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Your Guide To Antique Home Styles

Antique Home Styles and Bedroom Door Knobs.

By ella-bayPublished 2 years ago 3 min read

Even in this modern era the lovers of antique home style are no less. Antique Home Style helps you to bring timeless elegance to your home. Exquisite craftsmanship and classic design of the antique items be it a gramophone or your simple bedroom door knobs with locks having a rustic appearance add glam to your home.

But most people fail to balance the right amount of elements throughout their interior. Some fail to understand which antique style suits their home the best. That’s where this guide comes to the rescue.

Georgian

Georgian architecture was named after the three English Kings George, who ruled from 1714 to 1820. It was a fresh new look in the colonies. Where the formal white or pastel-coloured houses are carefully proportioned or trimmed while adding classical details.

It also used ‘Quoins’ which are the intersecting blocks that appear to reinforce the edge and are mainly used to accent wall corners. Stone was used In brick buildings. It can also be seen that solid wood panels are made to simulate stone in frame houses. The usual exterior material was Clapboarding, which was at times rusticated or laid flush to simulate the cut stone surface.

Even Georgian homes with modest designs can be seen having a finely proportioned doorway which is often hand-carved. Symmetry and balance are more focused and stressed when it comes to the principles of Georgian design. It can also be seen that classically derived decoration was always used.

Greek Revival

Greek Revival was seen as the first truly American architecture, which was blooming in the early 19th century. Greek Revival forms are mainly derived from the ruins of ancient Greek temples. Often supported by pilasters or freestanding columns, on the primary facade this style is characterized by a prominent pediment, with the whole painted as white.

One thing that did not appear in the correct Greek Revival work of the last century was the use of arches, ellipses or domes since the ancient Greeks did not know about them. Also, the decorative trim used is often bold and simple.

The same heavy timber-based frame structure was erected by Housewrights in continuation. Sometimes, small things like the interior door knobs were also carved with intricate designs.

These structures had supported houses of earlier centuries. However, the house was usually built using a narrower gable to the end of the street which in turn would affect the temple look. The street appearance is typically two floors high and three bays wide, but it is occasionally possible to see four or even five-bay facades beneath a shallow pitch pedimented gable.

Italianate

Italianate is a distinctive Victorian revival architectural style that stands out thanks to features like a huge porch, wide bracketed eaves, large windows, and an inclined profile or flat roof. Although there are examples of Italianate-style homes made of brick and stone, most of them in New England are made of wood.

The most common designs are the nearly square two-story three-bay entry homes with broad eves provided on brackets and a flat roof. The traditional ones were two-story, five-bay centred doorway houses with a roof with gables opposite to the street and a veranda stated across the front. The villas were of the form made up of multiple interconnected blocks placed within an off-centre squared tower.

Despite having a wooden frame, these homes do not have the massive posts and beams that the majority of structures constructed before the Civil War had. With the use of lighter balloon framing, far more intricate designs for floors and roof patterns are possible for this home style.

Queen Anne

The Queen Anne Home Style was inspired by the English structures built for the 1876 Philadelphia Exposition, which were drawn from 16th-century materials. Colonial Revival features supported the English Gothic/Renaissance designs as the style developed in America.

You can find this style practically anywhere. The Queen Anne style was prominent at the end of the nineteenth century. It keeps the charming place and asymmetrical design of the Victorian forms that came before it intact. But in terms of ornamental details, it foreshadows the Colonial Revival. Which later would play a significant role in the early 20th century.

It is a uniquely significant architectural style that purposefully combines Gothic and Classical elements. Some of the Queen Anne-style homes are constructed from brick using fine detail in the brickwork and are often included with a massive turret.

Most of these Antique Home Styles are popular throughout the globe. But there are many other styles varying from culture to culture. You can follow the information given above to give an antique touch to your own home.

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