| Cape Cod Style
Dollhouse
The Cape Cod style (c.1675 - 1950) reflects the difficult
weather and thrifty builders of the early northeastern coastal
villages. A traditional Cape Cod has a steep roof with small
eaves to protect the house from heavy New England snowfalls
and a large central fireplace to keep it cozy. The 1 1/2-story
houses have living space in the attic. A Cape Cod has double
hung windows with mullions, shutters and is finished with
clapboard or shingles on the outside.
Colonial Style Dollhouse
The Colonial house (c.1700 - present) is an American adaptation
of the English "Cotswold" or tree holder's cottage.
In its earlier version, the Cotswold had an open fire pit
inside the house and the smoke would find its own way out
through the thatched roof. The fire room was on one end of
the house so the residents could keep warm in the loft but
still be away from the smoke. This 1/3 and 2/3 division of
the house was still reflected in early colonial layouts showing
up as offset front doors and non-symmetrical first floor layouts.
As the Colonial design spread out from the earliest American
villages, the typical features were of a house 1 1/2 or 2-storys
tall with approximately a 45 degree roof pitch, narrow eaves
(for shedding snow) and a narrow front-to-back so every room
could be well lighted by the windows. The windows were small
pane double hung with no frivolous ornamentation and had shutters.
The doors were also plain and utilitarian. The walls were
almost always clapboard or wooden shingles. The Colonial design
took on the attributes of other styles that were popular at
the time of it building, showing Federal, Greek Revival or
Victorian details in their turn.
Mansard Style Dollhouse
Mansard roofs (c.1550 - 1870) are steeply sloping roofs with
a flat or nearly flat top. These became very popular in the
17th century of Paris as they took advantage of the property
tax laws, which did not tax attic spaces. The attic of a Mansard
house had a fully usable attic and was tax-free! Architect
Francois Mansart took advantage of that in his designs. The
word "Mansard" comes from his name being on so many
designs for houses with this roof design.
Plantation Style Dollhouse
The Plantation (c.1803 - 1862) houses reflect the elegance
and grandeur of the American south in the early 1800's. These
houses have tall ceilings and a formal layout inside, often
with fancy stairways. On the outside, columned verandas with
balconies are the dominant feature to shade the interior and
catch the breezes. It is the large balcony that differentiates
this style from the Greek revival.
Tudor Style Dollhouse
The Tudor reflects the early English great houses that were
made by joining together a frame of hewn timbers, then pounding
sticks to jam in between the beams. Finally, two plasterers
would stand, one inside and one outside the wall, and press
plaster into the sticks until the plaster squeezed through
the holes between the sticks and joined the plaster being
pressed into the wall from the other side. More layers of
plaster left a masonry wall held in place by jammed lath with
the hewn beams showing inside and out. That's the Tudor look.
The diagonal beams are diagonal bracing of the frame. Half
timbered Tudor houses, ones that step out half way up the
wall (so that the second floor is bigger than the first floor)
became necessary when the wood supply could not keep up with
demand and trees large enough to get timbers that would reach
all the way to the top of the wall got scarce. Half timbering
allowed the frame to be made from smaller trees. Tudor houses
traditionally had the steep pitch and shed dormers of thatched
roofs but neo-Tudor houses of the 1890 - 1920's had multiple
intersecting gables and peak roof dormers because better roofing
materials didn't automatically mean a leak for every roof
valley. Tudor windows were arranged in long rows, often with
a row of stained glass transom windows right above. Eave trim
often-used scroll cut verge board. Balconies or enclosed screened
rooms within the framing of the house are common, although
porches (which attach to the outside of the house) are less
so. A terrace is a more likely ground floor extension of the
living space.
Victorian Style Dollhouse
Victorian architecture (c.1830 - 1900) replaced the Greek
and Georgian styles, rebelling against the classical symmetry
and orderliness. The Victorian style is flamboyant and exciting
with tall, steep pitched roofs; multiple gables and gingerbread
stick trim or decorated verge boards accenting the eaves.
Roofs are further emphasized with layered chimneys and finials
or peak cresting. Windows are varied in size and shape and
may project from the house in a bay oriel. The outside finish
of a Victorian is multi-textured, multi-hued and uses every
material possible including clapboard, stucco, board and baton;
often mixing finishes. Colors are strong and varied with each
layer of trim being a new opportunity for a change of hue
or tone.
Queen Anne Dollhouse
The Queen Anne (c.1876 - 1915) ranges from the "Painted
Lady" row houses of San Francisco to sprawling resort
mansions. Queen Anne houses are exuberant and comfortable.
Rooflines are steep with multiple and intersecting gables
and majestic towers. In every section the windows are different,
some narrow, some double but there are always lots of them.
Every surface of a Queen Anne house is interesting with many
textures, many colors and lots of decorations. Decorations
include shaped or patterns of color in the shingles, brackets,
dentil, eave moldings, beading under every edge with fans,
ornamental plaster, patterned shingles and layers of facia
testifying to the builder's own imagination. |