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This staircase also leads to a second-floor sleeping room for servants. The hall is split with a half-wall created by the stairway balustrades and handrail. There are five bedrooms on the upper level. The north bedroom includes a Roman brick fireplace and a walk-in closet. Plumbing throughout the house was replaced, first in the 1930s and then ...
An iron fence with brick posts topped by wooden spheres sets it off from the streets on the south and east. [2] On the first floor of both facades windows are six-over-six double-hung sash. They have marble trim with consoles supporting bracketed cornices and entablatures. Small iron railings are attached to the sills.
On the main level is the entry hall, off which is a large parlor w/fireplace, plaster walls and dentil crown molding. To the rear of the main floor is another parlor w/pine flooring, built-in bookcases and dentil trim. At the end of the hall is a sunroom. The Dining room, fireplace, pine flooring with touches of "farmhouse chic".
Clinker brick closeup of bricks in the so-called Clinker building on Barrow street in Greenwich Village, New York City. Clinker is sometimes spelled "klinker" which is the contemporary Dutch word for the brick. Both terms are onomatopoeic, derived from the Middle Dutch klinkaerd, later klinker, from klinken (“to ring, resound”).
Aaron Ferrey House, Kent, Ohio, an example of Downing's Form III Grace Episcopal Church (Georgetown, Colorado) Springside in Poughkeepsie, New York Christ Church, Fort Meade, Florida Oak Hill Cottage, Mansfield, Ohio: Carpenter Gothic trim on a brick house in the manner of A.J. Davis's Rural Residences The Seth House in Albuquerque, New Mexico – Built in 1882
Image credits: chron0john #2. Under cabinet lighting. Cost me $150 and was 1000% worth it. DIY fire pit was about $50 worth of retaining wall blocks, also completely worth it.
Make a statement in spaces of all sizes with any of these inspiring modern living room ideas, featuring tips on colors, furniture, curtains, rugs and lighting.
The first slave cabins were likely made of wood. These brick slave cabins date from between 1790 and 1810. [15] Built of brick, the one-story structures are 12 feet by 30 feet with gabled roofs, have either plank or dirt floors, and a simple fireplace with a brick hearth and no mantle at the rear of each house.