Bungalow-Era Comebacks
Arts & Crafts motifs 1900–1930 — tiled fireplaces, built-ins, colonnades, nooks, tapered piers — are back in style.
It all started, in my opinion, with the restoration of houses from the Arts & Crafts or bungalow era. Quaint elements were rescued or reinstalled by smitten owners; others added period-correct features that may never have been in the house, as they undertook a general upgrade with the advantage of hindsight: It’s always the best of an era or a style that is revived.
Soon, bland builders’ boxes from the 1950s through 1980s were being made over as Craftsman Bungalows complete with big front gables and a colonnade inside. Builders of new houses, too, jumped on the bungalow bandwagon. A lot of the recent work will prove to be timeless.
Arts & Crafts Inspired
Why do so many components and motifs of the bungalow era speak to us today? It may be because elements of Arts & Crafts design are easy to identify and are adaptable. For example, they do not require high ceilings. Woodwork may be painted or executed in clear-finish hardwood or fir.
Such simple forms and unostentatious detailing make it a popular style. Such rectilinear elements as square columns and butt-jointed trim are relatively easy and inexpensive to duplicate.Furthermore, documentation is readily available in old millworks catalogs, many of them available online to view or download. All of this makes Craftsman a favorite vocabulary for new construction and home makeovers.
Albeit in a wide variety of expressions, several key elements of the era have made a comeback in the past 25 years. Chief among them are room-dividing colonnades, breakfast nooks, panel or skeleton batten wainscots, staircases with square spindles, painted kitchens, and fireplaces with art-tile surrounds. Clean, space-saving built-ins have found new favor in kitchens and baths, dining rooms, libraries, and bedrooms.
With Restraint, the Mania for Built-Ins RevivedThe bungalow was the “not so big” house of its time. Designers and builders sought to cram into these houses every space saver and built-in: benches, sideboards, china cupboards, bookcases, even fold-down ironing boards and tuckaway wall beds. Some of these lost favor and many originals were torn out long ago. Today the best ideas have seen a resurgence, with well-designed cabinetwork and nooks helping create easier-to-clean, clutter-free interiors. The pantry, for example, essentially a built-in closet of abundance, is a prized amenity. |
Perhaps surprisingly, authentic elements of bungalow kitchens have come into favor. While some prefer A&C Revival kitchens featuring the quarter-sawn oak and art glass borrowed from more public rooms, others embrace plain white cabinets, linoleum, and those cutout doors under the sink, which provided ventilation and deterred mice. Breakfast nooks and built-in banquettes may be more popular now than they were in 1920, when house- plan books offered these things as an add-on upgrade.
In the dining room, a high wainscot capped by a plate rail once again gives instant antiquity and a place to display collectibles. Flanking benches at the hearth create a cozy inglenook suggesting the Old World.
Decorative conventions have returned, too, including art glass, the period’s hardware and lighting fixtures, and wallpaper friezes. Motifs such as stylized roses, ginkgo leaves, dragonflies, owls, and many more have made their way onto revival art pottery and home textiles. Arts & Crafts continues to find new admirers—even if they don’t know what to call it.
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