carriere
This 1930 Craftsman bungalow is located in suburban Atlanta on a corner lot in the Jefferson Park neighborhood. It has unique front porch steps that we haven’t seen duplicated anywhere. It is one of just a few yellow brick homes built in this area; Georgia red clay was a plentiful source for manufacturing red brick, which was the norm for brick homes in the region during that period.

Deadwood, S.D., Roger and Sharon Crago
We are the third owners of this very original 1908 bungalow. It has a four-foot casket door, original light fixtures, hardwood floors and stained-glass French doors. The woodwork has never been redone, and the only change since 1941 is painting the walls. It is on the National Historic Registry and is quite a unique home.

Wichita, Kansas, Eric and Michelle Lamp
A few years back, my wife and I set out to find a bungalow in the country. After many months of searching, we decided to create what we wanted. We added all of the modern goodies, like cement siding, high-efficiency windows and a geothermal climate-control system. Due to budgetary constraints, the extensive interior woodwork will have to be added as the years go by.

Kirkwood, Calif., Brian Wilkerson and Andrea Vollersen
We’ve built a new home at the foot of a ski resort with many design elements that don’t seem to show up in new construction these days: floor plans that put the hearth (rather than the TV) at the center of the gathering spaces, trim work that is integrated with custom lighting, and built-ins that help meld the house with its furnishings. This shot of the second-floor deck shows some of the Montana ledge stone, 38 tons in all, that faces the foundation, and the snowfall that reaches 20′ annually. The house had a feeling of being a home from the day we moved in.

Marblehead, Mass., Kelly Dyer
I purchased my 1910 bungalow in 1999, and did $100,000 worth of renovations on her last year; it turned out amazing! Marblehead is one of the most beautiful spots in the world, a harbor town 19 miles north of Boston. There are about 10 bungalows there, not clustered, but all in very unique locations. I also lived in a bungalow in Louisville, Ky., which was my first discovery of what a bungalow was. Now I will be in one for life!

Chicago, Ill., Cheryl Borgeson and Les Carlstrom
Thank you so much for the many articles about Chicago bungalows; here’s a picture of ours. We live on an all-bungalow street, in a mostly bungalow neighborhood, and have looked for another one like it in Chicago, but never found one. It’s the smallest house on the block — the original owner built it for himself, so it may be one of a kind. It doesn’t have the built-ins, stained or leaded glass, or other extras that most have, nor does it have any closets except in the two bedrooms, but we still love its cozy charm. We’re inspired by the articles and advertisers in your magazine, and are renovating in the bungalow style, room by room.

Collierville, Tenn., Wesley and Melissa Nimon
In 1998 we purchased this 1924 bungalow in Raleigh, N.C., from a lady who had rented it out for the previous 60 years. Little had been modernized, and the original bathroom and kitchen were largely intact and just needed a little restoration. One of our initial exterior projects was to remove the asbestos shingles and metal awnings. It was a bit of a leap of faith to hope that the original wood siding underneath would still be in good condition, but the asbestos had protected it rather well since 1947. Employment has now taken us back home to Tennessee, where we are again living in and restoring a 1920s bungalow.

Bethel, Maine, George and Danna Brown Nickerson
We have never seen another house quite like ours, an interesting mix of Craftsman, with elements of Queen Anne and Italianate also in evidence, making for a unique facade. Since we last wrote you (Open House, Issue No. 25), we were presented with a historic preservation award for our restoration of our 1910 home, and as the icing on the cake, our house was entered in the National Register of Historic Places for its architectural significance in October 2002.

Spokane, Wash., Lynda and James Parry
Our 1912 Craftsman bungalow has original oak and fir floors in its 1,836 square feet. The dining room has dark fir-paneled walls, a leaded-glass buffet, and original light fixtures. There is a small, half-round fireplace and a bead-board ceiling in the den, while the living room has a window seat and floor-to-ceiling, double-mantel fireplace. We bought the house when we were both 22 years old, 35 years ago. It’s been a labor of love restoring and enjoying our “family friendly” Craftsman bungalow.

Marietta, Ga., Arni Katz
I spent summers in the Chicago area as a kid. I never realized the incredible imprint the Prairie-style and Arts and Crafts homes had on me until I realized I wanted to live in a home like the ones I admired in my youth. My cousin had built a Wright Usonian home in Lincoln Park, Ill., and after visiting him, the lightbulb went on. Our Prairie-style home was designed by Joe Metzler of SALA Architects in Minneapolis; John Self, of Atlanta; and my wife and myself. Including the mostly finished terrace level (above-ground basement), it is about 6,000 square feet.

by David Cathers

When they began house hunting in the mid-1970s, the McWilliamses were determined if at all possible to buy a Myron Hunt house. They had learned of this architect, and come to admire his work, because friends of theirs lived contentedly in a Hunt-designed home, which, with perhaps more sentiment than historical accuracy, those friends referred to as “a comfortable Victorian.”

Jim and Mary McWilliams found two of Hunt’s Evanston houses to choose from. As things turned out, the one they ended up buying was not their first choice, it was their second. But the choice they made, though difficult at the time, was to have a much more beneficial effect on their lives than they could at first have anticipated.

Although Hunt never achieved great national acclaim, his buildings are rightly admired in the Chicago area, where he lived and worked from 1896 to 1903, and in California, where he spent the remainder of his career. In Chicago he devoted himself primarily to domestic architecture, flexibly designing a varied group of suburban homes to suit the tastes of individual clients. In general, however, his houses were simple, unpretentious, affordable structures that reflected the influence of Shingle Style architecture.

Hunt’s houses also shared Prairie School traits: their elevations emphasized the horizontal line, their exteriors were mostly composed of stone and naturally finished wood, and they had interiors that were notable for their open planning, with one space flowing easily into the next. Hunt and Frank Lloyd Wright were in fact close friends, and in the late 1890s they shared studio space in downtown Chicago in the 11-story office tower/theater building Steinway Hall with several other forward-looking young architects of their generation. And, like Wright, in 1897 Hunt was a charter member of the Chicago Arts and Crafts Society.

But Hunt’s trademark talent was uniquely his own: his plans allowed for the maximum amount of usable space in houses that had to fit within the typically restricted boundaries of suburban building plots. In large part, it was because his houses were so pleasingly functional that he was kept busy with commissions during his years in Chicago. Before moving to California, he designed at least 39 buildings in Evanston alone, including a home for himself and his family. Myron Hunt’s houses are much coveted and rarely come onto the market, because, as Jim McWilliams says, “they are so livable.”

The house the McWilliamses live in was built in 1898, and Hunt must have considered it one of his best because he exhibited a rendering of it in the 1899 Chicago Architectural Club exhibition. He designed the house for a client named Harley N. Higginbottam, who was, among other things, a partner of the department store mogul Marshall Field. Higginbottam built this house not for himself but as a rental property; the first tenant was another department store grandee, Samuel Carson of Carson, Pirie, Scott & Company. Carson’s partner Pirie lived just up the street, also in a Myron Hunt house.

The McWilliamses bought their house in 1976, and gradually restored it over a period of about 15 years. Furnishing it didn’t take quite that long. Although Mary’s taste ran more toward the Colonial Revival style, the first piece of furniture she bought for their new home was a $150 Mission oak rocking chair. It’s still in their living room. “I’m not sure why,” she said to Jim at the time, “but this rocker fits in this house.” Shortly thereafter, as their knowledge of the Arts and Crafts movement grew, they began collecting early-20th-century furniture, pottery, metalwork and textiles.

Although the couple’s Stickley furniture collection is not extensive, it is particularly choice. Their rectangular, circa-1910 dining table, with boldly expressed tenon-and-key joints at both ends of its massive medial stretcher, is one of the few exciting new designs that emerged from Stickley’s factory during the late phase of his Arts and Crafts furniture making. The chairs around the table are “H-back” chairs, so named because their wide back slats have cutouts at the top and bottom and resemble a capital H. They, too, are from the late period — first appearing in the firm’s 1910 catalog — but Jim McWilliams considers them to be “probably Stickley’s cleanest designs.” The McWilliamses didn’t choose them, however, simply because they are handsome.

As Jim explains, “they are the narrowest chairs Stickley made, and we can squeeze more of them around a table than would be possible with the earlier, more massive chairs.”

The other most noteworthy Stickley pieces in this collection come from Stickley’s early period. The couple’s 1901 double-door bookcase, with its Gothic-inspired curves, molded edges and crisply beveled top, is a great rarity. Stickley used such refined decorative touches sparingly and to great effect in 1900 and 1901, but then, as his ideas about furniture design changed, he turned away from this kind of subtle detailing. The McWilliamses’ 1902 double-door china cabinet, a massive piece with an absolutely straight-lined profile, is equally rare, and a perfect representative of how Stickley’s furniture shifted, in just one year, from artful curves to bold geometry. They also own an extremely rare 1902 Stickley fall-front desk that has a fascinating history: it once belonged to the silent movie star Douglas Fairbanks Sr., and they were able to buy it years ago, when the contents of his opulent Rhode Island estate came up for auction.

What truly sets the bookcase and china cabinet apart from much of the Stickley furniture seen today is their extraordinary condition. Both of these 100-year-old pieces of furniture retain their original rich, dark, glowing finishes. Stickley is generally praised today for the clean lines, good proportions and meticulous construction of his furniture, but he was also a master colorist. He gave his cabinet woods complex and subtle hues: gray-brown, green-brown and a soft, matte near-black. Early Stickley pieces with their color so intact are, to say the least, very hard to find.

Besides Stickley furniture, the pair seek Arts and Crafts objects with a local flavor. Their Stickley china cabinet, for instance, houses a dazzling collection of silver and aluminum pieces from the Cellini Shop, a small Evanston firm that made hand-wrought flatware, hollowware and jewelry beginning in 1914. Jim and Mary also collect Teco pottery — sought after today for its classic architect-designed shapes and silken matte green glazes — also made near Chicago. And, as the accompanying photographs show, this pottery harmonizes not only with Gustav Stickley’s furniture, but also with the interior detailing of Myron Hunt’s architecture.

The ceramics firm that made Teco also produced lamps, and today Teco lamps are highly prized by the few collectors fortunate enough to own them. The McWilliamses’ Teco lamp is an unusually successful example, and retains its original leaded-glass shade designed by Orlando Giannini and made by his partner Fritz Hilgart. Although Giannini created some designs of Teco pottery, he and Hilgart are best remembered today for the superb art glass they supplied for Frank Lloyd Wright’s early, precedent-setting Prairie houses.good proportions and meticulous construction of his furniture, but he was also a master colorist. He gave his cabinet woods complex and subtle hues: gray-brown, green-brown and a soft, matte near-black. Early Stickley pieces with their color so intact are, to say the least, very hard to find.

Besides Stickley furniture, the pair seek Arts and Crafts objects with a local flavor. Their Stickley china cabinet, for instance, houses a dazzling collection of silver and aluminum pieces from the Cellini Shop, a small Evanston firm that made hand-wrought flatware, hollowware and jewelry beginning in 1914. Jim and Mary also collect Teco pottery — sought after today for its classic architect-designed shapes and silken matte green glazes — also made near Chicago. And, as the accompanying photographs show, this pottery harmonizes not only with Gustav Stickley’s furniture, but also with the interior detailing of Myron Hunt’s architecture.

The ceramics firm that made Teco also produced lamps, and today Teco lamps are highly prized by the few collectors fortunate enough to own them. The McWilliamses’ Teco lamp is an unusually successful example, and retains its original leaded-glass shade designed by Orlando Giannini and made by his partner Fritz Hilgart. Although Giannini created some designs of Teco pottery, he and Hilgart are best remembered today for the superb art glass they supplied for Frank Lloyd Wright’s early, precedent-setting Prairie houses.

In addition to its impressive Arts and Crafts collection, the McWilliams house is home to perhaps the most important Jules Guerin collection in existence. Guerin (1866-1946) is not as widely known today as he deserves to be, but in the late-19th and early-20th centuries he was one of the era’s most successful architectural delineators and magazine illustrators.

He was also a muralist, a painter equally proficient in watercolors and oils, and a stage designer. As a creator of architectural renderings he ranks as one of the finest of his era; Marion Mahony, best-known for her exquisite presentation drawings of Frank Lloyd Wright’s houses, and Harvey Ellis, who drew and designed houses, furniture and textiles for Gustav Stickley in 1903, may be counted among Guerin’s peers.

It was as an illustrator, however, that Guerin earned his greatest acclaim. Through his friendship with the hugely popular artist Maxfield Parrish, he began providing illustrations to Century magazine at the turn of the 20th century, and during the following two decades created illustrations as well for Harper’s, Scrib-ner’s and Ladies’ Home Journal. His illustrations for “The Chateaux of Touraine,” published in 1904 as a series of articles in Century, and then gathered together in a book, brought Guerin his first real public attention.

This success led to other magazine series that were also made into books, including Egypt and Its Monuments and The Near East: Dalmatia, Greece and Constantinople.

Guerin knew how to make his paintings compelling: he exaggerated perspective for dramatic effect, approached his subjects from an unexpected point of view and drenched his scenes in glowing colors. “The key to Guerin,” says Jim McWilliams, “is his use of color. He was very sensitive to natural colors.” Guerin traveled widely, often painting out of doors and capturing in watercolor the distinctive hues of each place he visited. His Egyptian scenes, for instance, are crisp and bright in the hot, dry desert air, and, in contrast, the ancient buildings he painted in Venice shimmer in a faint blue atmospheric haze. Guerin created vivid, romanticized images of far-away settings, and American magazine readers, leafing through the pages in the familiar comforts of their own homes, were captivated by the exoticism of his work. He also painted stirring vistas of historic buildings that are icons of the American landscape: Independence Hall, the Smithsonian Institution, the Capitol Building and the White House.

The McWilliamses discovered Guerin in the late 1970s. They happened on two or three of his prints at a local house sale, liked the pictures immediately, and bought them for a few dollars each. Then a friend found three original Guerin paintings set out on a porch at another Evanston house sale, and they bought them as well. With that purchase they were transformed, no longer casual buyers but determined collectors. Although some of the paintings they’ve bought over the years came from auctions at Christie’s and Sotheby’s, most were ferreted out from much more obscure sources. The fact that they were found at all is testament to Jim and Mary’s shared love of this work and to their persistence and ingenuity.

Although the McWilliamses are sophisticated and discriminating collectors, they cannot be considered Arts and Crafts purists. They live with Arts and Crafts furniture, but it is leavened with such touches as the zany 1950s folk art floor lamp that stands next to a Limbert Morris chair in the middle of their living room. Their Guerin artwork is of the period, but they also own a modern reproduction “Winged Victory” statuette.

A classical object such as this may seem out of place in this environment, but in fact it is not at all unusual to see such statuary in period photographs of Arts and Crafts-era houses. Viewed from the outside, the McWilliams home would not strike anyone as an Arts and Crafts house, and yet the natural interior woodwork, living room inglenook and open downstairs floor plan all fall within the movement’s tradition.

This house and collection provide convincing evidence that the phrase “Arts and Crafts” can accommodate much more variety than is often thought today.

When Mary and Jim first started looking for a Myron Hunt house, they met the owner of the house in Evanston that Hunt had designed for himself and his family in 1896. It had hipped roofs, deep shadow-casting eaves, exterior walls sheathed in wooden shingles and diamond-paned windows evocative of a charming English cottage.

In 1905, a writer in House Beautiful had written that “it is constructed on straight lines, and produces almost a Japanese effect in its simplicity.” The McWilliamses could not help but fall in love with this house. It was, amazingly, for sale at that time, but the price was very steep, and the house needed substantial amounts of repair and restoration. They decided not to stretch to buy it, and they’ve never regretted that decision. Opting for a more modest mortgage freed them to collect the Stickley furniture, Teco pottery, early-20th-century textiles, and Guerin prints and paintings that have come to mean so much to them.

Over years of collecting they’ve met other people who are equally passionate about the Arts and Crafts movement and have become their friends. “In many ways,” says Jim, “the people are more important than the objects. Today we can travel to just about any part of the U.S. and meet with friends who share our interests.” The McWilliamses are drawn strongly to Arts and Crafts architecture, furniture and art, but their kinship with an extended, like-minded community matters just as much. The choice they made, so long ago, has proved to be the right one.

David Cathers last wrote about the Pearsons’ Frank Lloyd Wright home and their furniture and pottery collection in Issue No. 36. He is the author of Furniture of the American Art and Crafts Movement and Stickley Style: Arts and Crafts Homes in the Craftsman Tradition.

Chicago, IL, Janice Vonckx

“Our 1 1/2-story, red brick bungalow is typical of Chicago-area bungalows built around 1927. The exterior remains true to its original style as does the interior, as far as maintaining its solid oak floors, doors and woodwork in the living/dining areas, We have thoroughly enjoyed living ‘the bungalow way’ for well over 30 years.â€

Langley,WA, Kirk Francis and Leslie Larch

“This is the only ‘ranch style’ bungalow we know of — we built it on our farm on Whidbey lsland,Washington, in 1992. All the fine craftsmen who worked on it, even those few not named Bob, provided us with not only a fine home but also rich remembrances of fruitful collaboration. We are currently building what may be the first Craftsman style hawk mews constructed on Whidbey Island.â€

Schuylerville, NY, Suzanne and Dennis Brackett

“My husband and I purchased our Craftsman style bungalow in the summer of 1991. It is our first home and we love it’ Schuylerville is a small village on the Hudson River, 10 miles east of Saratoga Springs. There are no other homes here like ours and it’s quite popular among lifelong residents. Our home was built in the early I 920s and was cons idered ahead of its time for that period.

“It is 1,400 square feet, has two bedrooms and a large attic for the second floor. Its features include a built-in milk bottle cupboard on the outside of the house by the back door, a sunny breakfast nook in the kitchen, a leaded glass window in the living room, lots of exposed woodwork (trim, ceiling beams and pillars), hardwood floors througho ut and a spacious floor plan that make the house appear larger.The only major cosmetic renovation we’ve done so far is the bathroom. There’s much more we want to do, but with both of us working full time it’s so hard to find the time.â€

Newcastle, CA, N. Del Cioppo

“There are great California bungalows in the San Francisco/Berkeley and Los Angeles areas but ours is in the heart of the gold country, about 30 miles east of Sacramento in the Sierra foothills.Three years ago, my wife and I acquired Overdene, a 5,000-square-foot, five bedroom, two-story shingle-style bungalow. It was designed in 1909 by San Francisco architect Albert Farr, a pupil of Bernard Maybeck Farr designed Jack London’s Wolf House in Glen Ellen (1913) and the Benbow Inn at Garberville (l926).WJ.Wilson, the original owner of Overdene. was the largest fruit shipper in California and president of the Placer County Bank. and built the house to reflect his prosperity:’

Syracuse, NY, Tom Farrell

“Our bungalow is of t 922 vintage. Inside, all of the wood is original oak and a lantern on the stair’s bottom baluster post is also original.We have subscribed to your magazine for just about two years and it’s helped us find items while redoing our home. Keep up the good work:’

Edmore, MI, Larry and Meredith Langell

“Our bungalow was built in the early ‘20s by a local businessman and lived in until recently by his daughter. It has been beautifully maintained and has built-in bookcases, pocket doors and original unpainted oak woodwork We have just completed some minor cosmetic restoration and were lucky to rip up wall-to-wall carpeting and find polished hardw ood floors. American Bungalow has been an excellent source for ideas, as well as products and services:’

Kerrville,TX, Penny and Frank San Marco

“This is a picture of our house when we bought it as is The previous owner had used it as a daycare center, and a ‘dropped’ acoustical-tile ceiling hid all the electrical wires, air-conditioning ducts and vents.We plan to restore the original wood finish to the dining room’s built-in buffet and repaint the exterior:’

Brookfield, CT, Robert D. Robbins

“In the spring of 1995 I bought my first home and bungalow, built in 1932. It’s the only one of its type in this town of 200-year-old Colonials. It has dark oak floors and trim throughout.The previous owners added a first- floor master bedroom and laundry room, but both changes fit in nicely with the original lines of the house. I look forward to filling the rooms with Mission furniture and spending time relaxing on that big porch!â€

Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada, Grant Rombough

“My wife and I have owned our 1913 I 1/2 story bungalow for 16 years. having fallen in love with it instantly when the real estate agent showed it to us. Fortunately, it had not been butchered and still retains its original cedar shiplap siding and exterior details, as well as all of the interior woodwork, built-ins and even the bathroom tub and toilet. Small miracles do happen: while refurbishing the bathroom I found an original set of faucets (with porcelain insets) for the pedestal sink we had installed, which exactly matched our tub’s original nickel-plated hardware!â€

Duluth, MN, Romayne Nygaard

“I helped my son find this ‘California’ bungalow near the shores of Lake Superior. The house was in its original state except for an added set of bookcases on the fireplace wall and a coat of paint on the walls and woodwork. In the kitchen, the linoleum countertops are still in near perfect condition.The wise builder glassed in the front porch’s north portico, keeping the iciest winds of Lake Superior away from the front entry. The native bluestone foundation is as sound as the day it was built, except for where the ice and snow has eroded some of the mort ar at the front step rails. My son is almost finished stripping all the oak and maple woodwork, and I just refinished a battered Stickley library table for him.The original owners would love the results!â€

St. Louis, MO, LaVerne Telle Boehmke

“This three-bedroom, eight-room bungalow was built in 1924 by my grandparents to house them, my parents. me and my brother. It is now my husband’s and my home.As you can see, it is built of beautiful St. Louis brick with a second story of stucco.There are built-in oak bookc ases with leaded glass doors between the living and dining rooms, a built-in pantry, and a large built-in cupboard in the upstairs bathroom. Almost all the fixtures are original, plus much of the furniture.There has always been wallpaper in all the rooms, except the kitchen and bathr ooms.There are six art glass windows, with various designs. throughout the house: geometric, grape clusters, a swan scene, tulips, and sailboats’

Nyack, NY, David Smith and William Spurlin

“The architectural plans for our home were drafted in January 1911 by Hutton & Buys, Madison Avenue, New York, NY. Except for our conv erting a small, front porch on the second floor into an office and repainting, the house is essentially the original. We especially en)oy the interior’s substantial use of oak and chestnut — inglenook, window benches and spindled railings on the three-flight central staircase’

Chicago, IL, Jim and Debbie O’Connor

“Our 1936 checkerboard-brick octagon bungalow is located in the Galewood neighborhood of Chicago. All the original light fixtures and architectural details have remained intact, including French doors, art glass windows, and original ceramic tile in the kitchen and bathroom’

Maryville,TN, Carolyn Hendrix

“Here is a photo of my bungalow circa 1916. Since this picture was taken I had an asphalt shingle roof put on. It’s multicolor — grey, grey- green, black and rustic red — giving it a slate appearance. Presently I am tearing out a wall between the kitchen and sun room to make room for installing cabinets. I have no idea what type of bungalow I have here, but I do love it and want to do the best I can to enhance its character.â€

by Paula Hendrickson

When Lisa Klein moved into her Chicago bungalow in 1998, she immediately felt comfortable in the North Park neighborhood. Home to two universities and located near the northernmost end of one of Chicago’s El lines, North Park consists of brick bungalows, Foursquares and some older apartments. Originally a predominantly Jewish neighborhood, the area is still home to a yeshiva, but as older residents have moved or died, a wider mix has settled in to create a culturally diverse neighborhood.

Just a block from Lisa’s house, a fork in the Chicago River acts as a buffer between this corner of Chicago and the rest of the city. The river means there are few through streets; it also provides habitats for many animals not often found in major cities, like rabbits, raccoons, opossums, deer and geese. It truly is a neighborhood with something for everyone. For Lisa, that meant a classic 1925 brick bungalow.

Everything was in good original condition from the front door to the back: oak trim, hardwood floors, a mirror-backed Murphy Bed, stained-glass windows and the art-glass light fixtures. She especially liked that the bathroom and kitchen had never been upgraded.

Realizing her existing furniture didn’t quite suit the new home, she started looking around. Wanting furnishings that reflected the home’s age and charm, Klein turned to her favorite places — antique malls, thrift stores, flea markets and garage sales — to fill her home. Around the same time, a friend of a friend was consolidating a bed-and-breakfast, and some of the furniture found its way to Klein — including an Arts and Crafts rocker.

“The first thing I bought was a carpet, in horrible shape, for $35 at a resale shop. I didn’t know anything about it, I just knew I liked it and was drawn to it,” Lisa says. The rug turned out to be the first of four Wilton rugs from the 1920s and 1930s now gracing her home. Originally in the living room, that first rug is now in her home office.

Lisa soon found a 1910 sofa with the original mohair fabric at an antiques shop that specializes in 20th-century pieces. Next came a 1920s French burled-walnut veneer armoire to hide her electronics. Once she realized it was from the same era her house was built, she knew what she had to do: find other furnishings from that period. One of Lisa’s hopes is to have no furnishings, other than electronics, made after World War II.

“Second-hand shopping has always been a passion of mine,” Lisa says. “I started when I was about 16. And I’ve cultivated my eye to find the hidden treasure — and my treasure isn’t necessarily anybody else’s treasure. I did start slanting heavily to Arts and Crafts furnishings once I realized how good they looked in my house and how available they were.” That was as recently as 1999.

“I think it was when I bought a machine-loomed Wilton rug and a Hoosier cabinet at a local auction that it really got in my blood. I liked how the rug accented the stained glass windows and brought the dark wood in my house and the furniture all together. I really got addicted to finding more stuff.”

One of her favorite finds was in a small shop about 100 miles from her home. “I found an old, mahogany-stained Arts and Crafts sideboard that looked perfect. They said it was originally from Chicago, so we thought it might fit. I’d seen it there a couple of times on my scouting adventures, and when it was on sale, I decided to buy it. It fit perfectly under the stained-glass windows in my dining room.” Only after she bought it did Lisa worry about how she’d get it all the way back to Chicago.

Lisa “garbage picked” a couple of things from her former neighbors, including a huge, wood-framed mirror for her hall, and a perfect-condition blue rattan chair that she put in her bathroom. Of course, all her finds aren’t free, some are just cheap.

“There was this Hoosier base at a flea market, marked about $140, and the dealer asked what I wanted to spend. ‘Five dollars,’ I joked. We haggled, and I ended up paying $50. The guy thought I was a dealer, and when I saw him at the same flea market a year later, he remembered me.”

It was at an estate sale that Klein found her dream stove: a 1934 Magic Chef American Stove Company range. “I had a stove guy who works exclusively on vintage stoves look it over, and he only had to replace some of the gaskets and put in a new thermostat. He said the oven and broiler were in impeccable condition — like they weren’t even used.” The cost of the range with repairs was about the same as buying a new stove would have been.

Perhaps her biggest splurge is one of her more recent ones. And it wouldn’t have happened if Lisa weren’t in the habit of stopping at just about every antiques place she passes — when she has the time, anyway. She found a Pullman-style hide-a-bed made by the Globe company, complete with original leather cushions. It may have been her biggest splurge, but she still didn’t pay much. “None of my purchases have been over $800,” she says.

“You can’t go out expecting to find something. Part of the adventure is just going and having the adrenaline rush of maybe finding something, and seeing all the possibilities and mentally figuring out what it is you like,” she advises.

While some antiquers insist on being the first person through the gates, Klein prefers waiting for the bargains. “If you want the best selection, go early the first day or wait in line for an estate sale, but if you want a good price, go to the second day of a two-day flea market when it’s threatening to rain because the dealers want to pack up and go home. And never pay the asking price. If the dealer won’t lower the price, get them to throw in a little something extra for free.” She says the biggest mistake many shoppers make is thinking they have no control over what the price will be.

Lisa also suggests frequenting the same shops so dealers get to know you. They’re more likely to cut better deals for their best customers.

“When you’re buying stuff, really look at all the sides and all the parts so you know it doesn’t have a broken leg or big scar,” she says. “If it does, you use that to your advantage to strike a good deal. You just have to be sure what you buy is solid. Look for repaired joints. It’s fine to buy that as long as you know what you’re getting into.”

“The best part of buying older furnishings is that they’re almost one of a kind, and they go so well with older homes,” Lisa offers. “Each piece has something unique about it. Even if you’ve seen two, four, 10 or 12 of the same thing, each piece has a life of its own. Collecting stuff like this is really an exercise in self-expression. You’re not buying something off the rack, you’re pulling together various aspects of your personality and combining them into a home.”

Lisa’s decor isn’t strictly Arts and Crafts — it’s an eclectic mix reflecting her artistic background as a graphic designer. Look around and you’ll see baby shoes dangling in a corner, a wall of crosses, a Hmong wall hanging and lots of Buddha heads.

“I like a lot of knick-knacky things so wherever I look, I see lots of eye candy. Being a creative person, I need a lot of visual stimulation and inspiration for my work.”

Lisa’s penchant is for collecting old things, so you won’t find reproductions in her home. “I like that my furniture has the same history that the house has. It has character and flaws, and blends in better. And good-quality reproductions are going to be more expensive than the time-worn pieces I buy.” Nor does she have, or want, $30,000 bookshelves.

“I don’t have museum-quality stuff, I have stuff my dogs and I can live with. I don’t have to worry that someone’s going to scuff something or scratch something. It’s a home, not a museum.”

There is one drawback to Lisa’s home-furnishing hobby: She’s running out of space. “Now that my house is starting to fill up, I’m going more for smaller things like pottery and linens.” Though in the next breath, she adds, “But I just might have to finish my attic to make room for more stuff.”