Zestimate® Home Value: $529,326. Owner would consider a 1-year rental, with option to buy..$2300/mo..3-bedroom, 3-bathroom home on Somersett Championship Golf Course. Two bedrooms in main house, 1 bedroom, casita..Extensive back patio, overlooking 9th (18th) hole. House includes 1 flat screen TV, and washer and dryer. House has solar panels, window treatments fire pit.. Available for rental December 1, 2016. Call for more info or appointment to view. Rental price includes HOA fee.. Neighborhood Description Great neighbors, beautiful views, on golf course..
Grade II* listed double fronted Queen Anne house c1700 with our bikes contributing to the symmetry of the shot. A beautiful and simple interior, with nothing straight but all wonky !
Francesca Gentilli spends her working life sourcing the best fabrics and textiles from India, Turkey, Morocco, Uzbekistan and beyond, and her own house is the best showcase of her finds
The refurbishment and transformation of an 18th century coach house and protected structure to accommodate an assisted living unit for ...
Apparently, we CAN build 'em like they used to.
Cathy Kincaid interior design Brooke Girty historic architect specialist Drew Kenny landscape 18th century Connecticut ferryman cottage Veranda magazine
The Best Stock For Sale of "second cut" ( Antique Dalles De Bourgogne aged freom 15th -18th Century ) this is perfect for great outdoors, we have reduced The thickness to 2 inch. For facilitate The assembly, Available Great Quantity For Sale, Price indicate is per sqft, Recycled Stone Floors, For more information send email
Of unusually large scale; the upper section with arched cornice over a pair of wire-inset doors opening to fabric lined interior fitted with shelves; the lower section with a slant front opening to fitted interior with covered well, above two paneled serpentine drawers and a shaped apron finely carved with pieced foliage and shellwork; raised on short cabriole legs and scroll-form feet.
Go inside this restored farmhouse just off the coast of Maine. Inside, the designer's mother's art collections fill the space.
18th century historic shingle side style Colonial home East Hampton Kathrine McCoy architect Ingrid Ongaro interior design classic traditional decor
A lifelong passion for all things 18th-century led barrister Phillip Lucas to spend ten years restoring Spitalfields House, a 1725 townhouse once home to Huguenot weavers that now houses his impressive antique collection
Cathy Kincaid interior design Brooke Girty historic architect specialist Drew Kenny landscape 18th century Connecticut ferryman cottage Veranda magazine
About An exceptionally fine pair of Baroque wall brackets. Water gilded with excellent patina with the gold subtly transparent showing its rich red bole, the brackets are rare both for their complexity and large size. An oyster shell shaped cartouche surrounded by theatrical garlands flowers, acanthus, and C-curves comprise the upper section of the bracket while the base exhibits a down-hanging pomegranate. The broad shelf above is supported by an articulated quarter round molding. The shelf itself is painted a red ochre and the support a yellow ocher, Italy, circa 1760. Provenance: Estate of Dr. Ira DeVer Warner (1840-1913).
For sale: $1,295,000. An elegant home in a sought after location with a grand entry and staircase, beautifully proportioned living rm/music rm, charming library with wood burning fireplace and leaded glass fronted bookcases, wonderful, paneled dining rm, spacious custom kitchen with a large center island and gas fireplace, master suite with sitting room and gas fireplace, pretty third floor with extra bedrooms and bath, main floor side porch and a lovely lot.
Brittany Bromley interior designer Bedford New York historic 18th century Colonial home classic traditional Grandmillennial style
The 15th-annual Philip Trammell Shutze Awards presented by the Institute of Classical Architecture & Art recognize design excellence in the Southeast
Decaying 18th-century church converted to a single-family home.
Forgotten and crumbling, Château de Gudanes was a shadow of it's former opulent, aristocratic-self. Until an Aussie family decided to bring it back to life
We purchased our first home June 2018 when we were only 24! Buying a home was always a huge dream of ours, and I always knew I wanted a fixer-upper. Fixer-uppers are NOT for everyone, but we love it! We...Read More
THE OLD HOUSE AT IPSWICH VILLAGE SAVING MOSES JEWETT’S HOUSE POST ROAD DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION 1981-1982 PART Five Prudence Paine Fish THE NEW KITCHEN Now that we had agreed that the working kitchen would be in the lean-to along with the first floor bath and laundry we were facing the challenge of creating a kitchen that worked for us both in terms of efficiency and aesthetics. Nellie had drilled it into our heads that there should be a continuity between rooms, an easy flow, and a psychologically pleasing transition of color, style and pattern and materials as one passed from one room to another. After the removal of the old half bath and other walls this is what the lean-to looked like. There was not much to save except the outside walls. We abandoned our original idea of trendy, contemporary, light colored laminate cabinets. (In retrospect, how could we have considered this?) We now settled on pine cabinets with raised panels that made more sense. The kitchen cabinets were raised panel pine. Today they might seem dated but I still believe they were appropriate for the house. We finished them ourselves. Mexican tiles with a charming handmade look covered the wall space between the counters and the overhead cabinets. The slightly irregular Mexican tiles for the backsplash with an occasional painted strawberry avoided the slick look of modern tiles. They have a handmade look. A large multi-paned window was installed at the driveway end of the kitchen where we envisioned a spot for a small table and chairs. This view from the loft shows the initial progress in the new kitchen as seen from above. Here the cabinets have been hung on the back wall. Here is the same view in the finished kitchen. The woodwork was pine, the floor also pine. The floor was new by necessity. New floors would be stained and finished. All original floors would be painted. In this way we tried to please the future buyer who adores pine floors and also please someone with a more purist mindset by painting the original floors. The new floors can always be painted and the new kitchen does now have a painted floor. At the far end of the kitchen was the bath/ laundry combination. Above this area we created a small loft accessed from the second floor. Under the loft is the door to the newly created bath/laundry. The new Velux skylights can be seen in the ceiling. This modern kitchen would have a cathedral ceiling with two large Velux skylights. The two back doors also had small panes of glass on the top two thirds. This kitchen would be bright and sunny For appliances we chose a Jennair stove with convection oven that vented downward. The dishwasher was Maytag, the sink double stainless steel with a single control faucet. This was before the days when granite and stainless steel appliances dominate kitchens and would become the standard by which a kitchen is judged. Track lighting filled the illumination needs. The counter tops were a neutral Formica. The downstairs bath received an imitation quarry tile floor. The pine vanity had a terra cotta Formica counter top. The shower stall was fiberglass. There were hook-ups for a washer and dryer in front of the sealed up door in the Beverly jog. Nellie came “over the road” with a small print wallpaper from Old Stone Mill (no longer in business) for the bathroom walls. This completes a description of our new kitchen. We maintained the pine of the adjacent area, provided good equipment for 1981 and an easy transition to the next space, the colonial period kitchen/family room. Here is the finished back wall of the kitchen with double sink and Maytag dishwasher.The finish on the cabinets was truly a pine finish. The old photo suggests that the cabinets were dark. They really were not any where near that dark. Best of all we had confined the equipment, appliances and modern functions of a working house to the added lean-to without invading the period rooms. Our mission to keep the original rooms as pure as possible was accomplished. The finished kitchen with antique toys in the loft. Looking at these old photos makes me realize how much harder this would have been today. Some decisions would be based on codes and requirements of the town. That goes without saying. More troublesome is the realization that the expectations of today's home buyers puts modern amenities and trends ahead of preservation. What seemed like a nice kitchen at the time might well be rejected now as would the small but serviceable bathroom upstairs in the space of the old bath. There has been no space relegated to a master suite with en suite master bath or Jacuzzi! There have been no walls removed that were original, the windows are true divided lights and not insulated glass. It would be difficult to be a preservationist and make the decisions necessary for today's market. I'm glad this was completed in a simpler day and age! Now that the "modern amenities" have been dealt with we will continue with the restoration of the 18th century rooms in the next installment.