The following article is based upon material in american bungalow style an informative book by robert winter and photographer alexander vertikoff winter a member of the american bungalow magazine advisory board and vertikoff the magazine s cover and feature photographer capture the charm and variety of the nation s bungalows in great style.
1920s roof architecture.
Were prolific marketers of woodwork many examples of which were colorfully illustrated in this large volume.
For builders in timber rich north america wood shingles were the obvious choice for the earliest roofs and ultimately the most common roofing material for houses well into the 20th century.
By the 1920s flat roofs found in big cities and on factories were well established as a symbol of modernity and became popular in the modern international style of architecture.
1920 woodwork for residential interiors could be implemented to complement a great range of architectural styles.
Architectural interior and exterior woodwork standardized curtis cos clinton iowa c.
Also different architectural styles will use the same type of roof.
The period between the wars from approximately 1920 through the 1930s witnessed the birth of a multitude of architectural styles some of which shared a number of design elements.
To accommodate technological advances such as central heating and indoor plumbing building designs captured new ideals in beauty that simultaneously allowed.
See more ideas about 1920s house vintage house vintage house plans.
Queen anne style architecture became a very popular home style beginning in the 1890s.
Jerkinhead roofs are sometimes found on american bungalows and cottages small american houses from the 1920s and 1930s and assorted victorian house styles.
Originally hand split from local woods oak and pine in the northeast to cypress in the south wood shingles were typically shaved smooth for high style and garden variety houses.
A jerkinhead roof may also be called a jerkin head roof a half hipped roof a clipped gable or even a jerkinhead gable.
The roof of a typical queen anne home had a variety of distinctive roof parts gables dormers and turrets or towers often all in the same roof.
By the 1920s large asbestos cement roof shingles were available in a natural gray color as well as red and blue black colors that resembled tile and slate.
Pigments ei ther added to the wet mixtures or rolled into surfaces faded when they were exposed to the elements.