The Craftsman - 1909 - 11 - November PDF
The Craftsman - 1909 - 11 - November PDF
The Craftsman - 1909 - 11 - November PDF
The 1910 Blue Book The Christmas stock this season is the largest and most comprehensive that Tiffany & Co. have ever assembled and it has been given special consideration in the new Blue Book which has just been published The Christmas Blue Book is a handy reference catalogue, without illustrations, issued to facilitate the satisfactory selection of Tiffany & Co.s wares by correspondence or in person. It contains 700 or more pages of valuable information, made accessible by an alphabetical classification, and describes briefly, and gives the range of prices, of their stock of diamond, pearl, and precious stone jewelry, silverware, watches, clocks, bronzes, marbles, stationery, porcelains, glassware, and other articles suitable for holiday gifts Tiffany & Co.s Correspondence Department is especially organized for answering inquiries and filling mail orders. Photographs, cuts or full descriptions will be sent to intending purchasers who will advise the house of the articles desired and the approximate amounts they wish to spend Selections of goods will be sent on approval to persons known to the house or to those who will make themselves known by satisfactory references
The Christmas Blue Book will be mailed
upon
request
A good bath tub is not expensive-it is the socalled cheap tub that is expensive. When buying a bath tub, you are buying an articlewhich your family and self want to use constantly with comfort and pleasure for years to come. It will cost you equally as much to install a cheap tub as a good one. There is no saving in the cost of installation. The difference in the purchase price between a good bath tub and a cheap one is relatively small, especially when you distribute the cost over the many years faithful service a good bath tub will give you. Then consideris the cheap tub cheap ? It is not necessary for you to go beyond means to purchase a guaranteed bath tub. two classifications of %ardar~ Guaranteed place a genuine Guaranteed y%~ within reach of every home owner. your The Baths Bath
The %wdas~ Green and Gold Label Bath is the most thoroughly efficient bath room fixture you can buy at any price, highly sanitary, most durable and beautiful. In these qualities, the stidms Red and Black Label Bath is second only to the %an~ Green and Gold Label Bath. None other offers equal actual value at anywhere near its price.
The meaning of the five and two year guarantee is this:-They are an absolute protection to you against any defects due to faulty material or workmanship during the life of the guarantee.
The two classifications of *tidar~ Guaranteed Baths are the Green and Gold Label brand and the Red and Black Label brand. The %aadars
Green and Gold Label Bath is triple enameled. It carries a five year guarantee. The SstsmdaM Red and Black Label Bath is double enameled. It is guaranteed for two years.
Seven and a half million of dollars and a life-time of experience stand back of these guarantees. When you buy your sanitary fixtures demand the %~~Huc Guaranteed Bath Tub, either the $titi Green and Gold Label Bath, or the %tidnrd* Red and Black Label Bath, according to the price you are prepared to pay.
And, be guarded against the substitution prae. ticed by unscrupulous dealers. Look for the 3ta11mdarsGuarantee Label and make sure it in still on the bath when you have it installed. For further information, write to ~8. w
Dept. 39
Pittsburgh, Pa.
ldi ns. Chicam: 4 15 AshlandBlock. O&e andShowmoma : NewYork: 35-37 W. 3latSt. Pittshu~h: 949PmnAve. Baton: 712 PaddcckBI St. L&a: 100-102 N.FourthSt. Louisville: 319-323 W. Main St. Philadelphia: 1128Walauth. NewOr em*: Cm. Baronne andSt. J.xtphSts. Cleveland:648-652 HuronRd. S. E. Toronto.Cm.: 59 RichmmdSt.E. Montreal, Can.: 39St. SacmmtSt. LmdwE.C.: 59HolbronViaduct
THECRAFTSMAN
VOLUME
XVII
NOVEMBER, 1909
NUMBER 2
FTOW a Painting
darpenier Memorial
of Glenn
The
Hudson-Fulton
. .
of
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
0. Coleman
Arthur Streeton
An Australian Painter Art in His Own Way Illustrated
l
By M. Irw& MacDonald
Illustrated
Country Modern
Houses Designed by Aymar Embury which Express the American Spirit in Home Architecture . . . of Finland . . . . .
Lines
164
Air-Ships: A Poem The National Quality of tie M;sic Life: A Poem . . . TreESurgery . . .
A Lesson in the Care of Trees Illzlstrated along
172
176
. .
, .
.
Sciehtific
A Well-Constructed Wood Cottage: A Roomy Cement. House Illustrated Summer Bungalows in Delaware, Designed to Afford Comfort in Little Space . . , . . . Illustrated How Pergolas Add to the Appreciation and Enjoyment of Outdoor Life . . . . . . . . Illustrated
.
.
The
Craftsmens
Guild
. . . . . . andCabmetmal&
A Lesson in Making Filet Lace Illztstrated What Drawing Is Lessons in Practical Met;1 Work Illustrated
By Katharine
. . .
Lord
.
Als ik Kan
The People and the Pageant
Notes:Reviews
Unsigned articles
l..*.
plan.
By The Editor
223
.*.*..
226
in THE CRAFTSMAN are the work of some member Staff, frequently the result of many editorial conferences.
AI1 manuscript
PURLISHED MONTHLY BY GUSTAV STICKLJXY, 41 WEST 34~~ ST., NEW YORR 25 Cents a Copy : By the Year, $3.00 in Unitbd States 8 $3.50 in Canada; $4.20 Foreign EnteredJune 6 1906. at New York City, so second-claw mstcer Copyright. 1909. by Gunav StickIcy
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DEVOE
COLORS
The only stencil colors that are FAST TO LIGHT, INDELIBLE, PERMANENT, guaranteed not to run or fade out when used according to directions. Devoe Stencil Paste Colors are the best for coloring Full directions on each tube. cotton, scrim, denim, canvas, russian crash, burlap, etc., and when used with Devoe Art Stencils you can make beautiful Port.iers, Curtains, Pillow Tops, Centrepieces, etc. No experience is required; anyone can use them.
all
F.W.DEVOE&C.T.RAYNOLDSCO.
NEW YORK AND CHICAGO
THE
PERFECT
WITH LEAD
PENCIL
WHICH IS
EBERHARD
FABER
::
New York
SOLD
BY ALL DET;LERS
TOOLS
for
Directions for making Bowls, Plates and Trays; R~POUSS~ Work; the Use Of Tools; Porters Home Outfit: Bench and Equipment for Metal Work; Hammers. Forms, Anvils, Repousse Tools, Dapping Tools; Leather Work Color Outfits, Gas Generators Tools and Tool Outfits.
W. H. PORTER
MFG.
CO.,
Phipps Power
ROBERT
BVRLEN
BOOKBINDER
Binding ob Large IllustratedWorks, Engravings, etc., a specialty. MAGAZINES AND OLD BOOKS rebound and f&s of every description made to order. Edge Gikiiug and Stamping. Paper H&g. 156 PEARL ST., BOSTON, MASS. Telephone 865 Main
iv
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34th Street
interesting
including Sideboards and other large pieces trimmed with hand-beaten copper or iron. Chairs upholstered with leather On the and Fourth exhibition Portieres, by James or rush, finished Seventh Floor in a rich nut brown. of the 34th Street Store
Floor of the 23d Street Store are furnished rooms displaying Craftsman Draperies, Scarfs and Table McCreery & Co. covers. Sold exclusively
23d Street
34th Street
Stencils
designed and made to order to suit any scheme of decoration. Stenciling done or stencils sold for home use.
L BOWDOIN cztMANLEY
Shoppingand Sugwstimr for lntior
54bFifthAvenue,NewYo?k
H. 0. WATSON
WORKS
IN
&
CO.
OF ART
Furniture
South Street,
Boston.
Mass.
NEW
YORK
Kindly mention The Craftsman v
www.historicalworks.com
Artists Oil and Water Colors are the Worlds Seodard BestI Wintcm . British . Kensington and School of Art Canvas
Ynjarpas
JEWiktdng
#3aper
Registered No. 301147 A New Self-Ftuing Paper for Charcoal. Chalk. Crayon and Pastel Drawlnps Wbrn the draviw is completed it is held in frontof a swamhe kcttlr. or prrfrrably the steamme kettle beld in front of the drawsrnc. 31 Handbooks on the Pine Art8 by Mail 30 cent8 each The Winton White for Oil Color Painting pound
Double Tubes. Half-pound tubes. One pound tubes. Two tubes Winsor. Newtons lllustrarion Boarda
costs no more than many imitation gems. Why buy the imitations? How can we do it? By mining and cutting every stone we sell. Just to show you we print the above. These stones we exact size They are taken at random from our illustrated price iit of 28 sizes and shapes, costing from 25 cents each to 432.00each. Stppe ,o,: g cy;Bts M> No. 13 50~:
StEnek
=
iI costs
For Water Color and General Black and White Work for reproducuons. It is also recommended for Pcncll and Crayon Work. Wrote for samples.
No:27
$1.00 $1.50
85~.
0. W. DRAWING
PAPER
What could be more attractive for Arts and Crafts We can till your orders without delay. p+Y?. peclal discount to dealers who buy quantities. Write, before you forget it, for our price list No. 5.
A hand-made Paper. Manufactured of Linen Rap. undrr the dIrection of the Royal Society of Painters in Water Culours.
THE
39 West
York
many
toy0
With our catalog before you, this can be accomplished with the greatest convenience and economy. This 654-page catalog will be sent free upon request to any prospective buyer of artists or craftsmens supplies, who mention THE CRAFTSMAN. Descriptions, illustrations and price lists of:
Brass and Pyrography Requisites: Oil, Water and China Colors and Paint Boxes; Bmshes. Canvas, Frames, Easels, Seals, Kilns, Inks. Pens, Paste, Pencils, Charcoal, Air Brushes. Erasers, Art Hand Books; Architects and Engineers Drawing Boards, Tables. Instruments. and other Arts and Crafts equipment.
Pierced
catalog to
C. PRATT.
333 Fourth
Av..
New
York City
lntrated
This new work is a combination of Pyrography and Wrought effective and engrossing
can do. scores of il-
patterns.
%c~itectural *:ational
Strathmore
Qlhft~men $0,
Boards.
Have your blue prints made by, and get your drawing materials from 3 I Cotnhill
(More than 60 years
Boston,
in buswms)
Mass.
Blue #rint
NEW
Papers and
YORK
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Miniature Spatulas
will be found practically indispensable for small T h e y are enameling. delicately flexil)lc and will carry the enamels into every nook and Corner, 35 cents the dozen, with one handle, the latter metal or bone, as may be preferred. Illustrations full size. Order direct, and ask also for Catalogue G 10 of Arts and Crafts Appliances, which is free for the asking.
SETS
with a treatment absolutely original. very good loakinc and uncomman. Special Hand-Wrought Jewelry in Solid Gold and Silver Perrons inwwsted are cordially invited to call or write.
JAMES
FLINT
BARCLAY
THE
UNIVERSITY
PRINTS
GREEK and ROMAN SCULPTURE SOOsubjects. (Van Mach) one cent each EARLY ITALIAN PAINTING 500 subjects, one cent each LATER ITALIAN PAINTING 500 subjects, one cent each DUTCH and FLEMISH PAINTING 500 subjects,one cent each 2,000 Four series with Handbooks for the student. separate reproductions, 80 cents for 100 or one cent each. Send two-cent stamp for complete catalogue and sample prints
BUREAU OF UNIVERSITY TRAVEL Boston. MMD. 64 Trinity Place BEAUTIFUL CHRISTMAS FOR C~IFTS
SENDFOR THESEdPIECEL -OF HAND-HAMMERED COPPEI (The jardiniere ismade in brass, too.) Besides being uvful. thcw pi< crs are l,cautiful, adding ju the desired touch of form and color to a Craftsman interic or indeed any interior. I,L~IIIQ LX~Y useful, these pieces are beautiful, addio just the desired touch of form and color to a Craftsma interior, or inde ed any interior. If you wish t o be distinguished for your taste in gift to brides, to the : person about to have a birthday, or 1 your friengs for Christmas; or if you want to show yet discrimil natlo tn buymg for your own home.,.& ,,a us- ma or expre ss you, prepaid, one or both of these pieces. Yo may ret urn them at our expense if in any way unsati factc~ry. p .ease is ~1% inches in extreme diameter and 7.j The jardiniere,. 10 inches 1 inches high, prwe $2.00. extreme diameter and Sg inches high, prxe $6.00.
I1.C
THE
DERRY
8 ICIURES
ONE CENT
eachfor 2.5 or more
Six 5 55x8 Send 25 cts. for 25 art subjects. or 25 Madonnas. Catdug of I0 miniature illustrarmns. two pictures and a Colorrd Rlrd p,cture for thrcr two-cmt atamps. and order NOW, before our Holiday rush.
Box4.9
/ ; /
DAHLQUIST
CO W. 3rd~Street The Craftsman
MFG.
CO.
South Boston,
Mm
vii
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Brass-Craft
OUTFIT FREE
-?I: F 2. 4 -I Brass-Craft is the most popular and valuable Art oi the time, and with our stamped articles and simple instructions, materials costing only a trifle can quickly be worked up into articles worth many . dollars.
These Myself
Thousands and at home these beautiful of men, are articles
women,
children
making of brass,
Nonruh Stenciled blank< and homeworkers tool sets. Unlike anyother homeworkers blanks, ours coma to you
already cut out and shaped -your work being only the epousse stenciled chasing design. or perforatingof the Ihe artistic ornamentation
us send you this Camr9ete outfit consistinn of 1 Stip pling and Veining Tool. I package Polishing Powder, 1 package Coloring Powder, 1 Fine Sandpaper. 1 piece Polishing Plush, and complete material for Handsome Brass-Craft Calendar (see iilustrat~~~n) AS foil<ws. 1 Brass Prnel, 1 Wood Panel. 50 Round-Head Brass Tacks. 1 Bram Hanger. 1 Calendar Pad. Furnished with stamwxl design and full directions for making Calendar worth $1.00~all in neat box FREE and prepaid. to anyone sendrng US 25 cents to pa; Cost of packinn. Shipping. etc.
Let
CM 64
profit. The above outfit offer is made for a limited time only to quickly introduce OUTsplendid line of Braaa-Craft goods and distribute >ur New Illustrated Catalog. Write today.
THAYER
737-739 Jackson Blvd.
& CHANDLER
CHICAGO ILL.
Complete materials for each article come in envelope with full instructions, making It easy for you to produce scores of useful and gifty articles at a small cost. Homcworkers tool sets sell from 35~ to $2.65 each-Noarub blanks from 2sc up. Ask your dealer to show you Apollo Studios Metalographp
RICES
mrntion
Vlll
www.historicalworks.com
HE various articles of Arts and Crafts jewelry illustrated opposite are made out of very heavy sheet brass and the designs are etched deep into the surface of the metal. Backgrounds of the designs are finished in verdigris. All pin stems, joints, and catches are German Silverand they are attached with silver solder SO that the jewelry is not only highly artistic and pleasing but mechaniEach article except cahy perfect. the hat pins is mounted on velvet sheepskin and packed for shipment in an attractive manner. The sets are imported porcelain enamels and they come in many beautiful colors similar to Chinese Jade, Topaz, Amethyst, Turquoise, Malachite, Chryrhg;; Coral, Lapis, etc. we have a great number of designs for each class of articles and if you leave your selection to us we will be pleased to send a different design from the illustration.
These goods are sold by dealers in all the principal cities in the United States and Canada and many dealers in the smaller towns are ordering this $20.00 assortment for their Holiday trade. Where we have no dealer handling our goods, individuals often represent and make $5 00 to $10.00 a day. Write at once for detailed information.
;bUR MARK
Address
All Orders
to
DAYTON
Kinrllv mention The Craftsman
iX
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Ceacbers
College
New Fine
An Art
Frorn
Classes in Drawing, Painting, and Composition, under the instruction of Robert Henri. Portrait Classes tar Men and Women. Day and Evening Life C%,sses for Women. Day and Evening Life Classes for Men, Composition Class.
Henri School
Y.
-/ 1 in
ST.
utter to Criftsmal
Diraotor
30
23x-d Year
Director.
XHOOL ofINDUSTRIAL A
#ROAD OF THE PENNSYLVAN IA ,I1USEUIM AND PIXE STREETS, PHILADELPHIA Thorough work under trained specialists in all branches of Fine and Industrial Art p&l provision for classes in lilustration, Architecture. lecorative Painting and Sculpture, Potte Metal Work, n&mxial Design, Textile Design and Manu I*a&me. L. W. MILLEP, Princi~cd.
^ * -*.-.ol)
hi.@. Dravzing, Paint , Gomposition. Anato n ly, Wood Carvin Dckorativ, applied to porcelkin mnm~ln metals and lealhei.
FRANK DUVENECK L. N. MEAKIN and others
A,
THE NEW PROFESSION s a 70-page hmd-book: its FREE Home-study Dowwstic ci+mcscourses; Health, Food, House Planntng, Mana@ment, tc For home-makers, teachers, d:&tians, m%trons, etc lull&ins: The Up-to-Date Home-Labor Saving AppliIll upp, 54 Ill., 1oc.,. Food Values-Practical,Dietetl~s, m. School of Home Economics. 504 W. 69th St.. Chicago, 16.
HOME-MAKING
42nd Y ear, Sewtember 77 lono *I May 27, 140. - -uearkctl&c;;: J. H. GEST, Director Cincinna?.i, Oh$
STORE
near
-59th
St.,
on
WlADlSON AVENUE
ERNEST A, BA!lCRBLDFR, Pasadena, California.
An Ideal Environment for ldeal Work.
Specialchanceto eet mannificenr Store; mre SUCCPSS and liberal treatment to right @rty; none but high grade need apply
I The Craftsman
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STRATHMORE
Water Color Papers
for the true, blemish artist, will the architect, on either the designer-give no flaw or after a or you uniform your surface, be found work.
Use Strathmore Quality
which before
have begun
Whether you are an artist, architect or designer there is a Strathmore product exactly suited to your requirements from pen-and-ink, wash, crayon or charcoal, to water-color rendering or full-size detail. Your dealer will supply you with the Strathmore sample book, or well send it free. MITTINEAGUE
. . Mlttmeague,
COMPANY
U. S. A.
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MEDIEVAL ARCHITECTURE
Its
By ARTHUR
KINGSLEY
PORTER
work deals with the history of the origins of the Gothic architecture and its development in Normandy and the lie de France. It aims to serve as an introduction not only to the buildings themselves but to the vast literature that has grown up about them, in putting in the possession of the student a great amount of information hitherto inaccessible. It (Med. Arch.) is Competent Reviewers are giving the work a splendid reception: built up with an immense care and patience, and it pulsates throughout with as immense an energy. The illustrations are numerous, well selected,well printed and mostly unhackneyed. Such a volume cannot enjoy too warm a weloome.-Chicago Evening Post. Mr. Porter has succeeded in writing a scholarly and very readable history of Ecclesiastical Architecture of the Middle Ages. . . . An invaluable source of information.The Boston Transcript Two massive and beautiful volumes-one of the most exhaustive studies of the kind ever offered to the non-professional reader.-Record Herald, Chicago. His tone [Mr. Porters] is singularly liberal. His first volume is of special importance. The publishers have done full justice to his work, both as regards the printing of text and To its various chapters he has affixed some precious lists of monuments and he illustrations. adds some excellent bibliographies.*-New York Tribune. It is a monument of painstaking documentary research and many of its sections are excellent reading. . . . Students of architecture owe Mr. Porter a real debt. The illustrations are numerous and for the most part well chosen. The printing is excellent.-The Nation, N.Y.
HIS
important
300 illustrations.
1,000 pages.
Extra.
Size 7 x 10 %.
Elaborate
Two
volumes. circular
Expressage
illustrated
Boxed, on application.
net.
$15.00.
NEW
HIWiLY
ARTS
BOOKS
RECOMMENDED
FOR
THEIR PRACTICAL
A text book for teachers and students. By AUGUSTUS F. ROSE. ment of the handling of sheet copper. No necessary d&a.1 forgotten; An abundance of working drawings and photographic stated in the simplest but most adequate manner. 126 pp., 6x9 in., cloth, $1.50 net. principles and necessary tools; directions for making various articles.
WORK.
THE many
By &UTHER WI+T?N TURNER. A &ok giving fundamental prmaples for workmg m basketry. and detalled instruction for making 56 pp.. 6x9 in., cloth, 7.5~. by many photographic plates. HOME. BY FRED H. DANJELS. The author seeks to promote good taste m the home by a comparative etc.. and by a simple, direct appeal both entertaining and con-
FURNISHING
MODEST
exhibit of good and bad styles in furniture, 114pp.. 6x9 in..$l.OOnet. vincing.
decoration,
PRESS,
an illustrated
Worcester,
monthly magazine,
Mass.
the leading textbook
PAINTINGS
The Doubletone
BY
Inks and
AMERICAN ARTISTS
Chob Examfiles Ahays ALSO a I,,
are made by
Philadelphia
SMALL
BRONZES VOLKMAR
AND
POTTERY
i
Kindly mention
I
The
Chicago
xii
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AVE you any edition of Shakespeare? If not, it goes without saying that you need it as one of the essentials of your library. Is the edition you have mlsatisfactory? Is it mechanically cheap and comtnonplaceeditorially uninforming and unhelpful? In tither case, you should investigate-at our expense-the famous BO~KLOVERS
EDITION.
For the large class of busy, tltinlziwg people who have not the time to make Sl~akes~ea~catz scholnvshi~ iheir aim, but who would read the plays with uudcvstandittg and profit, this cditiom is kvahab!e. The dainty, dc luxe volumes regcder its usr most commtic~~t aud plrasaut; its rlaboratc heljs clarify what might otherwise be obscure and dificulf.
Cc The Handy,
Helpful
Edition
The aim of tile I3ooLlovers is to make easy the understanding of Shakespeares works. Every ohsolete uord, every doubtful phrase, every obscure reference, 1$ expla~nrd hy noted scholars. This edition is printed in large type, frsm new plates, on selected white paper. There are in all 40 dainty volumes (7x5 inches in size), containing 7,000 pages, and artistically and durably bound in half-leather and cloth. The illustrations comprise 40 frill-page plates in colors and 400 rrprodnctions of rare wood-cuts. The llooklovers is absolutely complete and unabridged. In the extent of information it contains it is, indeed, a Shakespearean I:ncyclopedia. Its clearness and convenience appeal to every intelligent reader.
SEND
The UnirerRitp
THIS
Society
Free Inspection-Write
An
Now
entire 40-volume set of the l<OOI<LOVIiRS SHAKESPEARE nil1 be sent for exanunation, prepald, to any address, If you will fill up and return promptly the coupon. WE ASK FOR NO MONEY NOLV. We allow you ample timr for a careful, intelligent and unprejudiced examination of the set in the comfort and rivacy of your own home. If you are satisfied-and we know you w ? I bethat the Rooklovers Shakespeare is without a peer, YOU retain EL session of the entire 40.volume set and send us $1.00 only. balance may be paid at the rate of $2.00 a month. The list subscription prices are $62.00 for the half-leather hindiw, $jo.oo GOT the cloth. \Ve have decided to keep our special mail-order prices In force until the p~.~rvt cdhow IS rxlrntr~ted--$31.oo for the half-leather, $25.00 for the cloth. \Vrite no%-to-day.
arniwafioft, n SEI of the I3ooklowrs .sllokrsficnrc (40 vols.) in /lnlf-lentkcr bindins at jwtrr mail-order price of $31.00. Zf the hooks WC satisfncfovy, I shnll pny yea $1.00 reitkiw five dnys after tlrcir rrcript, n*ld $2.00 ench
. . . .. . . .. .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. .. . Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
(Change
if cloth is preferred)
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CRAFTSMAN HOMES
BY GUSTAV STICKLEY
is preeminently a book of helpful suggestions to prospective home builders and to those already possessed of a home who wish to increase its beauty by simple and artistic means. It contains plans for houses costing from $500 to $1500 which, it is obvious from the detailed descriptions, represent the best ideas in American domestic architecture. These houses are designed to meet the needs of their owners regardless of their way of life or environment. The rooms are well arranged and there are no unnecessary partitions to prevent an easy passage between them. Dirt collecting nooks and corners do not exist and the built-in bookcases, china closets, etc., leave plenty of free space.
Furniture, metal work, needlework and tapestries are considered from the point of view of their decorative value, and these chapters will be found to be invaluable to the individual home decorator.
ESSENTIALS OF WOODWORKING
By IRA S. GRIFFITH
Department Builder, Editor of Ammicun Carpenter and and Director of Manual Training, Oak Park, Illinois.
This book has been heartily endorsed by expert craftsmen a A d experienced teachers.
Quoted from Reviews : This is the best text book on this subject that we have seen. It deals with fundamental facts and presents them most interestingly and with abundant illustrations.-Educalion. It is well winnowed; hardly a sentence could be spared; hardly an illustration (of which there are nearly three hundred) could be omitted.-The School A ? ts Book. Revised @dIllon Prke $1.00
For those anxious to do a little of the furnishing of their homes themselves, there are the chapters of practical instruction in the making of useful and durable chairs, tables, screens, bookcases and other articles. It is also shown how we may finish our native woods so that they retain their natural beauty of marking and something of the color of the growing tree. Bound in full linen crash. At all booksellers and from the publisher, price, $2.00.
GUSTAV
BOSTON 470 Boylston St.
STICKLEY
NEW YORK 29 West 34th St.
The Craftsman
The Manual Arts Press
621 Y. M. C. A. Bldg. Peoria. Illinois
xiv
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THE W
HOME
BEAUTIFUL
HAT adds so much to the beauty of the home as beautiful pictorr> i What other factor of home decoration at What memories are so keen and lasting as those of some once so combines the interesting and the beautiful? . . beautiful picture? One of the worlds greateit cntws says : - Xothing so directly and immediately indicates x character of a man as the pictures upon his M.~IIL Nothing in the furnishing of a home conduces so much to refined leasure as a collection of carefully chosen pictures-you live with them and consciously or unconsciously they are affkct. If, then, ng your thoughts in most of the spate moments you spend with them. he art with which you furnish your home has such an imporrant bearing upon your My life, it behooves you to place upon your walls pictures of such a character that heir ef&ct will be beneficial and inepiring. 1 The Burlin.@on ProoF were issued two years ago in England to meet the demand br genuinely fine pictures for home decoration at a low price. The Proofs we leautiful and at the same time so remarkably inexpensive that they immediately II unique position as the pictures par excellence for the decoration of the home. x: $ eople and press acclaimed them, and the sale to those rho appreciated their rare / ,-rr beauty and cheapness reached into the tens of thousands. From Europe their fame 1 pread abroad until The Burlin@m Proofs are now looked upon as establish&
he standard of quality throughout the world.
THE
BURLINGTON
PROOFS
ARE:
panr
nre
DlLT n JEW
0.7 man?,.
COUPON f/l
TO-DAY
SPlKt.fOr the Cnt*lo~~Le that you ?nny see the full *w,es --
ART
133 East
COMPAhr
Sixteenth
1 NEW
YORK
Lae phsed treelYe the Xle,rogravure cata. ii WBd11 ,oyw Of mlnlatures alad full lnfonatlll rcyar;;~,;~ your Specm, Inrrdctry lrices.,e,,L, etc. ---I I - -2-Yra.lJi CITY 1 1 ,:;; in Full ..,.._ . . . . . . .,.. ,.,. .,.... . . . . . . . . .
Street I 0ccupat10n . _. .. . . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..
The.Douhleday-Page Art Company i 133 E. 16th St.. New YorkCity IL I vS*rr. I .?I interested 111 7hr l~urlrn~lnrr , the new p,cruren for llollle decoratwn, and
I, 1111, II, ,111.,<<,\\A\\\I) 111, 1I\k NEWMAN & REINTHAL Ahl) 111, <.1<\11> IAh 1111 I, 106 W. 29th St.. NewYorkCity II, ,011T.,I\( \\I111111 li It A DISTRIBUTORS : arwut. iJ x 26 ,,~,che% SOLE TRADE Doul,,e OWd.~~
....
Address in Full..
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mention
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2p,3kkTAt%iA 4riid%
Pa-One at Norwich, Coon.
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The Craftsman
xvi
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ROBERT WEST,
FULTON: PAIN=
BENJAMIN
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THECRAFTSMAN Q
AlS & Q1 I
GUSTAV VOLUME STICKLEY. EDITOR XVII NOVEMBER, AND PUBLISHER 1909. NUMBER 2
CARPENTER:
BY
01CE years ago, Edward Carpenter czlme to America to visit Walt Whitman. It was the visit of a disciple to a master, for in the utterances of the rugged pioneer who had plunged boldly into a realm of thought so ancient that it seemed new to modern understanding, and had brought back with him so many uncut gems of truth, the younger poet and philosopher had found t?lrt spiritual leadership that his own mind craved. And the record of that visit has the sound of deep calling unto deep, for two fellow travelers had met, and both had gone so far along the road which led to their common goal that the trivial things of life fell away into nothingness before the large simplicity of their association. Nevertheless, this record had another and lighter side than the philosophy (Aommon to both men, for it gave with equal directness the pleasant the little personal cha.racteristlcs, that show t.Lvervday happenings, \Vh&man the man as well as Whitman the poet, and to this we are indebted for the most delightfully human picture of him that is to be folmnd in all the literature written about his strange and powerful 1prsonaliJy. To p-e an equally clear and vivid picture of Carpenter himself would require not only equal breadth and simpleness of viewpoint, but an art as great and sincere as his own. The man who can depict v&h sympathy and comprehension all sides of his subtle individuality has not yet been found, and lye must turn to his own books for an underst&d+ of his large and sane philosophy of life. Through his books and through his public utterances (larpenter the philosopher is well and widely known ; but the man himself, living as he does 1)ractically in seclusion for the greater part of the time, seems to &rink a\vay from public knowledge, and little is known of him, In England a slender, frail-looking man, especially i; this country. appears on the clad in loose clothes of thin gr;t;~ wool, occasionally lecture platform in London or m some one *of the provincial cities, ;i,nd in a quiet. almost diffident \vay, SOYS thmgs which make people think. Then he vanishes Fgain, and IS next heard of in Rome or in Venice, or possibly in his own home among the Yorkshire hills, II.5
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A VISIT
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and the British public is left for a time to digest his utterances and to read his books if they want an explanation of them. Therefore, desirable as it was to a member of the editorial staff of THE CRAFTSMAN to meet Edward Carpenter and learn from personal observation what manner of man it was who had written Civilization: its Cause and Cure and The Simplification of Life, the possibility of doing so seemed at first very doubtful. Some of his friends in London were sure that he was in Italy; others thought he might be either at home or in any part of England, goin about his work in his usual quiet way, unheralded and unadvertise 2 . But at last I had the good fortune to meet an erratic, interesting genius named Joseph Clayton,-himself a brilliant writer and an incorrigible iconoclast who has hard work to make a living because in his books and review articles he cannot resist the temptation to poke incisive fun at the little tin gods of English political life. Naturally, he and Carpenter are close friends, and he exerted himself in my behalf so kindly and energetically that it was not long before I received a friendly letter from Carpenter himself, asking me to come and see him at 1Millthorpe if at any time during the summer I happened to be in that part of the country. ILLTHORPE is a little hamlet perched on one of the Yorkshire hills, not far from Sheffield. To reach it one has to leave the Scotch express from London at Chesterfield and drive six miles into the open country. The drive alone is worth a journey to the north of England, for the road winds its irregular way through one of the loveliest regions in the kingdom. I had had an idea that Yorkshire was bleak and stern, with wide desolate moors and graniteribbed hills, but this part of it at least was a fair and smiling land, with great rolling green hills clothed with oak, elm and fir trees, yellow grain-fields and velvet-turfed meadows covered with sleek cattle and placid sheep. The irregularly shaped fields and pastures, outlined and divided by trim green hedgerows, were as perfectly suited to the contour of the land as if the whole countryside had been laid out by some mighty landscape gardener, and here and there a group of gray stone buildings among the trees showed the presence of a It was just the environment comfortable and substantial farmstead. to appeal irresistibly to a man who had traveled far and wide, and who wanted to live tranquilly and happily amid surroundings so beautiful and in air so invigorating that mere existence became a joy. It was a country in which the simple life could be lived in its perfection, but the choice of it showed the taste of an epicure who had
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experienced all that civilization had to offer him and had come through it to the peace that lies on the farther side. At last the carriage pulled up a hill and stopped before a stone cottage half buried in a garden,-a cottage built after the northern fashion with long, straight lines, very narrow eaves, and absolute1 s no attempt at decorative effect. The ri id lines of the granite wal P were softened in places by a gracious cfrapery of vines, and a luxuriant growth of flowers and shrubs screened it almost to the roofline, but that was all. At the gate I was met by a young man who greeted me hospitably and invited me into a room that seemed a combination of kitchen, dining room and livin room. It was not large, and it was very homelike and comfortab 7 e. A kitchen stove built into the big chimney had an open grate in front, from which glowed a brisk fire of coals ; a couple of flatirons stood on end before it, and a tea kettle bubbled invitingly on top. In the corner nearest the stove stood an open cottage piano, its top strewn with sheets of music, and the dining table, which took up all the middle of the room, was spread for afternoon tea. Two other side tables and several plain chairs completed the furnishing of the room. Somehow it was all just as I had expected,-simple, homelike and pleasant ; no attempt at austerity, no striving after ultra-sim licity, but just a plain, hardworking living room that was used an f evidently enjoyed all the time. The young man who had met me was Geor e Merrill, who lives with Carpenter, and keeps the simple bathe for establishment in spotless order. As far as I observed during my brief visit, he was eneral manager in every sense of the word,-being cook, housea eeper, gardener, and withal a most congenial friend and companion to the philosopher-poet. He explained that Edward was busy just then with another guest, and that Captain Carpenter (the poets brother) and his wife, who were staying there for a time, had not yet come in from their walk, but that tea would be soon ready, and then everybody was sure to be on hand. UT in a moment the door of the study opened, and there stood the man I had come so far to see. Dressed in his customary loose gray flannels, and with his gray eyes, hair and beard, he looked at first like a slight gray shadow of a man, but a second glance revealed the wiry strength and perfect poise of the lithe, slender body; the healthy flush under the clear brown skin that told of much outdoor life and exercise, and the depth and luminousness of the quiet eyes, with their kind, steady, inquiring gaze. He looked spiritual, but not at all ascetic; and neither in dress nor manner was there the faintest trace of pose. He did not even wear the far-famed sandals.
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the heart of Whistler, but it was very evident that he did not know it. and would have been extremely annoyed and embarrassed if anyone had suggested it, even by a look. He shook hands cordially, but without effusion, and the firm friendly grasp of his hand accorded well with the frank kindliness of his eyes. Then the others came in,-Captain and Mrs. Car enter, who both interest themselves deeply in social questions, an cf take an active part in the life of Millthorpe when they are there, and an earnesteyed young man, who was clearly a fervent admirer and follower seeking counsel of his chief. The fat brown teapot was at once transferred from the stove to the table, about which we all gathered in the pleasantest and most unconstrained companionshi . By the time the steaming, fragrant cups were passed round, an cf everybody had taken a share of the thin brown bread and butter and big strawberries fresh from the arden, the brisk, light chat of the tea table was well under way. 8 arpenter himself took little part in it, throwing in a question or a comment now and then, but for the most part listening quietly to what the others had to say. But when tea was over he turned to me with the air of one remembering a duty, and asked me to come for a walk in the garden. It was such a pleasant, roomy, old-fashioned English garden, with wide stretches of turf, long grassy walks, and big clumps of flowers and shrubs growing much as they pleased; all set high on the hilltop, and commanding a magnificent view of hills and valleys that lay rich-colored and peaceful under the deep blue sky, with its slowly As we paced up and down the walk, Carpenter sailing clouds. himself opened the conversation by asking me about THE CRAFTSMAN and its editor, and the work we were tryin to do in America, seeming much interested in what I told him of t1 e national life that is slowly *shaping itself in this country. ROM that, the talk drifted naturally to social conditions in England, touching lightly here and there, but not going very &!fy host did not exactly deeply into any branch of the subject. after the American fashion, and ;t care about being interviewed was evident that he had no theory to expound and no lesson to impart for the benefit of the public, but spoke as an impartial spectator of men and events ; one who watched with interest all the significant things going on in the world, but seldom found it necessary to take an active part in shaping them. Although one of the leading socialists of the world, Carpenter apparently has no close affiliation with anv one of the many branches of the socialist party. His attitude ;s
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AS he stood there, the man was a picture that would have gladdened
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A IN
VIEW THE
OF
THE
KITCHEN HILLS.
DOORWAY AT ENGLAND.
OF
TPP
HOME
OF EDWARD
CARPENTER
MILLCEORPE,
YORKSHIRE
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FEEDING GARDEN
THE AT
CHICIiENS MILLTHORPE.
IN
THE
KITCHEN
EDWARD COTTAGE,
HOME IN A
IS
STONE
GARDEN.
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rather that of friendly interest in all, and he seemed to feel that each grou in its own way was doing some work toward the end for which all aEke were striving, and that mistakes and dissensions did not count, the main thing being that each group of theorizers or social workers contributed its full share toward arousing the healthy discontent that made men think. As to his idea concernin the possible outcome he had little to say, but that little was deci fi edly optiIn spite of all the turmoil and unrest of the times,-indeed, mistic. largely because of it,-the active desire to bring about better social conditions was growing ever firmer and more coherent and ever more widespread. During the present period of transition, he said, all efforts seemed in themselves chaotic and more or less futile, but none could tell when the whole movement would of itself crystallize into the shape that it must take in the great scheme of things. The labor movement, he felt, in s ite of its many blunders, was gaining strength and steadiness every if ay, and the socialist movement was coming more and more to know what it wanted, and how the desired reforms might be brought about. He was inclined to attach the vreatest importance to the present agitation for woman suffrage, w?rich he declared was the most vitally significant movement of the present age, for it meant the enfranchisement of fully half of the human race,an enfranchisement that must come before society will admit the right of all to equal privileges and to the opportunity for economic To him the work of the suffragists and the labor independence. movement stand side by side, and women and working men alike are struggling and suffering because the pro ress of the race demands that they shall win their freedom, and so he B p to free the whole social order from the bondage of present conditions. PEAKING of the causes which had contributed toward the world-wide desire for better things, he pointed out that not only was our Western civilization in a state of unrest and upheaval, but also the Eastern, and declared that in his opinion the .signs of the times pointed to a general fusion, and therefore to a profound modification of modern thought and life all over the world. This modification had its beginning when the simple and deeply spiritual philosophy of the East began@0 touch and tranquillize the restless objectivity of the West, and to be quickened in turn by the active aggressiveness of the dominant race of today. With our present facilities for the interchan e of thought, and with all peoples alike in a restless, inquiring an if receptive mood, the fusion must inevitably be swift, and out of the blending there will surely spring a nobler and purer civilization.
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Then he asked about America and the status of the socialistic, labor and suffrage movements here, smiling with quiet amusement at the good-natured indifference of the general American public toward all three. Nevertheless he predicted that America would be in the van of the nations experimenting with new social conditions, because America now is the great smelting pot of the world, and out of the thousand heterogeneous elements in her chaotic civilization there must ultimately spring a national spirit strong and aspiring enough to take a leading part in shaping the future of humanity. To a tentative question about his ideas of life, he answered that he himself was living every day the life that he thought healthiest and best; because it was close to the soil, free from the complexity of artiHe regards the ability ficial demands and occupied with useful work. to do some form of manual labor thoroughly and well as the first essential in a natural and healthy life, and he said simply that he himself worked with his hands, not from any theory about it, but from necessity, and that he lived among workin men because he liked them and they were his friends, accepting fum without reserve as one of themselves. So the pleasant desultory chat went on. I wish it were possible to give his own words as we strolled up and down the paths or sat on a bench overlooking the valley, but the talk was very fragmentary, glancing and wavering here and there through a maze of questions To give and answers, with an occasional lapse into friendly silence. the mere sense of it, as I have done, robs it inevitably of its ease and sparkle, but to attempt a record here of what he actually said would I asked if I might take a be akin to drying and pressing a flower. photograph of him, but he hastily than ed the subject, and was so evidently reluctant to pose that I refraine f from producing my camera. He thought I could not possibly want a photograph of him, but if THE CRAFTSMAN wanted one for publication, why couldnt the photograph printed in the magazine m October, nineteen hundred and six, serve the purpose ? Recollecting the picture in question, and mentally comparing it with the man before me, I admitted that a better one could not possibly be taken, so we compromised on the ossibility of finding about the house a few snapshots of the domestic ife at Millthorpe.
HEN the earnest-eyed young man again claimed the poets attention, and I went back to the living room, where Mrs. Carpenter was playing Mendelssohn and George was busily ironing a tweed skirt that she had got drenched in the rain. The tea things were cleared away, and the ironing sheets were spread out on
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the dining table, conveniently near the stove. I made my appeal for any stray photographs that mi ht be brought to light, and Mrs. Carpenter good-naturedly hunted t?-lrough all sorts of receptacles for Photographs are not plentiful at Millthorpe, any that ml ht be left. but at last s% e found two or three and a piece of paper to wrap them in. But there was no string. Never mind, said George, bringing his iron down with a thump on a refractory wrinkle in the hem of the skirt. Ill tell Edward to get one when he comes in. As a revelation of the simple life, this was sufficiently staggering to an onlooker, but when the gray-haired poet came slowly up the steps, looking more tranquil and remote than ever, he was promptly sent into his study to hunt for the string. At his nod of invitation I followed, and while he routed a vagrant and disreputable piece of twine from its lair in his table drawer, I swiftly took stock of the room in which had been done work that affected the whole course of modern thought. It was as homely and as livable as the living room adjoinin , and as irreproachably kept, but of luxury there was none at all. 1 well-worn work table, two or three chairs, and some shelves of books were all the furnishing it had, yet I never saw a room which more completely carried out its owners ideas of life. As he walked with me to the arden gate where my cab waited, Car enter said suddenly and a litt P e diffidently: I think it was very 700 l of you to come so far and take so much trouble ust to see me. B have enjoyed your visit very much, but tell me, why d d you come ? There were a number of reasons why I had come, but to give any one of them would have sounded like gushin ,-a thing 1 did not need to be told he detests. So I said simply: 1 came chiefly because the editor of THE CRAFTSMAN told me to come. You see, your books have been something of a help and an inspiration to him in the work he is trying to do himself, and he wanted to know just what kind of a man you were when one saw and talked with you in your own home. His look of embarrassed diffidence deepened a little. That was very kind of him, he said. Give him my re ards and tell him I should like much to meet him personally. T %en his whole face broke into a grin like a mischievous schoolboys. So that was because you would have got why you came, he said triumphantly, a wigging if you hadnt.
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Hudson-Fulton Museum
of
Celebm. Art.
LUCRETIA REMBRANDT
HERSELF PAINTER.
Loaned by Mr. Charles L. Hutch&son to the Hudson-Fulton Celebration Art Exhibit Held at the Metrofioliton Museum of Art.
WILHEM FRANS
VAN HAGS,
HEYTIIUYSEN PAINTER.
I.onned to the
o Avt .4 .&bit.
THE VAN
FOREST RUISDAEL,
STREAM PAINTER.
JACOB
I
Loarwd by Mr. P. A, B. Widener to the Hudson-Fulton Celebration Art Exhibit Held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
KERMESSE STEEN,
JAN
PAINTER.
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Hudson-Patton Mwseurn of
CrlebraArt.
LADIES": PAINTER.
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Loaned to the
of Art Exhibit.
GIRL
WfTE
WATER
JUG : PAINTEB.
JOHANNES
VERMEER,
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Art
Bxhtbit
f&LONIAL BEAUTY
DESK OF DESIGN
OF
UNUSUAL
ANDFINISH.
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class, the craft-guilds and merchant-guilds were the bulwark of the prosperity of the Netherlands. The wide commercial and maritime ventures of the Dutch brought them into touch with strange and differin peoples, and developed in them a certain open-mindedness. This so 533r and practical folk listened readily to the new doctrines of the Reformation, and their tolerant spirit made their country the asylum for the religiously o pressed of almost all Euro e. Though ished sim ly the Dutch settlements in t I: e New World were estab P as trading colonies, though New Amsterdam remained thorou Iily Dutch until Dutch rule gave place to English, though the city f ong showed the influences of its founders-yet the little town very early in its history came to hold settlers of various nationalities, including, besides the Dutch and English, Germans, French Huguenots, a small group of Jews, and a number of ne ro slaves, afterward freed. The heterogeneous population of New B ork today carries out on gigantic scale the early cosmopolitan character of the city-a cosmopolitanism that was artly induced by the common-sense ability of the Dutch, who made R ew York from the first a practically successful colony, and by the avowed spirit of tolerance, which (in spite of Peter Stuyvesant and the Quakers) still made the New Netherland a worthy offspring of the Old. At the USKIN says that a nation writes its history in its art. , the northtime of the greatest develo ment of Dutch paintin a e torturous ern provinces had attaine B political liberty from t despotism of Spain; the sway of the Roman church had yielded to greater independence of thought, and the awe and splendor of Catholicism had been replaced by the democratic simplicity of the Protestant faith. All this we see reflected in Dutch art, with its preference for the actual rather than the visionary, for the homely rather than the heroic. This Protestant spirit in art finds its sublime expression in what Dr. William Bode calls the master-stroke of Rembrandt, the ainters effort to bring the Bible into common life and to paint for tph e people of the Low Countries Christs message of compassion and salvation to the lowly. It was Rembrandts inspiration to make the Bible seem tangible and vital, and the presence of Christ a daily reality. Mr. George Moore, the English art critic, in his book called Modern Painting says, At the end of the sixteenth century the first ainters of the great Dutch school were born, and before sixteen hun Bred and fifty a new school, entirely original, having nothing in common with anything that had gone before, had formulated its * * * No longer do aestheticism and produced masterpieces.
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we read of miracles and martyrdoms, but of the most ordinary incidents of everyday life. * * * And again, contrastin Dutch with Italian art, he says, One art is purely ima inative, t fie other Dutch art is, indeed, widely %uman ; the Dutch is plainly realistic. studied and painted their own families and their everyday neighbors, they found pictures in every hase of life, and they were the first to speak, as it were, in the diaf ect of the people. It is the towering genius of Rembrandt van Rijn, in whom Dutch art finds its greatest expression, that instantly confronts the visitor to the New York art museum. The walls seem aglow with the luminous panels and canvases of this master, whose realism penetrates deeper than appearances, seeking not flesh and blood alone, but also the very soul, giving the spiritual as well as the actual life of every subject. To know Rembrandt in his greatest scope we must, of course, have seen him in his home, and also in the galleries of Dresden, Cassel and Berlin, and in the National Gallery of London. However, the portraits and studies now exhibited in New York show the master in all stages of his development from the earliest icture of himself (lent by Mr. J. Pierpont Mor an) to the last great se1 r -portrait, formerly in the collection of Lord If Chester and now owned by Mr. Henry C. Frickof New York. To the art critic and the savant must be left all comment on these paintings from the standpoint of the artist. Only an artist can hope to bring intelligent and discriminating praise or criticism to great art. The layman can but offer an appreciation. Surely no one can look unmoved on the justly famed last selfportrait of Rembrandt. It was painted in sixteen hundred and fiftyeight, during the dark period of the artists bankruptcy and social disgrace. Already an old man,-acquainted with sorrow through the early death of Saskia, his first wife, and his first three children, Rembrandt had seen favor ebb and friends grow cold, while success waned; his creditors had claimed (albeit justly, we may believe) what was left of the fortune that his genius had won and that had slip ed through his fingers in generous and prodi al expenditures. He lad seen his art treasures, his collections and %is library sold under the hammer for a few florins. Yet in this picture he faces the world with grave, self-possessed majesty,-the stead eyes, the heavy strength of the face, the low of the gold-colore J gaberdine seeming to set ill-fortune at nau a t. With everything swept from him but his palette, he lifts his firush, claiming the supreme consolation of the artist,-the painters consciousness of power in his art. It is as thou h he said to Fate You may do your worst, yet-here I shall live, for a% time master ofMyself; -as though this brilliant canvas declared that even the darkest adversity cannot put out the light of genius.
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HERE are other self-portraits in the exhibition-some six out of the hundred or so left by the painter ; Rembrandt was fond of usin himself as a model for the working out of artistic problems an 2 experiments. At the Museum many types of men and women move from the shadows of Rembrandts canvases, alive in the strange lightings which were the study and triumph of the master, and in which he wrought his most powerful external effects. It would be impossible here to enumerate all the personalities shown through RemHere, for instance, is The Savant, a student brandts genius. gazing down upon a bust of Homer, which his hand reverently caresses. Dr. Bode has said of Rembrandts chiaroscuro that it is the art of making the atmosphere visible, and in this picture Rembrandt would seem to have made visible more than the actual atmosphereeven the atmosphere of thought. The beloved young wife of the painter, familiar to all who know the European galleries, the fairhaired Saskia who died so early, -she, too, is here; while a portrait full of grave poetic charm shows us Hendrickje Stoffels, the faithful companion of Rembrandts later life, his second wife. On the walls of the Museum are the famous Gilder, and the Noble Slav; two fine Jewish heads (one called The Philosopher, both probably models from the Jewish quarter in Amsterdam where Rembrandt had his house); the &Tarquis dAndelot, The Sybil, Lucretia, and the. beautiful and thoughtful Portrait of a Young Painter. All these and many more attest to the varied power of him who was master of Dutch art in all its forms-in religious subjects, in genre, still life, portraiture; in drawings, in the marvelous etchings which in old age had all but cost him his sight, and in the glorious paintings which place among the immortals this millers son of the little town of Leyden. Preceding Rembrandt chronologically and next in fame stands Frans Hals, the genial and mighty painter whose best years were passed at Haarlem. With singular skill in contrast the Museum Portrait of a Young Painter one of has hung near Rembrandts the best pictures by Hals in the exhibition-the Portrait of an The broad and powerful brush strokes put before us an Artist. honest open-hearted Dutchman who looks as though he might have painted like Frans Hals himself, with just such fluent power, such frank brilliancy and swee , such laughing good-humor and hearty To Ip als has been ascribed the dignity of having fellowship with life. given to portraiture its pronounced development in Dutch art; so modern are his methods that painters today have humorously called him The Father of Impressionism. The twenty aintings at the Museum show the master at different periods of Ris long career.
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Let us now all too briefly consider the landscapes and genre picHere are winter tures for what they tell us of life in the Netherlands. scenes-the long bleak winter of the northern provinces-with their frozen canals and gay sleddin parties ; summer landscapes (Cuyp, van Ruisdael and the great 53 obbema) with their country roads, their bit of Haarlem forest, their dunes and canals, showing us the placid restfulness of the flat country beneath the rolling masses of shiftin clouds that are so characteristic of Dutch skies. To paint what tfi ey daily saw, to recreate with an almost pious care the scenery of the country they loved-this was the greatest triumph of the Dutch landscape painters, who rank today as among the greatest in the world. The genre pictures represent typkal scenes of Dutch life-the thatched villages and their peasants, painted with broad satiric humor by Jan Steen ;-the taverns with their noisy laughter and the humbler pathos of the poor. Here again are bits of intimate domestic life ; and not least in importance are the soldiers who had become such familiar and picturesque figures in the Netherlands through the long struggle with Spain. We are given, too, an insi ht into the refinements of Dutch society-the elegant ladies and cava!fiers at cards (Pieter de Hooch), the Lady with Lute, the Lady with Guitar, and the Music Lesson, by Johannes Vermeer of Delft,-pictures which tell us of Hollands culture in the art of music. That out of the thirty-six genuine Vermeers in existence there should be five in this collection The refinement and is a source of congratulation to America. delicacy of perception, the restraint and beauty of color and the strong artistic individuality of this artist have ven to Vermeer in latter days a place after Rembrandt and Frans x als, as one of the greatest masters of the Dutch school,-a school of national and democratic realism. We read today unmoved the carp of an art critic of the last century who complains that Dutch art chooses subjects wholly unworthy as compared with the religious spirit and the idealism of Italian art. We of the twentieth century have long since ceased to relegate art solely to the realm of the ideal,-we also welcome it for giving us the truth of things as they are, knowin that it is for the aenius to show to us of duller sense the realities of 8 ature and of Life. hre cannot do without true art of every school to fill humanitys differing needs. Certainly through Rembrandt, who pierces to the heart of things and makes the soul shine throuwh the flesh, who gives us such wealth of spiritual beauty in everyday ?ife, we may learn in art something of that which we hear so much about nowadays,-the religion of humanity.
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From
Erhrbd
the
at
Hre
Hudson-F&on Metropokton
SILVER
DESIGNED ARE
BY
NEW
YORK OUR
CRAFTSMEN AND
OF THE
EIGHTEENTH OF DESIGNS
CENTURY:
THE
BEAUTY
SIMPLICITY
WORTHY
CONSIDERATION.
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BY AND
AMBRICAN NEW
THE
MADE
COLONIST, ON
OF COLONl.ZL
FURNITURE
RECORD.
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A DUTCH
AND
COLONIAL
ART
EXHIBITION
PASS from the Dutch exhibit to the three rooms devoted to the art of the American Colonies. Here we are struck at once by the fact that any young community planted in the wilderness, whose whole effort must be to support life and establish industries among conditions of great hardship, can scarcely be expected to bring forth any other art than that devoted to making Though the walls of the American beautiful the necessities of life. exhibits are hung with pictures by such well-known American artists as Copley, the Peales, Benjamin West and Robert Fulton, it is the in these rooms which most interests the display of craftsmanshi visitor whose mind is sti r1 filled with the splendor of the paintings in the Dutch exhibit. Chief in importance among the industrial arts represented are The exhibition rooms are divided cabinetmaking and silversmithing. into three periods of Colonial development in these arts ; the first room is devoted to the seventeenth century, the second to the ei hteenth, the third to the nineteenth. One may see the history of w merican furniture from sixteen hundred and twenty to eighteen hundred and from the simple chest, fifteen, tracing the evolution of the high-boy and that of the stately cabinet-top secretary with secret drawers from the humble box with slanting cover in which writing materials were kept in early days. The most interesting objects in the seventeenthcentury room are the carved oak chests in which the Pilgrims and Puritans packed their possessions on their first voyages ; while the nineteenth-century room is distinguished by the beautiful work of the famous New York cabinetmaker, Duncan Phyffe, whose simple, graceful furniture reflects the Empire style of France. Not all of the furniture lent to the exhibition was made in the Colonies ; some of it was sent to the Colonists from Europe or brought over by the settlers themselves. Yet much of it has ty ically American design and calls to mind the stories our great-gran 1 mothers told of the itinerant cabinetmakers who used to visit remote districts to make from their rustic customers own trees (previously seasoned) whatever furniture was required in the isolated households. The idea of thus immortalizing literal family trees *by converting them into chairs and tables is no less quaint because impelled We may imagine how humorously dear such bits by economic necessity. of furniture must have been to the children of the household who in old age could look over their spectacles at the time-honored pieces, recalling the primitive farm in the wilderness and the old ash or maple under which they used to play. All the silverwork in the exhibition is the product of American craftsmanship; much of it is from Boston, where among the names
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A DUTCH
AND
COLONIAL
ART
EXHIBITION
of other silversmiths we find that of the famous Paul Revere; a large collection of it is from New York State and bears the signature of both It is interestin to see how apparently inDutch and English artisans. stinctively the craftsmen of the humble 8 olonies sought simplicity of form and motive. Indeed, one is struck throughout the exhibit by the element of refinement and good taste, the absence of display, and the dignity of line and curve that characterize Colonial workmans hip.
NE interesting feature of the eighteenth-century room is an interior wall from a Colonial house, with fireplace and cupboards. The wall is of paneled wood and was preserved intact by the owner of the house, with the intention of inserting it in a modern dwelling. The Museum has placed before the wall the highbacked chair and the stiff cane couch of the period, and has given brass andirons and fender to the fireplace. In the quaint cupboard is a collection of American glass,-Pitkin glass made in Connecticut at the end of the eighteenth century and Stiegel glass from Pennsylvania; a string of glass beads is historically interesting because manufactured in Jamestown, Virginia, for trade with the Indians. On the wall of this section of a Colonial room han s a framed Family Record worked in worsted, giving the births of tf e many children who blessed some Colonial household; we learn on reading the record that it is the Sampler of Charlotte Pierson, aged thirteen years. There are many other homely little touches that bring the daily life of the vanished centuries before us. Though much of the furniture exhibited is the product of New England and of other Colonies, the association is so near that these suggestions easily conjure up a vision of old New York,-the New York of the Battery, of Broad Street, Pearl Street, Wall Street and Maiden Lane,-a uiet country town, which though first Dutch and then English, long R eld the social and industrial elements of both nations. As we look at New York today, the Colonial period seems so remote that it is hard to realize how few have been the years that have seen such great changes. Not a trace is left of the little able-roofed town,-the green bouveries, the grazin 57 since vanished from Mana-hatta ; kine, the windmil 7 s have lon and as we think of the dar a narrow canyons leading from lower Broadway, with the skyscrapers towering on every side, it seems impossible to believe that those very streets once held the homes of the scrupulous Dutch, who in the old country washed even the outside of their houses three times a week! It seems hardly fair to look at the early American paintings of the exhibit with the overwhelming impression of the Dutch masterpieces
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A DUTCH
AND
COLONIAL
ART
EXHIBITION
admiration for the fact fresh upon us. Yet we must feel a wonderin that the little Colonies, struggling first with t1 e wilderness, then with French and Indian foes, and then with the mother country, could so early in their history have brought forth any paintings at all. By far the most numerous of the portraits shown are those by Co ley, and of these perhaps the most important is the painting calle cf A The Peale orFamily Group, lent by D. Maitland Armstrong. trait of Washin ton lent by Thomas H. Kelly is of historic value; %ut, s ace of honor in the exhibition is given to the famous of course, the p portrait of Robert Fulton by his friend and master, Benjamin West, which hangs at the end of the nineteenth-century room, over a beautiful old American mantelpiece loaned by Fultons granddaughter. The ainter has given to the great inventor an expression of intense, searc f ng thought which must evidently have characterized the face The burning glow of the eyes shows that here is indeed of Fulton. genius, and it is with particular interest that we look u on the portrait at this time, when all America-through New Egork-honors the achievement of this famous man. On the whole, the many portraits hung above the Colonial furniture in these three rooms may be said to complete the picture of Colonial times by showing us the Colonists themselves. These paintings add the last touch of interest to an exhibition arranged with singular clearness of purpose and effect. The display of early American industrial art forces us to realize that in spite of our rapid growth and progress we can scarcely be said to have improved upon the excellence of design in the craftsmanship of those old times when life Abnormal luxury had not then exaggerand manners were simple. ated household requirements, destroying good taste, whose distinguishing mark must always be simplicity, whether enforced by necessity or adopted by choice. However interesting the American rooms may be, the dominant im ression that the visitor carries from the Museum is that of the tru f y remarkable exhibition of Dutch art. The privilege of viewing in one collection so many masterpieces can never be forgotten. It must be an artistic event in the hfe of every American visitor who The exhibition teaches New Yorkers to be proud cannot go abroad. of their historic link with the sturdy, daring little country that could bring forth an Erasmus, a Spinoza and a Rembrandt,-thrifty, industrious and self-reliant Holland, honest alike in art and in religion, the mother of the town that was once New Amsterdam, and is now This exhibition will last until one of the greatest cities in the world. about the end of November.
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UNDERCURRENTS OF NEW YORK LIFE SYMPATHETICALLY DEPICTED IN THE DRAWINGS OF GLENN 0. COLEMAN
iHERE are only seven plots in the world, the novelists tell us, and all stories and plays are variations or combinations of these themes ; there are only five compositions for pictures; history is a repetition of a series of events, and there can never be a new emotion. It sounds like rather a discouraging prospect until one reflects that of all those who look out upon this cut and dried existence, no two people see quite alike or see the whole truth of it. The eternal novelty of life lies in the infinity of possible points of view; the way the nerghbors take it. It is from the point of view of the author that we see the play, read the book or look at the picture; from their point of view that we talk with our friends. Each has his own particular eye-glass, his little lens ground with an infinitesimal difference from all the other lenses, through which he views life at a particular angle. None of them tells us anythin new in itself, but each shows us a new way of looking at life, and wgh at it means to him. These meanings are new truths to us and go to build up the sum of truth and understanding in our attitude toward life. This is not to say that art inevitably should.have an educational purpose behind it, yet it ou ht to stimulate not only the senses to a better appreciation of line an 8 form and color, but also the soul and the imagination to a higher appreciation of the beauty of life. Consequently, when an artist appears with a definite and individual point of view it seems to us an occasion for gratitude. He will loan us his lenses, so to speak, and show us the meanin in something that we have perhaps passed by blindly a hundre 8 times. Mr. Coleman, whose drawin s illustrate this article, has a rare understanding of New York and tRh e peo le that form the undercurrents in the P vast river of its population. Ie has drawn them quite impartially, seeing them apparently with the level eye, neither exalting them by sentimental pity nor patronizing them as ignorant and weak. He has represented them in this serves of pictures, enjoying the pleasures in their lives which, regardless of poverty and pitiable surroundings, average about the same as those in the lives of all other classes of persons. They are all human beings, and the truth of his observations of them and their surroundings gives to his work an historical value aside from the artistic worth. Every great workman of all ages, in every branch of art, has contributed at least a part of his genius to preserving the history of his own times, either directlv or unconsciously representing the leading events in the social, military or political life. This, 3lr. Coleman
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FORTY-SECOND BY GLENN 0.
STREET: COLEMAN.
DRAWN
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AMATEUR DRAWN BY
NIGHT GLENN
ON 0
THE
BOWBRY
COT.ISMAN.
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UNION DRAWN
SQUARE, BY GLENN
NEW
YORK:
0. COLEMAN
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THE DRA\ZN
SHOP
GIRL
AT 0.
HOME: COLEMAN.
BY GLENN
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UNDERCURRENTS
OF
NEW
YORK
LIFE
has done in his group of drawin s, Scenes from the Life of the People, a series of impressions an 6: annotations upon life that register the old eternal relations between human beings, seen against the background of the moment. VERYONE familiar with New York knows Forty-second Street at the hour when the buoyant, excited crowd throngs out from the theaters. This is the moment of the first picture. It is not raining, but the air is full of moisture and the pavement shines under the lights. From the midst of the crowd the artist has selected two Jews. It is not chance that they are there; every night they are on the street, the fat, smug couple, takin their pleasure. A hundred like them have already passed and a i undred others might emerge from the crowd. The theater has been satisfactory, the damp air comes refreshingly against their faces. They are conscious of their warm coats, of the softness of the fur on their collars. The woman falls to thinking of the restaurant to which they are going, and the final gratification of supper and the blended perfume of food and wine. The excitement of the color and music of the theater have died away and she smiles complacently to herself in the midst of her satisfaction with life, but the stimulation is still at work in the senses of the man, growing sluggish now with approaching age, and he looks back across his wife at the oung woman who has just passed them, alone. She, too, looks bat f , but not at him, more at the woman who is smiling complacently; at the feather on her hat, the evident prosperity. Pleasure has not come her own way as yet toni ht. So muc% are they a type, and theirs the typical pleasure of the street, that the two seem to be the leaders of a processionmarching in due order from the pleasure of the theater to the pleasure of the restaurant. The artist makes no comment on the scene. There is much beauty in the composition; the arch of the elevated station and the play of lights, as there always is in New York street scenes, but in the background of the picture lies the tensity, the vast suggestion of the entire city. It is our entrance to all New York. The sky, arching over the city, is vibrant with pink reflection of the electric lights; the roar of the elevated, the buzz of the trolleys and the honk of motor horns ascend like an exhilaration. All New York stretches beyond, the wilderness of deep, narrow streets, the mass of people, beneath a mesh of lights. Amateur Night on the Bowery has perhaps more beauty of composition than the drawing called Forty-second Street, but here also, with wonderful force of presentation, we get the sense of the
I47
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UNDERCURRENTS
OF
NEW
YORK
LIFE
cheap theater, the rough audience in which the scum of almost every race on earth is resented. Amateur Night is the revival of an old custom originate 1 sixty years ago, when the managers used to try out aspiring actors on Friday mght, a roceeding which caused so much amusement to the corn any that tit e theaters saw money in it and, charging the regular a cr mission, threw open the stage to any amateur with professional ambitions. When the erformance became tiresome the audience shouted loudly for the itook, a formidable weapon manipulated from the wings, that removed the bore from the stage. One feels in the picture the good-natured grins of brutal amusement, the embarrassment of the rl who has forgotten what she was going to say, the effort of the otf er to appear quite at ease, to brazen it out somehow. Above in the balcony is the eager audience who has caught sight of the hook a proaching the unconscious pair, and is pressmg forward to see t%e comedy denoub ment. NYONE knowing the characteristic types of eople that loaf about the different squares in New York, wilf have little difficulty in reco nizing in the third sketch a quick impression of the south end ofg Union Square. This is the direct thoroughfare from the West Side to the Bowery, whither the figures are hastin . It is a cold, snap y day. The air is exhilarating, clean and w?Iolesom& The two r.i urns, their hands deep in their ragged ockets, their heads sunk in their collars, feel the exhilaration of it. 5 he man who posed for the figure on the left is an old rinter and a good one. In the winter, during the rush work of tRe Christmas season, he gets a warm job in a printing office; in summer he goes to the docks where there is always a cool breeze blowing across the piers. In the off-season he tramps about with his al and finds life equally ood, no matter which way he takes it. iti e may have shoveled a k ittle snow somewhere the morning of the picture, and so, full of joy of living, he and his pal are moving on to a beer on the Bowery. Behind them a woman, passing down Fifth Avenue, looks at the two shabby figures crossing the square. She has no conception of their leasure and of what makes it. She looks at them half-pityingly i ecause they are ragged and it is cold, and half-scornfully that men should come to such a pass. The Shop Girl at Home is the most dramatic of these drawings. Here the artist represents the girl at the most critical moment in her daily life, the little dramatic pause, tense with possibilities, between the days and the evenings excitement. This girl is made for pleasure, to enjoy all the obvious delights of life. She wants no
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UNDERCURRENTS
OF
NEW
YORK
LIFE
part in the sordidness and misery of it, so she goes to the department store with long hours and small pa , to be an onlooker at the pageant that winds continuously between t Ee counters. There is li ht, color, eaves the mornin she P perfume, and style, her goddess. Eve ife, but at night grayness behind to become a spectator of T t e jo of Y she comes back to it again. She is an alien H gure standing there, miles away from the labyrinth of dark, ill-smellin rooms at the top of the narrow, wooden stairs behind her, from the chiPdren squabbling at the end of the passage that leads to the little court in the center of the tenement. On the ste s beside her the ra ged little sister plays with a bedraggled kitten. J! he kitten and the c%IId are weazened and old. They have accepted existence as it has been thrust upon them. But not so with the shop girl; her blood is ardent and her body full. She is drawing herself forward out of the grayness; the white lights are on her face. She buys herself cheap imitations of what women who have beauty in their lives are accustomed to wear, because she, too, is seeking the beauty of life, and these are the prettiest things she knows. The artist has drawn her as she is, sparing no volu tuous detail, no commonness, no vu1 arity. She is an eager, roun x -limbed little huntress among the sha iiows of life. Shall she go forth or shall she wait, both the lure and the hunter, to seize the first pleasure that She feels herself an alien. asses in a guise that she understands? E ven in her thought she has thrust the sordid life behind her, yet she accepts it as her back round, and is inseparable from it. % e characters are so closely woven into In these four scenes t their environment that each becomes the expression of the other, and whether on Forty-second Street or the East Side the presence of Mighty Manhattan is always felt throbbing behind the particular setting of the picture. The drawings evince subtle satire rather than The artist works without comment. He is too absorbed caricature. in grasping the underlying connection between all life, and in portraying a hase of America, a transition, a step in the making of the country. R e sees the sordidness and vulgarity in it, but with a vision of truth that gives the scenes the di nity of a rightful place in the scheme of existence, and changes t%em from isolated happenings in the lives of unimportant peo le to chapters in human life and documents of the countrys growtR .
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X OUR
LOSS AND
OUR
COMPENSATION
S SAMSON found honey in the lions carcass, so perhaps may we, in contemplating the wreckage of noble forests that form part of our legacy to coming generations, hope to find something of sweet and compensating savor even under the ribs of that desolation. Face to-face as we now are with the material enalties of having sacrificed our woodlands wholesaPe to the blind greed of the axe and the devouring maw of forest fires, we are ready to recognize and accept the obviously ex edient principles of conservation and reforestation. But even while P earning this physical lesson we may have unconsciously crossed the threshold of another truth, one which has its spiritual and aesthetic no less than its material aspect. In the very spectacle of the devastation which we have wrought or permitted, with all its sordid accompaniments, there lurks a reminder that in life, as in art, beauty and satisfaction are born only of economy. If no amount of reforestation can restore to their original estate the magnificent pine forests of northern Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan, neither, with a timber famine menacing, can the countryside continue to bear its mushroom growth of meaningless and impermanent frame habitations in lieu of its legitimate crop of homes. If we cannot restore the unparalleled forests of black walnut which clothed the bottom lands of Indiana and Illinois, neither, let us believe, can we ever again fill our houses with furniture as ugly, ornate and insincere as the worst that the famous black walnut period produced. In short, our native woods are becoming too scarce, and therefore too valuable, for us longer to degrade them to wasteful and unlovely uses. With this enforced respect for their materials we may not unreasonably hope to see our house-builders become home-builders, and our furniture-makers once a ain animated by true spirit of craftsmanship rather than by zeal f or commercial exploitation. For it seems to be only when the value or the scarcity of materials compels economy in their use that the craftsman ets his best resultsife. a fact which finds analogies throughout all of fThus it is a commonplace of knowledge that wherever Nature, like an overindulgent mother, supplies mans every material need without demanding any effort upon his part, there her human children lag behind their less pampered fellows not only in spiritual and mental development, but even in purely physical achievement. Not in the tropics,.but in the temperate zones, has civilization borne its richest fruit. In those opulent regions where the earth nourishes him of her bounty without preliminary tilling, and where the problems of cloth150
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COMPENSATION ing and shelter are reduced to their simplest terms, man, although thus relieved of his physical burdens, does not urge to the front of the procession in the reat march of human rogress. Instead he loiters and dreams, soot%ed by the contentment o, Hhis senses, untouched by the salutary spur of necessity which has urged the race forward on its blind upward climb throughout the ages. Necessity, it seems, is the mother not only of inventron, but of the spiritual vision which enables us to know beauty and to worship it. N A sense the forest may be re arded as the basis upon which all our material wealth rests. Bf our water-sheds were stripped of their forest coverings which check and regulate the distribution of the rainfall the resultant floods would soon render our greatest rivers unnavi able and our fertile lands would be largely reduced by erosion to % arren wildernesses. It is therefore no easy thing that we demand of the spirit of optimism when we ask it to see light as well as darkness emanatin from our present forest problem. Nor is this to be achieved by b %nking the facts of the case-facts which even in their baldest presentation loom sta gerin ly lar e. Within the last year or two the nation has Been s%ockefinto understanding that its natural resources are not boundless, limitless, and inexhaustible, as we have been in the habit of randiloquently describing them. Cold statistics compiled by our lea 8 ing authorities on forests, mines, soils and waterways have made it clear that even the stupendous natural wealth with which Nature has endowed this country is perce tibly and swiftly shrinking before the great American method oP doing business. This method seems to be to kill the goose that lays the golden eggs in order toTri;lize more quickly and easily on the eggs already m the nest. erhaps, is one reason why the American people pay more for bark f iving than any other people ever paid before. The method is best illustrated, as well as most disastrous, in its application to the forests. By a wanton system of lumbering which wastes more trees than it uses and at the same time so litters with slash the woods through which it cuts as to leave them veritable fire-traps, we are depleting our forests at about a hundred billions of feet of timber a year, a rate whidh, it is estimated, will wipe out the last of our forests in little over a quarter of a century. Nor can we shirk our share of the responsibility for this state of affairs by decrying the reed of the lumberman. In the final analysis it will be found that t % e blame belongs quite as much to the ignorance and indifference of the general public. We should remember, moreover, that each year the fire losses in the United States by the burning of buildings and their contents amount to nearly
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COMPENSATION a quarter of a billion dollars, and that the timber thus burned is ust as much of a drain u n the forests as if we burned the trees as tL ey stood. The tremen 8 ous amount of wealth wiped out annually by actual forest fires-the result of carelessness-is not so easily reduced to exact figures. Of course, as soon as the public perceived the logical sequel of this short-sighted looting of the public treasure-houses, it began to busy itself with the discussion of remedies. Even after the horse is stolen, the other livestock and the fodder ma be saved by putting a lock on the stable door. Hence we have tE e conservation movement which many regard as the most im ortant development under the Roosevelt Administration. But so P ar has the destruction of our woods already gone that reforestation must play an important part in this movement. At the same time there is wholesome disci line in rememberi that no amount of tree-planting will restore wIiat we have destroy3 , though it may serve to mark the scars of our devastating methods, and to ward off their material penalties. We have layed the prodi al with our natural resources and we have Is . No amount of belated appreciation will to ret E on with the hus restore to us one of those big trees (sequoia gigantea) which from the western slope of the Sierra Nevada mountains had begun to watch the procession of the centuries before Moses led the Israelites out of E t, and which were still reen and rowing when felled to meet t !.F e needs of our vandal civiIization. r$ or will the adoption at the eleventh hour of scientific and businesslike methods of lumbering undo the havoc that has been wrought amon the redwood tracts of the Coast Range, where the big est saw-mi fis in the world are devouring the worlds most majestic B ore&s. Until lately, the method of cutting the redwoods was so destructive that it not only completely ruined the forests but incidentally wasted half of every tree. URNING from the Pacific to the Atlantic Coast, the ruined seaboard flats of Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas add another cha ter to the story of our ruthless and short-sighted exploitation of J atures bounties. Here the misdirected energy of our tur ntine atherers has destroyed the forests of maritime pine which un8 er the 4 fferent treatment would have been one of the most valuable and permanent sources of income on our southwest coast. By blundering methods which lose nine-tenths of the available turpentine from each tree, leaving the killed timber to fall and rot where it grew, they have reduced the region to an aching desolation of miasmatic swamps and sandy wastes. In France similar forests planted by hand on similar sandy stretches of coast, are so managed 152
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COMPENSATION as to yield a steady and profitable harvest of turpentine, firewood, mine props, charcoal and wood alcohol, without suffering any reduction from year to year. But even this is an inadequate and expensive substitute for the ori inal woodland laid out by the ins ired carelessness of Natures han f . As somebody writes of artificial ! orests in Germany: One realizes that there are, in fact, pine gardens as orderly as cabbage fields, and as well tilled and cared for as a market garden. Nowhere in the world can we find forests to duplicate those that we have destroyed or decimated-the limitless woods of primeval pine in Wisconsin and Michi an, the miles of huge white oaks in western Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, % entucky, Missouri and Arkansas, and the splendid forests of black walnut which made famous certain sections of Indiana and Illinois. But it would seem that the very lavishness of these natural resources helped to make us an unappreciative people. We cannot build or create beautifully without a true appreciation of our materials, and where those materials are too plentiful such appreciation is rarely found. Thus we did not get our bad architecture or bad furniture until the increasing output of the bi saw-mills made it a commercial desideratum to force the sale of P umber. Then began the eriod of ugl and characterless frame houses, with their boxed-in arc5ll itecture an cr their gingerbread decorations. Architects thought, not in terms of architecture, but in terms of lumber. Our overabundant and easily worked pine created its own system of wastefulness and ugliness. It aid the mills not only to supply the normal market but to create an B foster an artificial demand for their products. Lumber became such a bargain that we wasted it in miles upon miles of unnecessary board sidewalks and in flims makeshift houses, thrown together until the builders should be rici enough to erect in their stead other frame houses newer and larger and equally ugly. These houses were not in any true sense an expression of the common people, but of the great saw-mills and the commercial system they represented. While timber was so plentiful and so chea it did not seem worth while to give much attention or thought to Kow it was used. Later the people were to begin to find themselves architecturally through the pressure of new economic problems. HAT art we had in buildin and cabinetmaking belongs to a eriod before the era of the great saw-mills. Thus the 01B Colonial houses, whether of wood or of stone, possessed both beaut and durability, for when these were built lumber had not become a i rug on the market. The builder still used his wood with a wholesome appreciation of its value in terms of labor, and he conI53
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COMPENSATION sequently sought to avail himself of its utmost possibilities both of The same fact is reflected in the furnibeauty and of permanence. ture made in this country during the Colonial and Revolutionary periods, which by its thorough craftsmanship, its usable beauty and its economy of material stands as a reproach to the furniture-maker of today. The ledger of our forest accounts, then, may be said to balance up somewhat as follows: On the debit side, we find that the unintelligent exploitation of our forests has already carried us across the threshold of a timber famine into conditions which must be long endured before they will be even partially remedied. Thus the only considerable hardwood forests of vir in growth remaining in the country today are those of the White ii ountains in the northeast and the Southern Appalachian chains. We have destroyed our hemlocks for their tan bark as we once destroyed our noble hordes of bison for the robes they wore. By erosion resulting from the loss of our forests the country is losing more than one hundred square miles of good soil annually-the sediment due to this cause carried by the Mississi pi alone in a single year amounting to more soil than will be move dPm the entire process of excavating the Panama Canal. On the credit side, we find that these facts have shocked the nation into a sense of responsibility toward, and therefore truer appreciation of, what remains of its forest heritage. The wasting and burning ma be regarded as the price-exorbitant and terrible, but demande B-of this appreciation. As a result ublic opinion has rallied behind the work of the forestry bureau, wit\ its far-reaching programme of conservation and reforestation. But from the very nature of this work, we must wait long for its fruits. And in the meantime the soaring price of lumber 1s teaching us another national lesson. For the high price of materials is one of the most potent discouragers of cheaply-conceived, impermanent architecture and trashy and undurable furniture. Forced to recognize the value of wood, we begin to use it in a way to do justice to its inherent beauty and quality. As we have already suggested, some of the results of this changed attitude toward our commonest building material may be so far-reaching that it seems almost fanciful to omt them out. But it is obvious that a growing appreciation of the 7)eauties and right uses of a material so essential to the buildin of American homes must make itself felt as an important factor in t a e development of our national architecture. And when once we begin to strive for sincerity and beauty in our houses, which should be in a sense the outward symbols of all that is happiest and tenderest and most significant in the lives they shelter, our feet are already set on the paths of spiritual growth.
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X ER WHO HAS SOLVED THE PROBLEMS OF ART IN HIS OWN WAY: BY M. IRWIN MACDONALD
N SPITE of our worship of tradition, and our belief in academic training and the infallibility of longestablished methods, we are beginning slowly to realize that the man who oes directly to the heart a in the way that seems of things and does his wor best to him, regardless of what others have done, is the man who most surely attains to vigorous and convincing expression of his thought. And when a man has grown up in a new country, where civilization is still more or less in a formative stage, and where each problem, whether social, political, or artistic, must be grappled with at first-hand, he has the best possible chance for developing all that he possesses of capability; for if he be denied the culture that comes from close personal association with lon -established traditions and with the heritage left to the world by the t7l.l nkers and workers of the past, he is also freed from the pressure of the overwhelming influences that so often cramp, as well as direct, the freedom of individual expression. A significant example of the effect of work done under such conditions and in a new country far removed from the great art centers of the world, is found in the landscape painting of Mr. Arthur Streeton, a young Australian who is making his influence felt even among the strong men who now form the revolutionary group in London art circles. Mr. Streetons work, while more or less uneven,-as is usually the case with self-taught men,-always commands attention, because of the artists frank and forceful seizure of the salient characteristics of his subject, and a method of treatment that seems to go straight through the medium he employs to the soul of the thing he is striving to represent. One feels that here is a man who has lived much in the open, and who has a close kinship with Nature and a deep understanding of her moods. Whether he is painting the wide quiet spaces and mellow southern coloring of his native Australia, or the gorgeous hues and olden summer sunli ht of Italy, or the scape of England, watery gray-blue skies an f sedate opulent Ian Fi one receives the impression that the picture has been done swiftly and in the open,-that the artist has set up his easel near the spot which he pictures on his canvas and in striving to represent the scene that lay before him has put himself into such harmony with it that he has imprisoned in his colors the very soul of land, sea and sky. Every one of his pictures, no matter where painted, is full of light and air, I55
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A REALISTIC
AUSTRALIAN
PAINTER
and its fresh and brilliant colorin is harmonized by the atmosphere, precisely as the colors in nature b fend under the influence of the great unifier,-li ht. Arthur Streeton sees things somewhat in the same way that 8 orolla does, and in the majority of his ictures you feel strong sunli ht, the blowin of clean winds, and tKe movement of water under B lue sky. Whife he falls willingly into the soberer moods of English landscape, and paints it with the most sensitive appreciation of its staid, low-toned beauty, the greater part of his work shows a natural affiliation for the warmth and sunshine of the south, and his most brilliant canvases are those painted either in Australia or in Italy. HE fact that Mr. Streeton is almost wholly a self-taught man is due to one of those priceless opportunities for development that so often come under the guise of an ap arent limitation. During his most impressionable years, he had a P most no opportunity of forming his standards by the study of great paintings, for he was born and grew up in Melbourne, and durmg his boyhood was trained for the business life that finds most favor with an ambitious, energetic lad who has his own way to make in a new country. But he had other ambitions, and a certain power that was seeking for expression. When a lad of sixteen, he joined the night class of the Melbourne Art School, where, after his days work was done, he found a chance to draw pictures. In this way, he received some sound training in drawing from casts, and also from life, that gave him experience in handling line and form, and also rounded him in the principles of erspective ; and there his art e f ucation stop ed. Yet he felt suP ciently sure of himself and of what he wante B to do to give up business when he was only nineteen years old, and to devote himself to painting, workin out after his own methods the technical problems that confronte f him, and striving only to express as clearly and truthfully as he could the beauty which he saw all around him. Working in this way, it was natural that he should do most of his painting in the open, and this meant that he never had to outgrow the habit of dependin upon the carefully adjusted lights of the studio and the strivin for effects after this or that manner, but drove directly at the things P e wanted to express, which were air, light and the wonderful colors of land, sea and sky seen under the full glow of the southern sun. By dint of hard work and unwavering sincerity in expression, the youn artist slowly learned a free and fluent use of his medium; mai Ilfy because he was intent always upon the scene he was trying to depict, rather than on the manner of using his brush or laying on
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TRAFALGAR NOON IN
SQUARE, WINTER :
LONDON, ARTHUR
ON A
MISTY
AFTERPAINTER.
STRERTON,
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of his colors. Of course, there were hard times and many discoura ements, but year by year he gained a firmer grip on his art and wi2 er recognition from his countrymen, until in eighteen hundred and ninety-two he felt strong enough to send a picture to the Paris Salon. The result furnished an impetus which he is feeling et, for the icture was not only accepted but was hung in a place oP honor an cr given honorable mention,-the first time that such reco nition had ever been extended to an Australian. Five years later % e left Australia and went to England, not because he had exhausted the possibilities of his own country, but because he felt that it was time to turn to the older civilization and to seek the wider o ortunities that are to be found in the home country, which is the IIFecca of the colonial-born. But on the way he stop ed for several months in Egypt, revelin in 11s the white hot glare of tRe African sunshine, and in the tawny fll and plains, accented with dashes of barbaric color; finally resuminw his journey with a store of new ictures and sketches which forme 8 a valuable record of growth an cf experience. N ENGLAND the struggle began all over again, for the British mind is slow, conservative and eminently self-satisfied,-not at all given to the approval and encouragement of stron rugged young colonials who have hewn out their own ways of wora ing, reardless of the schools. But men like Arthur Streeton are not easily 5 efeated, and although commissions were few and exhibitions uncordial, he worked dog edly ahead, always true to his own convictions, % at he saw in exactly the way he saw it. So and always painting w radually he gained a hearing. His pictures found place in the Paris 8 alon, and appeared more and more often at the provincial exhibitions held in England, and at last London woke up to the fact that here was a strong man, doing honest and vital work. The doors of the Ro al Academy and the New Gallery were opened to him, hall, the Royal Society of British Artists, and the new also Guil dy English Art Club. He visited Venice, and gave his own virile and unhackneyed interpretation of the world-famed and much-painted palaces, churches and lagoons of the Queen of the Adriatic. He saw modern Venice with the delighted ap reciation of the outlander who has long dreamed of her glories an a has just found his dreams realized in objective form. And again he swiftly transferred to canvas what he saw, as undisturbed by the golden visions of Turner and the subtle harmonies of Whistler as he was by the hard, glittering color and merciless architectural details of Canaletto or Zeim. Working always uickly and on the spot, and dashing his colors on the canvas with ?Iig free brush strokes, he caught the very spirit of Venice
r6r
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A REALISTIC
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gaiety.
as she is today,-with all her opulence of color, her vividness and He saw the buildings in the mass, and he grasped the eneral effect of the cream and rose tints of marble, the soft gray o? timeworn stone and the sparkle of blue-green waters lapping a ainst the steps of the palaces,-all bathed in the somnolent splen Bor of the summer sunshine. As the result, his Venetian pictures had a marked success in the International Exhibition in Venice, and he returned to Englaud with wider powers and a surer grasp of the thing he was trying to do. And in England he found that it was no longer difficult to command attention, for the vigorous sincerity of his work had begun to receive its just meed of consideration and respect. An exhibition of his work at the Alpine Club last spring made a strong impression, because for the first time it showed the full scope of his power and versatility. Here were pictures from Australia, Egypt, Italy, and England,-each canvas vital with the life and atmosphere of the country which had inspired it, and all alike evidencing the insight and honesty of the painter.
HIS year he received a old medal from the Salon of the SocietC des Artistes Franqais f or a large picture which he calls Australia Felix, and another canvas entitled S dney Harbor attracted much attention at the New Salon in the E hamp de Mars. Both pictures are reproduced here, and the illustration of Australia Felix is all the more interesting to Americans because Mr. Streeton has been invited to send the picture to the next exhibition held at the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh. This will be his introduction to the American public, and it is safe to predict that he will find cordial appreciation and understanding, because he is so closely akin to the men who are doing strongly individual work in our own country. The picture shows reat quiet spaces, full of the warm haziness of the southern atmosp% ere that in the distance takes on a tone of rosy violet instead of the blue of northern climes. Huge wide-flanked hills with softly rounded lines enclose a rich valley of farm lands, dotted with buildings here and there, and other valleys and plains stretch to the far distant horizon. The bronze-green of the heavily timbered hillsides throws into strong relief the lighter tones of the fields, and a shar accent is given by the bare trunks of the dead trees in the foregroun s ,-trees which seem to have risen directly in front of the artists easel as he sat on the brow of the hill looking over mountain and valley. The coloring of the whole picture is warm, sunny and mellow, -a glow but not a glare of sunshine. It is a rich and leasant land, as yet unspoiled by the civilization which it befriends and also dominates.
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The other Australian picture, Sydney Harbor, shows the same breadth and freedom of treatment and the same dignity and simplicity of interpretation. There is a wide, quiet stretch of water, with low-lying hills beyond, veiled with the violet haze that allows only a suggestion of the city that covers their slopes. Even the buildings nearer to the foreground become almost a part of the landscape, and the steamers and cruisers lying at anchor in the bay and the little fishing boats skimming about give hardly more than a suggestion of human life and industry to the peace and serenity of the scene. Mr. Streetons English mood is shown by the picture of Trafalgar Square on a Winter Afternoon,-a icture painted for, and owned by the Right Honorable Russell Rea, R i . P. Veiled as it is in a pale gray mist, broken here and there by shattered rifts of light which are reflected in pale gleams from the wet pavement, it is the very essence of London in winter. The whole picture is a study in grays, and its coloring is most tender and elusive. The fountains seem almost a part of the silvery mist, and the tall slender shaft of the monument appears to float above the earth rather than to rest upon its base of sohd stone. The confused mass of ghostly buildings beyond looks like the city of a dream, and the only thing that brings us back to reality is the tide of life pourin throu h the streets and the solid mass of masonry in the foregroun 3 at the 7 eft. It is a picture to which one turns again and again, so full is it of tenderness, mystery and harmony of tones. The Venetian pictures are painted in a different key. They show the same breadth and simplicity of treatment, and the same broad, swift brush work, but they seem fairly to radiate the light and color which fills them. In the view of the Grand Canal from the Palazzo Foscari, the property of Dr. Ludwi Mond, F. R. S., the chief interest is the marvelous use made of the re % ections in the water of the palaces on either side. These palaces, built of stone or marble, have all the soft grays and warm rosy cream tones that are characteristic of Venice and, in the o alescent green water, their reflections take on a purple tone in the sii ade and a shimmer of rose and pale gold when cast under the direct rays of the sun. As in all Mr. Streetons Venetian pictures, the architecture is treated with an eye to the general effect m the mass rather than the detailed features. It is a pit that it is impossible to give in the illustrations any adequate idea of tKe coloring of these pictures, for in the color, and, above all, in the atmosphere which fills them, lie their most compelling charm.
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COUNTRY HOUSES DESIGNED BY AYMAR EMBURY WHICH EXPRESS THE MODERN AMERICAN SPIRIT IN HOME ARCHITECTURE
CIVILIZED man is a home-loving creature, and so much of that which is vital to his life is associated with his house that any touch of the formal and impersonal in its architecture seems out of place and bad in design. A dwelling house must be something more than an exhibition of the skill of an architect. It must express something of the warmth of the relations between those that it shelters, of their natural affection toward the house and of their connection with those who preceded them ; their forebears, who have, or might have found the house homelike, according to the standards of their day. For in building a house we must build for antiquity as much as for posterity. Mr. Joy Wheeler Dow, in his book American Renaissance, under the chapter head of Ethics, sums up these immaterial considerations in building the house by saying: It must presuppose, by subtle architectonic expression, both in itself and in its surroundings, that its owner passessed, once upon a time, two ood parents, four grandparents, eight great-grandparents, and so on; ?Iad, like1 , brothers and sisters, uncles and aunts, all eminently respectable an cf endeared to him. One of the salient features of Mr. Aymar Emburys work is, then, its ethical correctness. For every example of it, the small country cottage or the elaborate suburban residence, has about it the air of a house whose walls have looked long upon happiness. Supposedly, this is to be attributed to the clever use of natural settings, suggestions of older work, generous lines and a good use of repetition, but one is
HOME AT OF MR. RALPH PETERS ISLAND. _I_ GARDEN CITl I, LONG
!
164
FIRST
FLOOR PLAN.
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AMERICAN
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ARCHITECTURE
inclined to think it is not traceable to things so definite but rather to a certain point of view, the architects particular interpretation not more of the subject of house building than of life. The houses are unusually suggestive of peo le. The walls seem to have grown up about an already establisheB home, as though in designing them the architect had used transparent mediums and watched, as he built, the goings and comings of an imaginary family within. Mr. Embury states his architectural theories by the brief explanation that a house ought to look as if the people liked to live in it, and apparently this sim le theory is adecluate to produce some charming domestic work. 5 ut, as with all sim le expressions of the principles that lie behind good work, they are tKe result of a great deal of observation and thinking, which Mr. Embury has embodied in a book called One Hundred Country Houses. The text, illustrated by modern examples of American architecture executed by architects from all parts of the country, contains much interesting matter on the history of American architecture and the planning and arrangement of country houses and gardens. The first two illustrations of Mr. Emburys work accompanying this article show the front and rear view of AMr.Ral h Peters residence at Garden City, L. I. The house is a low, ramg ling structure, adapted from the Dutch style. The lower story is of terra cotta blocks, a material that Mr. Embury often uses, covered with buffcolored stucco. The second story is of hand-split shin les, painted white; the trim of the house is also white, with window filinds of dull green, and the roof, one of the most beautiful and interesting features, is of dark brown. The windows have old-fashioned small panes, and the lightness and charm that these always give the house is helped
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ARCHITECTURE
out by the use of trellises and the light railings above the door and around the corners of the porch roof. The second view of Mr. Peters house shows the building as seen across the rear from the left. Although the structure gives the effect of lightness, a.lmost of daintiness, that one finds usually only in smaller buildings, it HOME OF MR. J. C. BULL: is really of impressive size. TUCKAHOE, NEW YORK. In the center of the rear of the structure is a very attractive double gable, the larger repeated by one of smaller proportions, varied with a three-cornered blind at the peak. The house is trimmed at the eaves with a heavy molding and a row of shingles laid at right angles to it, which, in the two front gables, saves the awkward abruptness of the contrast of the white against the dark brown roof. The house is entered through a vestibule that leads into a long hallway extending through to the rear. At the extreme left is the living room, and the dimng room, with a glassed-in breakfast porch opening from it, occupies the corresponding osition on the other side. These two rooms are connected by a fon corridor runnin across the rear of the house, which is furnishe f like a room an 8 lighted by so many windows that it is practically a long sun parlor. The ell contains the kitchen, lar e pantries and a bedroom and bath. In spite of the fact that tfi e house has been but recently built, it seems to belong SECOND as much to the ground it stands on as do the trees about it, and its many pillars rise as naturally and gracefully. The cottage belonging to Mr. J. C. Bull, of Tuckahoe, N. Y., is very attractive in design and colorin . The treatment of t % e first story with stone piers at each end and columns and HOME OF MR. J. C. BULL.
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Aymar
Embury
11, Archricct.
HOME LONG OF MR. RALPH SHOWING PETERS, ENTRANCE GARDEN AND
CITY,
PORCH.
ISLAND,
REAR
VIEW
OF
MR.
PETERS
HOUSE,
LOOKING
ACROSS
THE
GARDEN.
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Aj,nnv
Embury
II,
Architect. MR. J. C. BULLS COTTAGE, TUCKAHOE, COLONIAL NEW YORK: SHOWING INTERESTING MODIFIED EFFECT.
,IOME AN
OF
MR.
HENRY USE OF
S.
ORR,
GARDEN SHINCXES
CITY, AND
LONG BUFF
ISLAND: STUCCO.
EFFECTIVE
WHITE
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Aymar
Embury
II,
Architect.
HOME OF MR. DOUGLAS Z. DOTY, BOUND IS BROOK, NEW JERSEY: RELATION OF ROOF TO WINDOWS SINGULARLY INTERESTING.
REAR
\IEW
OF
MR.
DOTYS
HOUSE.
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LIVING
ROOM
IN
MR.
ORRS
COTTAGE.
Courtesy
of The Anrerican
Architect.
LIVING ROOM IN THE HOUSE OF MR. PETERS.
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,KVIERICAK
COUNTRY
ARCHITECTURE
HOME GARDEN
OF MB. CITY,
HENRY LONG
S. ORR: ISLAND.
alass between, making practically the whole south side of glass, gives g*h rrg tan dhrfl c ee u rooms, and, with the brick panels beneath, makes a most unusual and delightful wall. The second story of the house is covered with hand-s lit shingles, painted white. The roof is dark brown. The use of little tref lises about the windows, rising from flower boxes on their sills, is a beautiful and also practical arrangement, shading the windows and giving a soft outline against the roof. Upon entering the house we come into a large s uare hall but slightly separated from the living and dining rooms, an 1 the pleasantness of these rooms can easily be imagined from the many windows that are in the wall of the house. The interior plans are compact and convenient, both up stairs and down, with am le sup ly of closets and antries. The cottage built for Mr. R,,ry 5 Orr at Garden e ity, L. I., is an attractive structure of white shingles and buff stucco over terra cotta blocks. The house has a third story so that the roof is high in proportion to the rest of the house. The expanse is broken by the two oval windows at the gable ends, and small curved dormers on the sides. The windows on the front of the second story are set in, with deep wmdow sills and on the first story are made very picturesque by the use of old-fashioned outside shutters instead of blinds. The entrance to the house, with wide seats on either side, is especially attractive and harmonious as an approach to the hall, which is finished with a
AMR. ORRS HOME.
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AIR-SHIPS high wainscoting of gray-toned oak. This hall runs the length of the house, connecting the dining room and living room ; the stairs leading up from a broad dais landing across the rear. We also present as illustrations of Mr. Emburys work two views of the front and rear of Mr. Douglas Z. Dotys cottage at Bound Brook, N. J., which is built of soft-toned gray stucco, with the roof and very attractive shutters of dull green. The front wall of the lower story is of unusual beauty; the four square pilasters divide it into graceful pro ortions . The center of interest is the door with a group of square ligYlts, emphasized by the transom and long side-light. On either side is a group of windows with window boxes beneath. The windows are of different lengths, but a balance is effected between them by the use of a lattice behind the box on the right. The evergreens in front of the porch and in the boxes ve the necessary weight to the lower part of the wall and balance the s ft adow of the roof above. This symmetrical arran ement is kept from being stiff by the little shin led projection at t % e right. The rear view shows a wooden f at one corner with attractive wooden lattices. The porch ,porc depends largely for its beauty on the grace of the structural features. The two interiors shown are from Mr. Orrs cottage and Mr. Peters house. The first is in brown-gray and buff. The walls are hung with buff-colored grass cloth, the plaster repeating the color in lighter shade, and the woodwork, ceiling beams and furniture are of graytoned oak. The second is also of oak, but deep brown in color. The bookcases are built in and the chimneypiece is beautifully paneled. All of the houses are particular1 noticeable for beauty of design. In every case they are so thoroug 31 ly suited to the landscape that they seem to have always been a part of it, and beyond this, the walls show an artistic composition of rare interest. Mr. Dotys house is a most obvious example of this almost pictorial arrangement of space, color and shadow. The result is that each wall has the unity of a picture, and the whole house, no matter from what aspect, presents a charming appearance.
AIR-SHIPS
1 love to see the air-ships go,A silk-winged fleet abroad,From out the milkweed pod To spread the road-news, high and low,And set the world a-nod.
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THE NATIONAL
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OF FINLANDS MUSIC
p&ous chalices to receive all the divine sounds. When the inspiring son was finished Vainamoinen presented to them his olden harp, w ch should increase their wisdom and ha piness. Q Ilfor%I tunately, the poor fishes, who also had gathered wi% all the others, had forgotten to put their ears out of the water, therefore they were only able to imitate the movements of Vainamoinens mouth in smging. The Finnish harp, Kantele, the invention of which is attributed to Vainamoinen, is an instrument of five strings tuned g, a, Not every nation possesses a complete scale; that is, b, c, d. a scale extendin to the octave. We use at present three different scales, viz., the c L omatic scale, the major scale and the minor scale. The musical scale varies in different nations, having in some instances more intervals, in others less; in others, again, one or more intervals in relation to the tonic, different from those of our system. Some of the oldest Finnish folksongs are restricted to five tones, and in these five tones vibrates the soul of the whole nation, and these songs still resound in all hearts and tremble on all lips. Like all northern peoples, the Finns are predisposed toward minor ke s ; other elements of exact definition and easier analysis bein interva%c and rhythmic, the latter found especially in the national 5 antes. HE influence of the Swedes on the development of Finland began in the twelfth century, when Christianity was forced upon them, and has never ceased entirely, though Sweden had to cede Finland to Russia in eighteen hundred and nine. Now Russia, thou h under solemn pact to permit liberty of language, education anf religion, is engaged in stamping out the last vestiges of nationalism in music as in all the other arts. The develo ment of music as an art in the modern sense began in Finland near t !l e close of the last century. The fundamental work was started by Frederic Pacius, a German, born ineighteen hundred and nine in Hamburg, who was called to be the professor of music at the University of Helsingfors . He gave Finland, which he reco nized as his native land, its national hymn, Oi, Maamme- Our &nd and he is also the corn oser of the solemn and beautiful hymn, Suomis Song. Both of tx ese national songs express the love of the people for their country, and their faith and hope for a happy future. As is the case in the evolution of all modern arts, the Finnish music was for a time dominated by other nations, Italian, French and German influences, and the musical mannerisms of these were impinged upon the work of the Finnish composers, regardless of the natronal characteristics of the Finns. Carl Collan, who composed the well-known Vasa IMarch, Gabriel Linskn and Martin Vegelius
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THE NATIONAL
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OF FINLANDS
MUSIC
are those whose compositions are largely based upon the German style. Fortunately, a s ecific national type of composition finally has begun to assert itse9 , and the composers of true Finnish music are now creating in accordance with the peculiarities of temperament and the emotions of the people, and naturally their productions are different from the music evolved under the influences of foreign inspiration. They have built their creations upon the basis of the Finmsh folkson , the true product of the people, and the result is that they are pr05 ucing melody which expresses naturally the heights and depths of the quality of the nation itself. The most prominent corn oser, the man on whom all young Finland has set its hope, is f ean Sibelius, born December eighth,. L eighteen hundred and sixty-five in Tavastehus. He is the true son of the people, and is remarkable because of the productivity as well as originahty of his talent. Althou h a pupil of rominent Germans like A. Becker in Berlin and C. 8 oldmark in 5 ienna, he, as few others, has achieved in his work the expression of the typical char-. acter of the nature of Finland and the national individuality of the Finns. He is the real creator of the Finnish Voice in the Chorus of the Nations. Entirely independent in feeling and following only his genius, his purpose is to widen the limits of the expression of the beautiful in music. As the master and leader of musical young Finland, even more intimately than the poets and painters his great symphonic poems paint episodes from the Kalevala, and in his suites for the orchestra is the peaceful, deep and melancholy beauty of Finland. Jean Sibelius is supported by the state, and so, entirely untroubled by material cares, he devotes his genius to the upliftin of the musical life of his native land. Besides the works mentione 8 he has composed two symphonies, symphonic poems, quartettes and quintettes, a sonata, numerous slighter pieces for the piano, and many inspiring songs, such as Ingalill, Black Roses,:- But My Bird Is Long m Homing, etc. Very popular as a writer of songs is Oscar Merikanto, born in eighteen hundred and sixty-eight, whose son s, Pai, Pai, Paitaressu, a charming lullaby, Miksi Laulan, an f many others, deserve a wide recognition. He has composed also an opera, Pohjan Neiti, which has brought him the genuine admiration of his countrymen. The tendency to introduce into the art of music the national color, we find also in the works of Armas Jarnefelt, born in eighteen hundred and sixty-nine. Lyric beauty and rich expressive instrumentation mark his compositions. His sym honic poem, Korsholm, was last year played by the New Yor E Russian Symphony Orchestra. As a musician, : s well as the founder of a Philharmonic Orchestra
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LIFE in Helsingfors, R. Kajanus receives the gratitude of his country. One of the younger composers who follows the wake of J. Sibelius, is Erkki Melartin, born in eighteen hundred and seventy-five, who has become famous through songs of infinitely charming melancholy and poetical conce tion. C. Flodin and Selim Palmgren are aIso doing important worE in the development of Finnish music, the latter as a composer of brilliant piano pieces. There is much original power and beauty in this new Finnish music; but perha s in order to understand and appreciate it thoroughly one shouli! know something of mythology and of the life of the people; certainly to those who understand, it takes its place with the real creative music of modern times,-strongly inspired, free from imitation, characteristic of the fearless, vivid, vital nation in which it was born. Its melodies are like the stirring winds of the north and suggest the sparklin atmosphere of the mysterious aurora borealis. To the Fmns boiii sadness and joy are but op ortunities to express power and heroism, and their music voices the % eauty of a people sensitive and sympathetic to all the great forces of Nature.
LIFE
shadow here, a shadow there, A little sunshine everywhere; Today, great joy: tomorrow, care.
A throb of love, a thrill of hate: A long, long waiting at the gate For dawns that break an hour too late. And yet a splendid round: a strife That man may win who dares the knife And plays the game-the game of life. -C.M.
GARRETT.
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SCIENTIFIC
CARE
OF
TREES
About its roots a grass plot had been cultivated and the plot was On great days fenced in from the profanation of heedless strangers. of celebration, like the Fourth of July and Election Day, a flag-pole was run up beside the tree and the stars and stripes fluttered through The minister himself was not spoken of with greater its branches. reverence, or the memory of the absent with greater affection. What fragrance dropped from the early blossoms, what balm in every breeze that blew down from the branches. It is possible only through such a love and reverence for the old trees that we begin to appreciate this new scientific discovery which nurses the young and protects the old of the tree world with the same thought we are accustomed to associating only with the care of human beings. The value of tree surgery lies not only in the fact that it can restore the old, but that it knows the evil ways of all the enemies of the young and middle aged. And yet with all that is being accomplished we know that the science is only in its beginning, and that undoubtedly the possibilities of its usefulness will spread from the preservation of the individual tree, those loved and needed personally, out to the care of all the old and sickly trees, particularly throughout the big private estates, where vast acres of timber are regarded as a financial asset. Our purpose, however, is especially to awaken an interest in all invalid trees, young and old, large and small, and then to express briefly and accurately some methods of treating them, so that those interested may be able to establish in their own garden tree clinics, and do private home surgery wherever it is practicable. It would be well first of all to understand the construction and growth of trees that vve may know their weaknesses and the kind of especial care which must be taken in order to preserve them. Roughly speaking, the parts of a tree may be characterized as follows: The root, the trunk and the crown. It is the root, of course, which absorb the moisture and mineral substance from the soil. The trunk is perhaps the most interesting part of the tree, for it is here that the real growth occurs, and it acts at the same time as a passage for the food from the root to the crown, whereit is digested and passed back to and through the cambium, a film of growmg tissue which completely envelops the roots, trunk and branches of a tree, and with the exception of the leaves and a few other tissues, is the only part which is really alive. The sap wood and heart wood are respectively beneath the cambium toward the ith of the tree, and when once decay has gone through the break in t!i e cambium layer, its progress is swift The crown is the upper unless stringent measures of care are taken, part composed-of the branches, leaves and fruiting bodies. Repro178
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IN
AN TREE FILLED WITH SO THAT BARK THE DENU? CAVITY AND CEMENT PROPERLY ROUNDED GROW OVER THE EVIHIDE WILL EVENTUALLY
MALLET. READY
ENTIRELY
CEMENT.
OF EXCAVATION.
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AN
EXAMPLE IN
IMPROPER RESULTING
WAY IN
OF
SUPPORTING
LIMBS,
RESULTING
STltANGULATION.
LIMBS BARS OF
OF TREES HEW BY
BY
IRON
INSTEAD
BANDS
AROUND
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SClENTlFlC
CARE
OF TREES
duction occurs here, and it is here also that many of the enemies to tree life make their onslaught. On every healthy growing tree a great quantity of dead wood collects, and in the course of time branches break off or bark peels away and leaves openings for insects, fungous diseases, frosts, etc., t.o do their damaging work. It is therefore necessary that these dead limbs be not ne lected or given a chance to fall off of their own accord. They s%ould be cut off immediately, in the following manner and for the following reasons: The cut should be made a.s closely us possible to the contour of the tree; stubs should not remain, for the prevent the new bark from spreadin rapidly over the wound, an B unless this new bark does spread quickPy decay is bound to occur. A further preventive is that of dressing all the cuts with coal tar or a drab lead aint, until the wound has a chance to heal. Other limbs that shoul 1 be removed in the same manner are the less healthy ones that cross those which would be strong if given the chance. Crossing limbs are bound to chafe. Still another cause for pruning comes when we are aware that some of the roots of the tree are damaged, which is sometimes caused by grading the soil, thus buryin the roots too deep, or by frost or %ould receive pruning at the crown, drought. In this case the trees s because when any considerable number of roots are injured sufficient moisture to supply all the twigs cannot be obtained, and the sun and winds evaporate more water than the tree can afford. Here a thinning out of the branches will restore the balance between the roots and the crown, giving the former an opportunity to regain their ,,. health and strength. 4 * 00 heavy a limb that is, one too heavy for the supporting trunk, may cause trouble by breaking off at an undesirable spot and leaving a jagged wound that will never heal. Limbs of this sort should be supported by iron bars running to other branches. Great care must be taken here that neither the su porting nor supported limb is injured, a calamity sure to occur if Eands are clasped around them to hold the bars, for these bands will choke the tree exactly as would a collar around the neck of a growing animal eventually choke it. The method from which no harm can come is that of boring a hole completely through the limbs, taking care not to split them, and then using a bolt and washer to hold the bars. In cases where the limb to be su ported is extremely heavy it is recommended that several bolts an dpbars be used in order that the strain may be distributed and splitting prevented when the tree sways with the wind.
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There is nothing more injurious to the life of the tree than a cavity, for in it fungi breed and decay spreads rapidly. When one is found the proper course of cure is simple, consistm of the cleanin out of all deca ed and diseased tissues until nothing % ut sound woo3 remains, and a Pter coating the purified cavity with tar filling it with the best grade of Portland cement, laid in wet, over wires and rounded to the contour of the bark, thus giving the cambium a chance to grow over it. This recess requires considerable skill and it is better to leave such worK to the hands of tree experts. Some of the diseases to which trees are subject are as follows: Poisoning, injuries from heat and cold, abnormal food and moisture supply, mechanical injuries, fungi and insects, none of which is incurable ; for by proper pruning, fillin cavities and scientific nurturin , almost any tree, no matter how !i iseased, can be saved. Consiifer the recent dying of the chestnut trees. This was caused by the growth of fungi peculiar to the chestnut, and from which there evolved a species of spore which was blown through the air, sometimes for miles, until alighting on a wound-often a very small one-on another chestnut, started its decay, and this new growth of fungi in turn spread its emissaries of disease until all the chestnuts withm a radius of perhaps twenty miles were either dying or dead. Had people but known it or taken the trouble to consult some of the many and proficient tree ex erts, thousands upon thousands of these chestnut trees might have %een saved. It is true that no absolute means of controlling this disease is known, but tree experts have found that by cutting off the diseased twigs or by cleansing the cavities in which the fungus has grown, and then subjectin them to a wash composed of copper sulphate, the tree will be bene f!ted and no spore will come from it to hurt the other chestnuts. It is essential, of course, that once a tree has been treated it should be watched closely for a long time to see that no new growth of fungus appears. HE insects which make such war upon our trees are divided inta three classes; the leaf-eating, the sucking and the boring, and the method of combating them is different for each class. Leaf-eating insects, such as caterpillars, etc., are best destroyed through poisoning their food, and this is done b sprayin the leaves of the tree with chemicals that accomplish the Besired kilf,ng, yet do not, at the same time, injure the protoplasm of the tender growing leaves. A mixture of arsenate of soda and acetate of lead (two to eight pounds to fifty gallons of water) so combined that the arsenic becomes insoluble m water, is perhaps the best spray known, and it may be used in any reasonable strength. In doing this it is best to
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CARE OF TREES
use such a sprayer as permits the moisture to fall upon the leaves in the form of a mist, thus spreading the tiny particles of poison all over the surface. Never use an amount sufficient to drip from the leaves. With the sucking insects it has been found that a spray of some oily preparation that will not damage the foliage of the tree is best, something which will cover the insects with a film and suffocate them. The boring insects which do the most damage bore into the bark and wood where spraying will not affect them. A wood borer ma be killed by running a soft wire into the hole until the larva is pierce cl. Or if carbon bi-sulphide is squirted in and the hole stopped up the liquid will become a gas and the larva suffocated. The bark borers work in the cambium and are very likely to girdle the trees. The shot-hole borer is so called because of the many holes made in the bark by the adult beetles as they emerge. When such holes ap ear, the damage has been done, and the affected trees should be cut Bown as soon as noticed and burned immediately. Such trees cannot be saved, and after the first holes appear the beetles continue to come out and fly to other trees. Thus hasty action is necessary to destroy the beetles in order to save the surrounding trees. The borers are not apt to attack sound, healthy specimens. Tree lanting and transplantin is a subject for exhaustive study an % should not be attempte t , except in rare instances, by an but the expert. Aside from the difficulty of the work and the dericacy required to do it, there is the question of suitability to consider. One must be something of a landscape artist in order to get the tree in such a place as will show it to best advantage and at the same time make it an added decoration to the landscape, regardless of the point of view from which it is seen. Again, a knowledge of botany is essential, for it is the soil that acts as arbiter of the kind of tree that can be planted successfully, so greatly do the amounts of moisture and mineral substance required by the different sorts of tree vary. The planter must therefore know the habits and needs of the trees with which he is working. This holds good also in the matter of transplanting. Often a tree that was in perfect condition at one end of an estate, when moved to another will not thrive, no matter how skilfully the transplanting has been done. This brief outline of some of the things that may ha pen to the beautiful old trees surrounding our country homes, whit hpgive them their dignity and their homehness, may interest many and lead to the taking up of the study of the care of trees in earnest or, if there be not time, to the employment of men to whom the care of trees is a business and whose success is dependent not upon the mere giving of advice, but upon actually saving diseased and dying trees.
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THE TRUTH
ABOUT WORK
HAVE thought of fitting the interior of my home with walnut wood, a woman recently said to an artistbuilder. Do you advise me to use it ? For I do not want to put too much money into anything that is likely to go out of fashion. And the artisan shuddered . To think, he said, that there should be such a thing as fashion in a wood so beautiful and durableas walnut, that a womans interest in it should hinge on whether or no others would think it in style or pronounce it the fashion, and that she should stand ready to discard it whenever their ignorant opinion should change! How can a woman, the man continued, fit up her own home other than in accord with her own taste, her own personal appreciation of beauty and comfort? And having achieved this, or even the vision of it, how could she let her purpose hinge on whether someone else agreed with her, or fancied something different? What relation have other peoples houses to hers ? She would not permit anyone to dictate to her a fashion in children or husbands or religion, then why in a home, which accordin to her theory should be the blessed abode of all three? It is dik cult to ima ne a more artificial or absurd idea than that fashion could create or 3.l estroy anything intrinsically beautiful, and fashion cannot even exist where there is an appreciation of the value of work. Walnut wood, for instance, is an appropriate, permanently beautiful fitting for a room, or it is the reverse. Its beauty cannot be intermittent. And the mans argument in re ard to wood applies with equal force to architecture, furniture an 3 every final piece of handicraft which enters into the recess of home fitting. It is, in fact, true of all of life. If you un Berstand the truth about beauty and then labor to express it, you have discovered the secret of right, happy living. And what one or a dozen people think about some new trivial departure alon eccentric lines can no more affect the life of the woman who h as ff earned to see clearly, to live consistently, than the gay chirp of a spring robin would make her decide to model her home after the cross section of a nest. The achievement of beauty in architecture, in home fitting, is too fundamental and vital a matter to be affected by the chirping of robins, or neighbors. It is the expression, or should be, of all the supreme im ulse toward reasonable beauty which a human being is capable oP. Imagine a fashion about the material symbol of spiritual develo merit,-and a home is this or nothing. But to ap reciate beauty Pully one must labor to produce it. It 1s to recognize it. It is necessary to cooperate with Nature not enoug l!lY in making it possible.
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WORK
S WE have so often said, it is the work which creates to meet a need, creates sincerely and as vitally as possible, that is res onsible for ractically all permanent beaut , outside of that in w ch Nature fl erself is the craftsman. But t Eere is much 7ll to be understood in connection with the word work, which most of us have never taken into consideration. Work, especially in America, has come to mean the ignominious, arduous performance of duty, to be accom lished in a state of coma, to be finished swiftly, to be forgotten. ipnd of itself, without purpose or interest, work can, as a matter of fact, become not only a deadly menace to development, but a system of personal demoralization for commercial results, so that, as is often done, to recommend work in a wholesale way to take the place of lay, and this to people who do not know how to work, or to insist % at work intrinsically is of value without relation to results, is to lessen the appreciation of the right use and beauty of labor, and to render any ar ment in its favor open to just criticism. wishes to make is for intelliThe plea which F HE CRAFTSMAN gent labor which meets a practical need and which is also productive of beauty; which is wiser than play because it includes the element of play and yet leads to results ; is more lasting in effect than work unrelated to life because it is the result of enlightened Purpose, and thus is a part of general progress. What we plead for is discrnninating labor, not mere slavery or unthinking play. It is productive work beyond mere financial returns that we beheve will carry the final benefit for the human race. And in the products of this sort of work there is not likely ever to enter the question of fashion; for fashion is born of the swift-moving, unthinking machine which produces for sales only; it has no relation to life ; it has no desire to have such a relation; its purpose is to hypnotize intelligence for financial returns. But the woman who has woven her own rug and the man who has built furniture suited to his own home will not be apt to take seriously the dictates of fashion. These people have gone beyond such artificial discriminations. They have created beauty through their own effort, and the handiwork which is the result they regard as a permanent asset in the interest of their lives. At present in this matter of work American eople rest under the great disadvantage of having permitted themse;ves to take a somewhat artificial unthinking point of view. We have lost the knowledge of what a stupendous force work is and should be in the development of the individual, and we have forgotten the great lessons of restraint, concentration and disci line which work, and work only, can teach the you,th of a land. We rlave established among us that awful blight, the non-working aristocracy, actually far worse than any European aristoc185
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THE
TRUTH
ABOUT
WORK
racy; for in Europe, at least the idle eople have duties to state and estate, to army and navy, and in a feebPe way to Society, duties which Thus a parently do not exist for the wealthy class in America. t IY e rich man in this country who has neither profession nor business is idle; and all that is left is to substitute play for work. The almost inevitable result of this artificial existence is a scorn for labor, because there is an absence of understanding of its vital significance to nation and individual. Not only have we created this futile idle class and allowed it to flourish, but we are continually exploiting it in our literature and in our ress, until throughout our civilization there is springing up a total fy false point of view toward the intrinsic value of work, The rl in our factories, in our shops and in our village homes lar ely f as one standard of gentility (tra ic word), and this IS idleness. 4 he mother may work, but not the f aughter. Pretty widely throughout America our young women are ashamed of housework, ashamed to cook or to sew or to care for the small members of the family. A girl ma be weak and silly, even unamiable, but somehow she establis i! es herself satisfactorily in her own mind as a social success if she is also useless. An ignorance of vital domestic conditions and her own inability to cope with them she somehow characterizes in her own mind as being a lady. ND with our boys it is not so very different. To do errands; to help in any way about the house, to perform any kind of manual labor, at home or in business, is esteemed unmanly and vulgar. The mother says of her daughter, erha s to her, Anna is so refined; she does not like work. Anf the /&her says of his son, or perhaps to him, My boy wants to make somethin of himself besides a common workman. Thus we encourage our c $1ldren to regard labor as common, beneath their consideration, when in nine cases out of ten intelligent work would be the one method by which daughter and son would secure essential mental, moral and physical growth. But as yet mothers and fathers in this nation do not see clearly the tremendous truth about work. As a matter of fact, they are not quite thinking it out; they have perhaps in their own youth slaved too much, worked too hard without a purpose other than a livelihood. Their only memory of work is in connection with hard&i and as an unsatisfactory process of earning food and .reaching 01cf age. Not having stopped to consider the fact that there is always the use and abuse of good, they reason from their own unfulfilled experience with labor that it will be better for their children to live idle lives (which
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THE
TRUTH
ABOUT
WORK
in truth is a thousand times more disastrous). Where they have been poor their children shall be rich; where they have worked for themselves, others shall work for their children. And it proves how little they really think that they are willing to pass on to any other than their own what has seemed to them the slavery of labor. They have not reasoned out that the essential thing is to better conditions which have hurt them, rather than to merely s are their own children from suffering . Of course, it is all selfish, iP logical and unthinking, and yet this attitude of mind obtains all over our country, in the average middle-class American household, and spells disaster both for parents and children. For to release children wholly from their obliations to life is to breed lack of discipline, lack of sympathy, a desire f or success without effort, for achievement without purpose and a scorn of realities. This tendency must eventually kill romance, degrade affection and create false ethical standards. The beauty of service, which the truly areat of all ages, from the time of Christ until today, have realized, 1s 3 ost sight of in this atmosphere, and there is no recollection apparently of the fact that to serve others without money and without price was once reckoned a fundamental of Christianity. Today the supercilious attitude toward labor and toward those who labor has become one of the most stupendous disintegrating forces in all Protestant religion. While we pursue the worship of our idle rich, we fail to realize that in the first place it was service without money which was really the foundaThose who ranked pregminent in a comtion of all aristocracies. munity achieved the distinction because they served others and refused all compensation. In the very beginning of kingdoms the king himself was made the chief of the eople because he had chosen to serve them, to think for them, per%aps to battle for them without reward. Today, even, the crown worn by the King of England bears the motto ich dien (I serve), a pathetic echo from those faraway times when the workers were exalted and the drones forgotten or obliterated. But so perverted have we become that today it is the drones who wear the insignia of achievement, while those who serve truly and unselfishly are often without honor. ND yet if the mothers and the fathers of this country would look the matter squarely in the face, work would once more become a title of dignity, associated with beauty and happiness. The very children themselves would see to this if left unhampered, for when not restricted with undiscriminating rules children know, or crave to know, the delight of work. The very plays of natural children are invariably adaptations of real things to their own little
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ways and means. Normal little girls adore being in the kitchen and are enchanted to wi e real dishes or pat an actual ie into shape, while to make one si cr e of a grown-up bed or sweep, wittll a baby brush in hand, a real room where grown-up people live, are among the real joys of childhood. The smallest tots will work for their dollies, dressing them, putting them to bed, making their tiny clothes and arranging busy ractical lives for them. All this is the very normal instinct of chil d!l ood which gets its jo out of actualities. It has no modern standards for separating its 1y ittle life into work and play, frowning at one and happy in the other, and is only hurt and grieved when the average mother, as is usually the case, heedlessly but persistently endeavors to kill this instinct for play-work, and to offer instead instruction in that fatal estate of being a lady. The busy, happy little ersonality must be taught that it must sit still, keep away from tf le kitchen, take no part in the daily routine of making the home pleasant, have no knowledge whatever of the value of mutual service, in order to grow up into a stilted, artificial, undisciplined person without much ha iness or usefulness in life. Picture what a chiptl would gain if taught that all the small home tasks had a relation to real joy m life, that it was asignificant pleasure to do some work for mother or father, brother or sister, until unconsciously the duties and tasks of the ordinary household became a symbol of the sympathetic dependence of the family and their need of mutual service. Of course, a child would not be taught these things in words ; indeed, it would not be necessary. It would all be evolved by the wise attitude of the mother in developing the childs natural instincts and in fostering a love of simple home conditions. And the boy who wants to build a house or aint a fence or lay pretend in a shop, he, too, should be allowe x all possible free x om for the development of these instincts and for the turning into right channels his joy in the play which relates to interesting work. It seems reasonable that such a boy would have a better physique, a wider intelli ence, a saner understanding of real happiness than the one whose cf ante in life is back of a bank window or idling in a law office to acquire that interesting but anomalous position known as the American gentleman. In the public schools, where the majority of ity children, at least, secure practically about all the instruction, spiritual as well as mental, which is likely to come their way, the attitude toward work is even more de lorable usually than in the home. The unacknowledged aim of t 1 e average metropolitan schools seems to be, in actual instruction as well as in the personal point of view of the instructor, to insist upon the degrading quality of work and the necessity of be-
THE
TRUTH
ABOUT
WORK
longing to the professional classes to achieve happiness. The word mechanic in these schools is a term but little above some opprobrious epithet, housework something to rise above or to ignore. The boy whose father wears a blouse learns to hide the fact; the girl whose mother cooks and washes for her comfort blushes if her companions realize that she is associated with such humiliations in her home life. Apparently, our schools are planned to create and foster a leisure class, out of harmony with our democratic institutions. Thus children after leavin school face life without the least comprehension of our national i f eals or the real meaning of the werd liberty. It is quite appalling if one thinks into the inevitable result of the sort of instruction we are giving most of our future citizens, which is preparing them for idle lives without means of support in their idleness. HAT do we intend to do with all these children whose natural instinct for labor we have destroyed and whom we have trained to a false standard of society, in no wise preparing them for success in professional channels, or in the least permitting them to understand the truth about the wide fields of usefulness from which they have been withdrawn? As a matter of fact, we are already beginning to feel the result of our fake attitude toward labor in the state of unrest and idleness in our cities, which is constantly making for an increase of overty and crime, daily becoming more difficult to cope with, and wIIch is due wholly to our ignorant, foolish attitude toward common work. And this must continue until we teach our children both at home and in the schools that the ability and willingness of all men and women to earn their own livin is the patent of their right to life itself. And they should not only PI e tau ht the necessity for each individual citizen to earn a livin but tf eir preparation should be such that their means of livelihooP would be the best, most valuable work which their taste and capacity would render possible. Once having passed the barriers of ignorance and resentment, this would be a sim le recess, and it would do more in actual practical 1 t f:e social betterment workers, the settlement results than a P grou s, the college philanthropic societies, the sincere socialists and rabi 1 anarchists the world over. For there is in truth but one way ever to achieve social readjustment, and that is by way of the children, throu h the homes primarily, and the school, secondarily but more deBnitely. Such a work cannot, however, be done in a desultory, whimsical fashion. There must be appreciation of the fundamental necessity for the change and a definite pu?ose to bring it about. You cannot empty a lake, even a small one, with twenty different kinds of pretty engraved 189
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spoons. YOU have got to dig a channel and it has got to be on the right incline, and you have got to see to it that the channel has a broad, you cant change hurtful wideunencumbered outlet. Equal1 reaching social conditions by a Bozen pretty theories; not at least while a great deep-seated wron continues to prevail. Children do not need more pictures of Greea architecture on the walls of their schools, more pretty songs as they march reluctantly to the classroom, more knowledge that there are fashions in play, fashions in homes, fashions in furniture, fashions in courtesy; rather they need from the start to be taught the truth about work, and all of this great vital far-reaching truth which is possible to brin to them, and which modern civilization is developing a set and felP purpose to ignore. If in the planning of our public-school work a years time were given to boys and girls to learn the right relation of work and life, to appreciate the value of using their hands dexterously, of controlling their hands with their brains, to understand without thought of shame the right and wrong of human relationship, to speak the truth, to res ect instruction because it is worthy instruction, there would be at P east an honest start in the right direction for those who in a few years will become our helpers or our rivals in the effort to re&tablish social life on a higher level in America. Unhappily for our national pride, America is large1 for this unutterably foolish, harmful point of view towar i wor , whmh resRonsible has created in this country a class distinction, based wholly on wealth and idleness. And strange, almost unbelievable as it is, we are cultivating so wide an envy of this class that we are actually placing idleness before our children almost as a national ideal. There is but one remedy for this demoralizing condition, and that is the establishin of a new ideal of work. We must set before the youth of our lan fi a standard of labor that realizes the utmost beauty, permanence and interest. If we have permitted ourselves as a whole to grow to hate or to despise work, we must do our children the justice of rehabilitating labor in their eyes, and this cannot be done without ourselves appreciating all that work means physically and ethically. We cannot hope to create an ideal born out of the present revailing management of our sweatshops and mines,- a standard b P etched and blackened in places by our own greed or lack of honest human sympathy. But from the be inning, before school days are thought of, our children can be taug P t to understand their intrinsic right to all real beaut and joy which life holds ; but which they may only realize throug K their own individual purpose as laborers.
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WOOD
COTTAGE:
E are publishing
THEI CRAFTSMAN an
the truss supporting the verge board of the gable, form an interesting variation in the end walls. The design is one which is susceptible to an interesting color treatment. The shingles may be left to take on the silvery gray color of driftwood, which is natural to them under the action of the weather, or they may be given a wash of diluted sulphuric acid which will slightly bum the surface to a dull brown and do away with the period of obvious newness by giving an acquired look of age and wear to the shingles. In either case, the field stone, which varies greatly in color, will blend well into the background of the house ; and the red of the brick, which is gradually introduced into the stone toward the gable, will add its color to the roof, which may be stained a dull green or red, and will give a touch of brightness to the landscape. The interior is very compactly planned. The living room with its big stone fireplace occupies one whole side of the house, The ceiling shows two of the heavy structural beams. At the rear end of the room is a low bookcase and at the opposite end a long, deep seat is built in beneath the windows. The dining room, as shown in the drawing of the interior, contains a built-in sideboard with a cupboard, and a china closet on either side. The stairs lead up from the rear of the hall, which is practically a part of the living room. Note the opening with a lattice frame which ma!ies an attractive setting for a pot of
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flowers. At the foot of the stairs a door is seen which opens into a rear hall, connetting with a large and convenient pantry. The kitchen is well fitted with closets and a big dresser, and has i also the convenience of a shelf. a sort of stationary dumbwaiter .beside the range which opens by two small doors into the dininp room, so that the hot dishes ma; be pushed directly through from the kitchen. Upstairs the floor space is divided into four airy bedrooms, with a bath at the end of the hall. This is as comfortable a little house as we have published for some time, simple in plan and in design and gracefully proportioned within and +without.
taken to avoid possibility of leakage. The cement is brought close about the windows; the sills are the only part of the casings which are left uncovered, and they are sloped so that the water does not stand upon them. The windows themselves are well grouped, to break the monotony of the wall into pleasing spaces, an important consideration in a plain cement house, which, more than any other sort of house, depends upon the size and shape of its windows for decoration. The woodwork is of chemically treated cypress which will blend with any coloring that may be selected for the cement. The plans show the interior of the house to be very roomy and FIRST airy. The chambers are fitted with ample closets, and are well lighted with large windows, both casement and double-hung. All over the house the interior work shows many attractive features, and in every direction the eye falls
r
HE second house is of cement with long, sloping roofs of shingle or slate; in which dormers are broken out to give the necessary height to the chambers. It is strongly constructed upon truss metal laths, and every care has been 192
4
WOOD FLODR COTTAGE: PLAN. SECOND
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--:
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CRAFTS-
WOOD COTTAGE
alcove back, the curve of the arch repeating that of the porches outside. The ceiling within the nook is lower than that of the living room and is dropped to a level with the tip of the heavy lintel across the entrance, adding a greater air of seclusion to it. Two casement windows above each seat give a. pleasant reading light and make it a delightful. spot for an hours rest in the middle of the day., But in the winter twiCEMENTHOusE: ~IWT light when the fire, playFLOOR PLAN. ing over the warm tones of the woodwork and the soft varied colors upon some interesting variation of the of the stone, blends them into vibrant 8 walls, a piece of well placed wainscoting, shadow, and glints here and there upon a * a bit of color made by shelves of books or bit of metal above the chimneypiece, or a picturesque window with a seat beneath. upon the brighter colors of cushion and Indeed, the amount of furniture that is pillow, the inglenook becomes truly the built into the house will make quite a difheart of the house, in itself something to: ference in the expense of furnishing it. In make the evenings home-coming the the kitchen there is a long dresser and a anticination of the dav. The interest of sink fitted with drip boards. A sideboard. the home centers here; happily. flanked by china closets, is built into the I dining room beneath the group of five small casements. The living room shows several seats and book shelves, but the most attractive feature is the deep inglenook, which runs out between the twin porches that connect with the room by means of long French The chimneydoors. as the interior piece, shows, is of split field stone with a rough tile hearth. On either side are two long settles with high wainscoted backs, splayed out a little for greater comfort. The CEMENT HOUSE: SECOND ?laoR PLAN. thick board shelf has an
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SUMMER BUNGALOWS
HE originals of the five little bungalows illustrated in this article are standing in one of the most attractive portions of the State of Delaware. With the exception of the two larger cottages they are for week-end use and were designed by the owners themselves. The first is of rough pine boards stained brown with white trim. The obvious simplicity of the body of the house is relieved by the rustic porch supports and the curving lines in the railing of twisted withes. The second is built on sloping ground against a charming background of leafy trees and thick underbrush. T$r body of . it is plaster of a gray ; the chimney, which suggests a cozy fireplace within, is built of field The top of the chimney shows stone. an interesting variation in chimney building; it is of plaster held together on the outside with sticks, after the fashion of a The roof and porch hood crows nest. have not been painted but left to take the stain of the wind and weather, so that in the winter the house is as little noticeable against the bare gray trees as when it is There half hidden with summer greenery. is something delightfully suggestive in the furnishings of the porch ; a table, a chair and a book rest. The table is a mere board, the chair is a most primitive support roughly made of boards and unfinished logs, but the book rest has a graceful series of Gothic arches carved upon its supports. The third bungalow is covered with broad weather-boarding, the porch closed in by rustic trellis-like sides for vines, the roof is of tarred paper, the chimney inside and out of field stone roughly trimmed. Here in a more practical way we get the sense of completeness and comfort, of much in little ; the little house with its owner pleasantly entertaining a friend on the porch, the vegetable garden in fine and flourishing condition, the pleasant suggestions of shadowy wooded walks to be had for the seeking, and in all probabilities a delightful neighbor near by.
IN DELAWARE,
DESIGN-
The little cottage called The Poplars is perhaps the most picturesque and delightful of all. With the exception of the black tarred-paper roof, it is a soft, weather-stained gray. Meadow grass and the wild flowers brush up against its walls and the poplar trees lean over it from above. Soon the young sapling before the porch will grow up and its branches droop around the entrance, so that the house will hardly be seen for the mass of green about it. The last bungalow is set in the very midst of the woods. It is less roughly constructed than the others. The beams are trimmed smooth and stained, and the broad porch is screened in so that the living space is practically divided into rooms and porch. To the people who really love the life of the country and the woods, to rough it, these little bungalows will unfold the many pleasures that they afford their owners. It is not necessary to have a large house and an elaborate menage to enjoy the country, indeed they are a drawback, a barrier of artificiality, a limitation upon freedom of thought and action. In the city our house is our refuge from noise and turmoil, our library a place for rest and quiet thought. In the country, the woods themselves are the securest cloisters, their clean, sweet aisles insuring perfect peace. The house is but a shelter from the storms, the store house against our material needs, the place .nhere we sleep, although for that, most of us can say truthfully with the simplehearted philosopher of Syria sleeping under the stars, The pillow I like best is my right arm. There can be no doubt in the minds of those who have followed the rather slow development of an architecture adapted to American country life that the bungalow has furnished a most valuable source of inspiration. It was designed in the first place in Eastern countries for the life of intelligent busy people, whose existence is a practical one and whose aim must of necessity be as :simple as is con-
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DELAWARE OF
GALOW PINE STAINED \VITH ITY TlON RUSTIC PORTS &4ILING MKNT ADD A TOUCH
BOARDS WHITE OF
.NOTE THE
CONSTRUCPORCH AND
RELIEVE
LIGHT : M4;EXCEI.CEMFST
CONSTKICTIOS.
SIDE ABOVE OF
VIE\V
OF THE AS \VELL
THE USE AN AS AS
BUNGALOW.
SHOWINVG PORCH AS OUTDOOR ROOM AN TO ROOF Ii\ILR PORTANT TION PENSIVE ITY 0 F OF ESQUE
ABDED THE OF IS
QUALITY
APPEARANCE
FOR AN
LO\2 : THE
\VOULD ANY
~IIARMINGLY >17RROT7SD,VGS
I R I M I T I \ E
Brsc;
4I.On
1 1s A S T E R SHINGLED RUSTIC PORTS : AND ARE BUT CHIMNEY STONE ESQUE FOR DOWS II.ACED: SI.IGHT MAKE FOR A ILACE RCILDING NOT PORCH THE PORCH LEFT
PAINTED,
IVEATHRR:
IS A PICTURADDITION SO SMA1.1. TIIE ARE WINESCEPT II E EXPENSE THIS COIJNTKY FOR WEEKOf ( 01 W 0 U I. D COTTAGE :
T I 0 N A I, I, Y WEI.1.
T 4 G E PRACTICABLE
EST)+ OSLY.
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TIIIb
111SGAI.O\\
,S
( 0 , F K E D w I 1 H II R 0 A 1) WEATHERBOARDING: PORCH 1% ITH 1.1s TINES: NEY STONE TRIMMED, IMER ROOF FROM HOMELIKE GIVEN T.ZBLE OSE IIOL SEAT I)I\-II~EIl TFlE SE IN GARDEN SIDE LITTLE IT FI 011 ERC: OF AND FLOURISHING FOR IS 1s CLOSEV RlSTI( SIDES THE OF AND (OVF.RS THE IN TRELFOR CHIMFIELD TAR THE
ROUGH1.Y
I\ N 1) S E C U R I 1 Y RAIN: NOTE
.TH1S CALLED LARS ATED : (;RASS PLOWERS .\GAINST \VALLS POPLAR OVER IT TION THE WITH
~TURESQUELY A N D
F R 0 M
TRIMMINGS ENCHANTING
BACK HEART
IN F : THIS
WOODS IS A LITTLE IN
DU NG.U.0 w IRIMITIVE STRUCTION THE BEAMS MED BROAD THAI. bl.lCE (ALLY ROOMS IT ST.\INEIl PO THE IS AND SCREENED ARE SMOOTH AND
T H A N
OTHERS:
R C II IN
Is
SO LIVING INI 0 h
DIVIDED
SUGGESTS THAN
I. 0 N GE R TIhCE {YEEli-END
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BUILDING
A SUMMER
COTTAGE
sistent with comfort and attractiveness. And although it has gone through many changes in the readjustment to Western ideas of comfort and beauty, fortunately it has not lost in the transition its original fundamental purposes of furnishing space without elaboration, beauty without extravagance and comfort for the least expenditure of time and money. Of course, there is a wide range of variation shown in the evolution of the bungalow in this country. In some of the Adirondack camps it has grown into an elaborate structure, with a second story added and many sumptuous details of finish and ornament; while in the Delaware week-end or summertime buildings, illustrated in this article, it has diminished into something scarcely more than a shingled cabin, yet even here holding to the better idea of space and to the suggestion of outdoor living on the wide porches. For every bungalow is designed always with the view of outdoor living or else it is not a self-respecting bungalow.
The country homes in America which ate essentially an outgrowth of the bungalow, and yet emphatically adapted to our ideas of home life, have grown almost into a definite type of native architecture, so completely have they responded to the realities of the life of the vast majority of American people and this type of architecture, which we almost think of as new, aims not only to provide space for the unencumbered existence which sensible people have grown to demand, but it is adding to its inherent picturesqueness every sort of sane material comfort. And in addition it is also bravely facing the servant problem by seeking to reduce the amount of housework without essentially lessening the actual beauty of the house interior; rather adding to it, in fact, by insisting that, for the first time in the history of our domestic architecture, we shall present right structural line and well thought out color schemes in the interior of our homes, and insisting upon simplicity with beauty.
animals. And though simple and inexpensive, it is out purpose to make them beautiful, durable and permanent. In presenting them in the December issue every essential part of the construction will be clearly set forth, not only in the article but by detail drawings which will present various significant features of the structure as well as the interior fittings, which will also be included in the initial expense. An accurate mill bill will be given which may be used in ordering all of the material. We wish to present these houses so that they can be built without further consultation with architect or builder, in order that the man ot woman desiring a permanent and economical summer home can arrange with country carpenters to do the work. In this way attractive buildings can be secured at the initial cost, resulting not only in satisfactory dwellings but in a good investment.
201
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California, the simpler kind are no longer considered a novelty in the scheme of Eastern home building. We find them seriously considered by all the more original of our younger Eastern aruhitects and landscape gardeners, sometimes in place of porches, again as a shelter to a pleasant walk or as a separate structure to serve in place of the old-time musty, insect infested summer-house. But in whatever way they are used, they all tell the same story of our increasing love of outdoor life and desire to enjoy intimately the natural beauty about our houses and in our gardens. The following illustrations are taken from some beautiful California pergolas of various shapes and materials. The first and second photographs illustrate the rustic pergola of a California hotel of mission architecture. The uprights and crosspieces are of eucalyptus timbers, unsawed and undressed. The framework is covered with grape-vines and climbing rose-bushes, and many hanging baskets are used along its length. One side opens upon the lawn, while the other is hedged almost to the top with luxuriant shrubs and brilliant flowers. In the pergola of the next illustration the uprights are of undressed eucalyptus timbers. One of the most beautiful features of this is the feathery quality of the vine which covers it, emphasized by the fern-like foliage of the row of pepper trees bordering the street. This pergola is very long, running practically around two sides of the garden. At the comer, the floor is raised by one or two steps, making a little summer-house commanding a view through the aisles of the pergola and across the garden that it includes. The use of the vines, which conceal the base of the pillars and also act as a screen from the street, adds a great deal to the beauty and attractiveness of this garden porch. The fourth photograph shows a more elaborate and formal arrangement with a fountain at the end. The pillars are of
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RUSTIC
HOTEL WOOD
PERGOLA
IN
CALIFORNIA GRAPE
OF
FITTED SEATS
FOR A SUMMER
ARMCHAIRS LOUNGING
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PERGOLA CONCRETE
TIMBER OF A TO
Ah-D
CEAMENT, COVWITH
CLIMBING
ROSES
AND
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RUSTIC
PERGOLA : ATTRACTIVE
PORCH USED
PERGOLA AS SUMMER
EMBOWERED LIVING
IN
ROSES,
TO THE
HOUSE.
ROOM.
PERGOLA
OF
FORMAL
GARDEN.
SUGGESTING
GREEK
INSPIRATION.
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DETAIL PATH :
OF
WOOD
PERGOLA,
SHADING
GARDEN
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PERGOLAS
AND
OUTDOOR
LIFE
concrete, of graceful proportion, supporting the framework of peeled eucalyptus. This is built over a cement walk bordered with scarlet geraniums, and leads from the side entrance of the house out into the garden. The delicacy of the vines used emphasize rather than hide the proportions of the structure, and the use of color and the arrangement of the fountain raised and backed by shrubbery, make this one of the most ideal illustrations of pergola construction. The fifth photograph shows a pergola similar in design to the preceding one, but this is built almost against the side of the house instead of extending into the garden. This, too, contains a fountain at the end, the flowers between the pillars grow up from a sort of box effect which is very attractive, and the row of irises which edge the walk, give it a wonderful beauty in springtime. Another pergola is constructed against the side of the house with concrete pillars arranged in pairs, the cross-beams stained to match the woodwork of the house. This is completely embowered in roses and is little more than a porch with a pergola roof. The next illustration shows the structure used as a distinct garden feature. It is built of timbers similar to those used in the house and stained to match. It follows the shape of the letter L, the photograph showing one of the wings, and forms a sort of cloister about the garden. The upright pieces are 8 x 8s. They are ten feet in height and set eight feet distant from each other. The crosspieces are 2 x 8s while two 4 x 6s run parallel lengthwise across the top. Bracing timbers extend from either side of the uprights to the girders that support the crosspieces. Small lanterns of glass and bronze are hung from the girders of the pergola and at night, when lighted, give a very delightful effect. The last photograph shows a small pergola which is really the porch of a concrete house. The pillars are of cement and very large, the crosspieces are of Oregon pine stained to a deep brown, and
climbing rose-bushes furnish the shade for the rustic seats within it. The beauty of the pergola depends chiefly upon the vines and flowers that surround it, for, without these, no matter how graceful its proportions, it has little charm in itself, and it should be remembered that its use, first of all, was for a walk, a sort of laymens cloister where a man might enjoy the beauty of his vine and fig tree and at the same time find a spot for peaceful thought. Great care should be used in placing it, especially when it is detached from the house, for, without an obvious reason for being, the pergola is a rather foolish piece of architecture and many sins have already been committed with this most attractive garden accessory, because the fact has been overlooked that the pergola has a meaning. But once satisfactorily placed so that it seems to creep out from the house or lead to the woods, or shelter a walk, it may become a most useful as well as picturesque addition to the scheme of garden development. It should not be too heavily draped with vines except in a country where the sun must be almost wholly shut away. Otherwise the shafts and splashes of sunlight drifting down between leaves or through parted vines add much to the beauty one has grown to expect of a pergola. Whether attached to the house or placed at the end of a garden, after the vines are well under way a pergola forms a most delightful summer lounging place, a playhouse for children or a sewing room. With this in view it is wise to remember the blossoming fragrant vines in planting about the framework in spring ; roses, honeysuckle, grape-vines, will vary the beauty and fragrance from June to October. For sheer color the woodbine should claim at least one supporting pillar. Practically every building material is suitable for use in pergola construction, marble, wood, cement, stucco, and tree branches for rustic effect. Wood is most effective used after the manner of the simple Japanese construction.
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BY KATH-
FIGURE WIRE
ONE: ON
FRAME
WHICH
THE
bined with embroidery. Threads were drawn out of linen, or merely forced apart and sewn over to form a square netting upon which the pattern was then worked. This form still obtains in Russia and in of the Mediterranean Islands mw and in Madeira, and to the casual observer appears not unlike the Filet with netted ground. A little later a loose net was woven on a loom or frame, and this method, too, is still used in some parts of Southern Europe. Last of all the knotted net was invented, beginning, to quote an old Italian pattern book, with a single thread and increasing a stitch on each side until the required size was obtained. This net, made with practically the same knot as the fishnets of earliest times, was a very important step in the evolution of lace making, since it marked the transition from forms of embroidery, or working with thread upon a textile ground, to lace proper, a fabric constructed directly from a single thread. This lace was made in large quantities in France and Italy in the Middle Ages, and was known by many names, Lacis, or darned netting, Punto Recamato a Maglia Quadro, Point ContC, Opus Filatorium, and others. Siena was an important center for its manufacture and sale, and it was sometimes known as Siena Point. The. plain net unornamented was much used for bed furniture, curtains, and other large pieces, and was called variously RCseau, RCzel or RCzeuil. Colored threads and those of gold and
208
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A LESSON
IN
MAKING
FILET
LACE
FIGURE SITION
TWO:
FIRST
PO-
OF THE
HANDS
IN MAKING
FILET LACE.
silver were often introduced in the pattern, and are still used in Russia, and beads and knots were sometimes used to decorate the thread of the groundwork itself, The purest and most beautiful form of the lace, however, was that made in Italy during the sixteenth century, and consists of the plain square-meshed net, with the pattern worked in two stitches only. In the early nineteenth century there was a revival of Filet lace under the names of Filet BrodC d Reprises and Guipure dArt and a new form was made in which the designs were superimposed upon the net, rather than worked into it. Large threads and needle point forms were carried transversely across the mesh, the square character being ignored and as far as possible concealed. These forms, developed in the search for novelty and sensation which mark so much of the work of that period, are quite lacking in the beauty and distinction of the earlier examples of the lace and are unworthy of the attention of the modern craftsmen. The making of Filet is not difficult. When the simple knotting is once learned, as it may be from the following directions, a little practice will enable one to work with the absolute evenness and accuracy The net is necessary for good results. made in the hand, using a peculiar flat shuttlelike needle, on which the thread is wound, and a mesh-stick, flat or round, over which the stitch is knotted and which determines the size of the mesh. When the net is completed it is sewed into a frame of wood or heavy wire (Fig. I) and the pattern is darned in with a blunt-
pointed needle. The net is made in the following manner. Make a loop of tape or heavy thread and pin it to a cushion fixed firmly on a table, to a chair back, or any firm object. Or it may be a piece of heavy tape with a loop at each end, one large enough to pass around the instep, and a smaller one at the other end of a tape long enough to allow the left hand to rest in a comfortable position on the knee. In either case the loop into which the first stitches are made is technically called the stirrup. Into this loop or stirrup, tie the end of the thread which has been wound upon the needle. Take the mesh stick in the left hand, holding it hori-
SECOND OF THE
POSITION HANDS.
slightly below it. Take the needle in the right hand and bring the thread down over the mesh stick, then up behind the mesh stick and the index finger, making a loop around the second and third fingers. Bring the thread down on to the front of the mesh stick again and hold it there with the thumb, and bring the thread
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A LESSON
IN
MAKING
FILET
LACE
down again behind the fingers (Fig. II). Now pass the needle up through the loop around the second and third fingers, entering this loop from tCceleft, and passing, first behind the mesh stick, second through the stirrup, and third in front of the loop which is being held down by the thumb (Fig. III). It is important that this loop should be large, so that its upper side Draw out the should be above the stirrup. needle and release the thread, first from the thumb and then from the third and second fingers in turn, thus tightening the knot over the mesh stick (Fig. IV). In doing this be sure to draw the needle downward and toward you. Otherwise the knot will tighten too soon-and a large stitch will be formed instead of one exactly fitting the mesh stick. Repeat this process, making two stitches into the stirrup. Then pull out the mesh stick, turn the work over and proceed as before, except that the needle now passes through
THE
CLOTH IN
STITCH BOTH
IN
WHICH
WOVEN
DIRRC-TIONS.
the stitches already made instead of through the stirrup. Net one stitch into the first of the two stitches made in the stirrup and two stitches into the second. Withdraw the mesh stick again, and again net one into every stitch until the last, into which you always net two. Continue to increase in this way until the requisite number of stitches is obtained for the square. Then net one row plain, and decrease by netting one stitch into the last two stitches of each preceding row. The plain row should have one more stitch than the number required for the square. In making insertion or any oblong piece of net, you work as for a square until you. have two more stitches in the row than are required for the width of the oblong. Then work alternately one row decreasing at the beginning by putting one stitch into two and one row increasing at the end by putting two stitches into one, until the necessary length is obtained. Finish by decreasing as for the second half of the To make edging either make a square. plain insertion, buttonhole the outline desired and then cut out, or begin as for the square, net until the number of meshes Then net for the narrow part is obtained. alternately a row increasing at the end and a plain row until the greatest depth of point is obtained, then turn and work back leaving one loop unworked each time until the narrow part is reached once more. The first method is capable of more variaFIGURJZ SIX : By the second method only a Van- DARNING STITCH. tions.
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A TEA
CLOTH
OF FILET SCHOOL:
LACE
MADE
AT BY
GREENWICH KATHARINE
HOUSE MRD.
HANDJCRAFT
DESIGNED
PILLO\V
COVERS
OF
FILET
LACE
MADE
AT
GREENWICH
HOUSE
HANDICRAFT
SCHOOL.
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CURTAIN HOUSE
MADE
FOR
MRS.
E.
H.
HARRIMAN BY
AT
GREEN\\ICH I.ORn
HANDICRAFT
SCHOOL:
DESIGNED
KATHARINE
OPERA FILET
BAG
AND
CARD
CASE BY
OF
MODERN
COARSE LORD.
LACE :
DESIGNED
KATHARINE
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A LESSON
IN
MAKING
FILET
LACE
dyke proceeding by single squares may be obtained. When the net is completed it must be stretched in a frame, which may be, for a large piece, the ordinary adjustable wooden embroidery frame, or for smaller pieces, the wire frames made for the purpose. Very small pieces are sometimes sewn to flexible cardboard. In either case care must be taken to stretch .the net with absolute accuracy. The method of working has left the net stretched corner-wise, but if the mesh stick has been used properly, each mesh is a perfect square, and a judicious stretching gives the net its natural square shape. Before beginning to put in a pattern the design should be studied carefully so that the threads may be woven to the best advantage without retracing the steps and with as few knots as possible. The end of. the working thread should always be attached to a knot of the mesh and where it is necessary to piece the thread a weavers knot should be used. The working of the pattern should be done from right to left. At the end of each row of meshes worked over, the thread should be carried twice around the thread of the mesh. This is not always done, but produces much firmer and better edges to the pattern. There are two stitches, the cloth stitch (Fig. V, a. b. c.), in which threads are woven in both directions as in cloth, and the darning stitch (Fig. VI), in which the threads are woven under and over, all in the same direction. The latter stitch gives a heavier effect and is useful in giving light and shade. It will readily be seen that in cloth stitch there should be two threads or four threads in each direction. Two will usually be found sufficient. In the darning stitch a sufficient number of threads should be used to fill the meshes well. For cloth stitch always use the same size thread as that used for the net. The same size should be used for the darning stitch as well? when it is combined with the cloth stitch. When the entire pattern is done in darning stitch, as sometimes is done for large simple geometrical designs, a longer thread may be used, and especially if a very heavy
effect is desired. Embroidery stitches worked transversely across the squares of the meshes are to be used very sparingly if at all, as they destroy the real charm of Filet, which lies in its frank use of the square construction. The pattern is sometimes outlined with regular outline stitch used in embroidery, but this, too, to my mind, savors of concealment of construction, and takes away from the distinction of the pattern built on the squares. The designer for Filet has before him a most interesting problem. He has two or three values in which to work-the open mesh, which serves both for background and deepest shadows, and the two values of the cloth stitch and darning stitch, the latter for the high lights. The limitations as well as the possibilities of the tiny squares should be carefully studied, and the size of the mesh fixed upon before the nature of the design is determined. Naturally, with a very small mesh more complicated forms may be used than with a larger mesh where broad and simple forms should be used. In many of the Medireval and Renaissance pieces, the human figures depicted are wonderfully lifelike. We find the personages of Greek mythology, some with all the grace and lightness of the wonderful figures of the Greek potteries and reliefs. When one remembers that these figures are so depicted with the limitation of the square unit, it makes doubly valuable to the student of design the study and comparison of such pieces as are found in museums and private collections. The limitation of the squares is not so great as will at first appear to the novice. The craftsman who proposes to make designs for Filet, or even to adapt and copy, should provide himself with section paper, which may be had in various sizes, from four to eighteen squares to the inch, according to the size of mesh desired. When the space to be filled has been measured off, sketch the design freely over the squares as if on plain paper, placing the units properly and getting the general proportion and balance established before giving any attention to the squares. When
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WHAT
DRAWING
IS
this is done it will be surprising how readily the roughly sketched forms can be Practice will, of course, squared up. tend to make even the first sketch follow the lines best adapted to the eventual squaring. The designer who also understands the execution of the work will have the advantage of making more practicable designs. A little experience will soon show one that designs which are much broken take much longer to execute and
are really less effective than those which have a good proportion of unbroken lines of squares, while on the other hand letting into the design lines or points of light plays an important part in the grace and vivacity of the design. The purposes for which Filet lace is appropriate are many. It may be made in fine thread and used in trimming linen dresses or those of the rougher and heavier silks, as the rajahs and pongees.
WHAT
DRAWING
N account of its being used in two or three different senses, the word drawing is not at all well understood. Sometimes it means reproducing visualities-copying the model. Sometimes it means visualizing ideals, either pictorial or as in abstract design. AS these two meanings of the word stand for polar opposites the first thing intelligent art criticism must do is to clear the ground of this confusion. I say, not drawing criticism, but art criticism. For since art is what I am interested in, I want to distinguish between drawing which is art and drawing which is not. The only way to do this is to look at the drawing of men about whose artistry there is no doubt, and see what is its character. A man draws for one of two things: either his aim is to depict an existing physical object-as the camera does-or it is something else than this. The American populace of today seems to think the first aim is that of artists, and that work resulting from this aim is art. They confuse the meaning of the word drawing with the word art. But looking to the work of great artists, who are in the final authority, do we find it agreeing with this idea? No. We do not. Raphael, Michael Angelo, Rembrandt, Turner, Hokusai-not one of these men drew photographically. Their aim was something quite different. What was their aim ? Let us see. A mere exact representation of a physical thing is, of course, simply a copy of an appearance. It involves none of the mental powers which distinguish artists. It, 214
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it is true, in fact, of the entire universe of which we have sensuous knowledge. It is true not only of organic units, such as trees and leaves, but of qualities and propsquareness, erties such as roundness, straightness, redness, flatness, shadiness, sunniness, singleness, complexity, etc., ad infinitum. These are ideas. They are composite memories of sense impressions. Drawing that presents these ideas is art. Of course, drawing has of itself no necessary connection with representation of external objects at all. Here I draw a It is circle and there I draw a square. drawing and it is art. It represents an idea-the idea of a circle and of a square. Exactly in the same way is all drawing by artists an expression of ideas. Millet never copied a peasant. His pictures are full, not of peasants, but of Millets ideas of them. Greek sculpture owes its greatness to this principle. It is pure thought -nothing else. Every mass is an abstraction, every line is a generalization, every It is a purely curve is a universal curve. mental product-pure art. Yes, it is completely true,-the saying that in his art what the artist expresses iR himself. In fact, what am I as a spiritual entity but a bundje of ancestral and personal memories-that is, of ideas ? Nothing. But, though self-expression makes a mans work art it does not make it important art unless the man himself is imHowever truly he expresses portant. himself, his work is no more than he is. In art, draughtsmanship is a purely intellectual power. Take it in Michael Angelo, for example. It has nothing to do with depicting an external model--Something it never dreams of. And this great artists mind is the same as your mind or mine, only bigger. The essential prinIn art all power, as ciples are identical. is all other human power outside mans mere beef,- is of the intellect. And what is the mark of intellect? It to observe ones sensations acis this: to group them by characters curately, which are essential, and to subdivide these groups by finer and finer differences in the sensation. This mealis self-knowl-
edge, self-discipline and self-control. EXpressed in drawing, the result is art. In conversation, Whistler said to me, though I thought it rather trite: There is nd such thing as painting without drawing: it is all the same thing. Of course. Why not? How could it be otherwise? Whether the movement of the hand is recorded by a pencil or a paint brush is certainly a matter of indifference. In both cases the record is drawing. More than this, coloring is drawing, too. History tells us of not one great colorist who was not also a draughtsman. It could not be otherwise ; for beautiful coloring is based Qn the intellectual power to see and .to arrange chromatic relationships in exact accord with an idea of beauty which preexists in the mind and which the painting exists to present. And a mind possessing this kind of power over the one visual element of color naturally does not lack it in dealing with the element of form. Indeed, even if we suppose to exist the case of a person with a color-gift alone, he would be helpless to express it unless he could draw. For serious color demands that tones be distributed over a surface with an exactness which implies a firm mental grasp of spaces, and an accurate laying of tones into these spaces,-that is to say, it demands the same powers as does draughtsmanship. Coloring is a question of brains-simply -just as drawing is. In either case, the degree of excellence is simply the measure of the mind back of it. Mental power is shown bv the ability to think, which is to see relattonships among ideas. The wider, the more nearly universal the relationship observed, the bigger is the mind. Said Ruskin fifty years ago, No person ltrained to the buperficial execution of modern water-color painting can understand the work of Titian or Leonardo : they must forever remain blind to the refinement of such mens penciling, and the precision of their thinking. It is delightful to find a critic, even if we must go back half a century to find him, who knows and says that Titians color is based on precision of thinking.
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piece of lead, with a blunted chisel and a hammer! force up the copper between the dotted lmes to the height of about g of an inch. This makes a ridge which holds the cups in place. the single circle has its whole area raised nearly into a hemisphere, which allows the match holder to be riveted to its surafce. After the circles have been raised, the Diece should be turned face up and the s&face between the ridges ghtened with a wooden mallet, and then hammered with the ballpein of a hammer. Then tuming the copper face down again, the handles of the tray should be bent up until there is room for the fingers to be placed beneath, and raised after the fashion of the small circle. The entire edge is also bordered by a ridge made in the A SMOKING SET OF COPPER. same way as tKe circular cup temporarv use: and some holders. con;enie&es f&r smoking The match holder consists of a boxare quite useful in the household. Fhaped piece of copper large enough to The smoking set, as the drawing shows, tllow a box of safety matches to slip in comprises a tray, a match holder, ash reeasily. This should be riveted to the band The tray is made ceiver and cigar holder. of copper which supports the holder from of copper, No. 18 Brown & Sharpe gauge, the tray. This band is simply a strip of cut after the pattern shown in the diagram. So. 14 B. & S. gauge, cut with tapering It is 14% inches in length and 6% inches in ends and bent according to the sketch. The the widest part. The circles should then ends are then riveted to the tray. The be described upon it with a compass in bottom, cut on the same pattern as the the fashion that the dotted lines indicate. tray, should be cut Circle No. I is described on a radius of . .from--- No. 20 B. & S. on, CpDDer and should be soldered gauge 1% inches, which is also the radius for the outside circle of No. 3,
have a plain sheet of copper cut in the shape of the diagram and described with four sets of circles. Laying this upon a
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WORKING
DESIGN
FOR TRAY
OF SMOKING
SET.
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the contour of the wood, leaving about a Iinch margin around the sides. It is cut long enough so that it may be bent as shown in section No. 5 on the working drawing. The surface should be hammered and the copper then attached by copper tacks to the wooden upright. The sliding bookrack is on the style of a tongue and groove. One of the bottom pieces is cut as shown in section No. 6. The other is cut down to fit, having a tongue on each side, and these slide into grooves cut lengthwise of the grain in the other piece. ONTINUING our lessons of practiinstruction in cabinetmaking, we present here the detail and conthree bookcases. struction of Two of these are of usual size and suitable for use in the average library or living room ;
ENDS
OF A
METAL
BOOKRACK.
using a soldering iron. The three cups are also made of No. x, B. & S. gauge copper and are respectively 2 and 3 inches in diameter. They are riveted to form a cylinder, and the bottom is soldered on. The edges of the cups are slightly turned out. Both styles of book-ends are made of No. 18 B. & S. copper. The pattern, when it is cut out, is simply bent in the center. The half which is to slide under the books is perfectly flat. The end which comes against the books is hammered out with a blunted chisel to the depth of s-inch, just as the small circle was hammered in the smoking set. A backing of No. 20 B. & S. copper is then soldered to the upright half and the edges are filed and rubbed with emery cloth. This is very simple to make and very effective when done. If before the back is put on the convex portion of the end is placed over a mandrel and hammered, and the flat border left smooth, a very decorative effect is obtained; The woodwork for the book rack No. 3 is vs of an inch thick, the end piece is mortised to the bottom. T h is tenon must also be heated and glued in place. The comers of the upright piece are cut off or, if desired, may be rounded, and the sheet of copper follows SECOND BOOKRACK.
C cal
THIRD
BOOKRACK.
and the third is smalller but equally useful because planned to hold books such as dictionaries, reference books, etc., which are too large for the usual bookcase, unless laid flat in the center of a lot of upright books, thus giving an appearance of untidiness. This case, however, is constructed for just such books to be laid in flat and the slanting top will do nicely as a place on which to open them. Bookcase No. I stands 6o inches high, is 43 inches wide and 14 inches deep. It contains one stationary shelf and three The top is of I%-inch loose shelves. quarter-sawed oak, as are the stiles and rails on the front and sides. The panels of the sides are s-inch thick. Reference to the front view and sectional view will show the method of construction for this case as well as for the greater part of book217
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from the back. Where pegs of this sort are not obtainable we shall be glad to furnish them, or wooden ones can be made to take their place. The top is fastened on with our regular dumb-bell fasteners, which we illustrated and described in the last issue of THE CRAFTSMAN. 2 inches
DESIGN FOR AQ
SLIDINGE3OOKRACK
The second bookcase is made along exactly the same lines as is the first, except that it has a drawer at the bottom extending across the whole width. A back rail is also added to this piece, to which is fastened the -_ bottom _of the bookcase proper. Three loose shelves ---.. ..-_ -.-.-.-_ are contained in this case, but it has no stationary shelf. The sides are of one solid piece of oak, 12 inches wide, 1% inches thick and about 47 inches high ; this is furnished with a I-inch t&k top making a total of 48 inches in all, which is the entire
case No. 2, which also shows the top rail of the door with the triangular piece of molding. This is set against the glass inside the notch of the upper rail of the door, and continues down the stiles and across the bottom rail, holding the glass firmly. In detail No. 2 also note the small amount of space between the groove and the stile. This space is left to allowfor the expansion of the panel, and should be left always in furniture construction of this sort. The door jamb is also shown in detail in No. 2. This extends across the top and down the sides of the case, but does not run across the bottom ; in its place a small block of wood about I inch by 2 inches istacked to the bottom against which the doors rest when closed. Butt hinges are used and these are countersunk into the jambs of the side and the edge of the door and fastened with screws. The loose shelves are held in place by metal pegs set into the side stiles (see detail No. I), two on each side of the bookcase, one set 2 inches from the doors and the other
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BOOKCASE
NUMBER
ONE.
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height of the bookcase. It is 1 36 &ches wide and 12 inches deep. Detail No. 3 shows the construction of the drawer. The two sides and the front are of oak into which are set the back and bottom of chestnut, g of an inch thick, which is used because oak so thin is apt to warp. On the upper side of the bottom of the --bookcase and midway between the sides, are run two cleats BACKPJUIEL directly from the front to the back, and a third is attached to the center of the bottom of the drawer. As is shown in detail No. 3 these three cleats form a running track for the drawer, which is supported in the center instead of at the sides, as is usually the case. In both of these bookcases all joints are- mortised and glued, . screws bemg used only to fasten the back naneling to the case. At the botto; of PLAIT I LCJL the second bookcase mortises ,* are made for the tenons of the bottom sunnorts. and dowel pins are run through the edges of only difference being in the slanting of the the sides. top and the addition of four posts. PanelThe construction of the smaller booking is used at the back and on both sides, case is similar to that of the other two, the with z-inch stiles and a g-inch rail at the top and bottom. The rear posts are notched to admit the back, but the side stiles are set into grooves cut in the posts. A strip runs along the top and is set into l-L?!?AL P the notch formed by the back and the Both of the slanting top coming together. shelves are stationary and are notched out around the posts, but supported by cleats running across the panels. The posts should be slightly beveled at the bottom, otherwise they are apt to splinter unless the bookcase is handled with the utmost care when moved about. As may be seen in the illustrations, there is a curved under rail across the bottom of this case, the tenons of which are run through mortises in the post and fastened with dowel pins.
DETAIL
NUMBER
ONE.
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and finish of the piece itself. This extreme plainness displays to the best advantage the natural beauty of the wood, and not the least pleasant part of the task set for himself by the amateur cabinetmaker is the selection of wood that in texture and grain is fitted to give the greatest amount of interest to the piece. The beauty of the furniture is so closely related to the beauty of the wood that it is worth while to devote special study not only to its selection but also to the methods of finishing that will develop to the utmost the natural qualities of each separate wood. We have published again and again in THE CFUFTSMAN the methods of finishing that we use in The Craftsman Workshops, but the home worker will find the most comprehensive of these articles, and therefore, the one that is best for reference, in the magazine for July of this year. This article describes the leading characteristics of all our native woods that are suitable for cabinetmaking, and gives, in sufficient detail to serve as a basis for experimenting, the method of finishing that we have found most desirable for each one. As to the decorative structural effects
BOOKC.\SE
SUMBER
TWO.
The construction is greatly strengthened by the use of this rail which serves the further purpose of relieving the severe straight lines of the piece. Much of the charm of plain furniture lies in just such subtle structural effects, and close attention to these details make all the difference between beauty and crudity. For example, the edges and corners of the top of this bookcase are softened by chamfering, which leaves a slightly beveled edge instead of one that is sharp and crude, and the introduction of a very slightly curved line in just the right place, as seen in the rail and in the back at the top, lends a grace that forms an important part of the distinctive charm of the piece. As will be noted, the only decoration that is used in connection with this furniture lies in the emphasizing of certain structural features, such as the mortise and tenon, in the designing of such necessary adjuncts as door and drawer pulls. and in the proportioni;
DETAIL NUMBER TWO.
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we have alluded to, it will easily be seen that in no case are these features to be introduced when they are not an actual and necessary part of the construction of the While we emphasize piece. to the full, the decorative effect of the tenon, key or dove-tail, we never use them for ornament alone.
E have received several requests from subscribers who did not take up the cabinetmaking in its primary stages with us, asking us to make the drawings a little more in detail, and this we shall do from now on in order that the late beginners may have the same advantage from these lessons as the more advanced students. We have also been FRONT requested to explain for beginners the meanings of certain technical expressions we are constantly using, such as mortise, dowel pin, jamb, rabbit, etc., and in the future from month to month we shall explain the technical expressions we use in each article, and when the word implies an operation, to show how this operation is performed. In the foregoing article we have several times spoken of mortise. A mortise is a
--
DETAlL
OF DRMYER
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tenon. When using this form of joining (the tenon, mortise and dowel pin) all three should be glued together. The dowel pin itself may either be made on a turning lathe or, better still, be bought at some cabinetmaking shop where these pins are made by machinery. This is a case, where the machine-made article is distinctly an improvement on the hand-made. A word about gluing here may not come amiss. Before gluing, all joints should be warmed, for the heat opens up the pores of the wood, and the glue, soaking in, forms a firmer and less easily breakable joint. If the wood be cold the chances are that the glue, which is always used warm, will be cooled too quickly and set before it soaks into the wood. The word groove explains itself, for a groove in cabinetmaking is precisely the same as a groove anywhere else. It is sawed out with a circular saw or cut out with a chisel. If the home worker takes sufficient interest in his work to purchase a good equipment, he will find a rabbit plane very convenient.
Jp
BOOKCASE XUMBER THREE.
through the joining board, two holes only need be bored, one at each end, and a keyhole saw used instead of a chisel. A tenon is that part of a rail or stile which projects into or through another stile or rail, forming a joint. Where the tenon runs entirely through the mortise it should be made long enough to project j/8 or g of an inch beyond the outside edge of the mortise. At the back of the tenon (the end of the visible part of a stile or rail) there should be a shoulder, the width of this being $4 or ?/4 of an inch at the top and bottom and about B of an inch at the sides. Dowel pim are round bits of wood, usually about $4 of an inch in diameter and are used to drive through the mortise and
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because all this showy, expensive pageant found not an echo of response in the heart of the sidewalk crowds. It was not real, and instinctively and unconsciously the spectators knew it wasnt real, and no one cared. In no instance could one find that anywhere the people were a real ingredient in the Celebration. What had they to do with welcoming the guests or in the speechmaking? They were debarred from the Opera House ; they were warded off from the grand stands. As a whole, they seemed orderly, good-natured and bewildered, constantly looking for pleasure which had been promised them and which they could not find ; contributing nothing, as they had been made to feel outsiders. *It is rather a pathetic thing for a great city to imagine that she can order the spirit of play as she can packages of fireworks; that she can make a nation gay by press-agent work ; that she can create enthusiasm by electricity and commotion, and that a few conventional made-to-order parades of committees and boats and unimaginative floats can take the place in the peoples minds of real merry-making of which they themselves are an intrinsic part. In all this celebration one was constantly reminded of the stern parent who said, My little boy shall love me or get a licking. The people who got up the pageant apparently had but one thought, that so far as possible it should be a money-maker for those interested, that where there was not money there should be prestige. There was a big gallery play of what was being done for the people, 223
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PAGEANT
because it was necessary to have an audience. In no one instance can we find a trace of the common people being consulted. None of them thought of taking the initiative and getting together and saying, Let us make merry among ourselves; let us enjoy a little holiday ; let us for our own sake and that of our children relive for a brief time those far-away romantic early days, that we may better appreciate the valiant spirit of the men who opened gateways for civilization to enter. None of them brought forward their children and said, We want ourselves to be a part of this festival that we may learn lessons of heroism, that we may gain permanent standards of national achieveArchitects and builders were not ment. called upon to contribute their gifts in designing and constructing the floats which were to tell the history of the times. Artists were not consulted in planning costumes and in suggesting beautiful color schemes. No one said a word to any musician anywhere throughout the land to the effect that his advice would be valuable in suggesting appropriate and beautiful music to precede or to follow certain historical events ; no poets heart was made glad by the order of a pleasant lyric or sonnet setting forth the reason and purpose of all this display and expense. As a matter of fact, we turned our backs on all the tremendous opportunity to achieve beauty which the people of the nation have to give gladly for a celebration of this kind. A group of artists who were witnessing the comic tragedy of the tottering floats and the inappropriate music and the unalive people who played their mercenary little parts in the parade, recalled the days of the old guild festivals in Belgium, in Holland, in Flanders, guilds of artists and artisans, themselves creating the pageants, with the court painter often master of ceremonies and every man of ability and every woman of beauty adding their quota to festivals of the people and for the people. Surely, such pageants as we read 224
of in those Medieval days never passed through silent streets of curious, indifferent people, held in line by stout policemen and revolting epithets. Not but what we needed policemen and possibly some of the epithets. But the real difiulty is much further back than the unmanageable crowd who could not quite understand what it was all about, why they were there, or why they could not be in the midst of it. It has its source way, way back in the sorrowful fact that through the development of certain qualities in our civilization we have lost the knowledge of hour to play. As a matter of fact, the opportunity to play has largely been taken away from us by just such performances as the HudsonFulton Celebration. We have been forced back into a listless, indifferent audience, instead of being allowed to become a p of the merry-makers themselves. Ltttle by little we have grown to feel that all merry-making must be done for us, by people hired to do it, and that all the part we need play in it is to applaud or to criticize. The drama of the nation has become utterly separated from the people. The music of the nation belongs to the opera companies, to orchestras, to concert halls. We have forgotten how to sing. Our poetry, what little we have produced, belongs to a few publishing houses. We have forgotten romance. And all this, as we have said, comes about through that terrible separation between expression of joy and the watching of the expression. We have grown to think that it is undignified to express joy, that it is only fine and elegant to observe it quietly. And so the state of affairs which existed in this Memorial week is an absolutely logical outcome of a very general attitude which exists throughout the country. Zn America we scorn the player as we do the worker. Only the self-contained observer seems to merit our approbation. Perhaps the very worst side of all this unnecessary and unreal celebration, this festival without the people, was the attitude of the press, which, either failing or refusing to understand the truth, poured
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THE
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forth pages of gushing preliminary anThe nouncements of what was to be. people were informed that they would see the greatest naval parade that the world has ever known ; that they would see a street pageant such as has never before been prepared for a city to enjoy, that everything that could be conceived of would be furnished for the pleasure and profit of the people gathered together. Then, after the parades had paraded dully by and the pageants had passed sadly away and the people had strolled home itidifferently (those who understood, a little cynical, those who did not, much bored) the papers came out with flourishing records of the wonderful thing that had happened, how the cries of joy burst from the throats of thousands, resounding from one end of the city to the other, where, as a matter of fact, there had been a little handclapping and some screams from people who got in the way. mat, indeed, has happened to us as a nation, that we shouId permit ourselves to be led out to play with a halter around our necks? Are we so far from the nursery days of history that absolutely our play instinct has vanished, or is it the mercenary quality of American civilization which renders it impossible for us to approach anything but market day without feeling ill at ease and restlessly out of place ? Are we wholly losing our simplicity and sincerity in our fearful competitive drill as money-makers ? Are we as a whole letting ourselves sink into the passive uncreative state of an audience whenever we move away from the ticker or the desk ? It is a banality to state that every widespread growing tendency in a country can be traced to some deep-rooted inherent wrong. And if today we are a nation whose holidays must be under organized police contra!, whose pathetic efforts to play result m utter boredom or horse play and hysteria, it may be interesting to ascertain what kind of civilization we are expressing in this tragic demoralization whenever we have oppor-
tunity for rest and joy. We seem to have moved a long, long way from the original purpose of a holiday, which in the old Anglo-Saxon meant a holy day, a day of rest and pleasantness. And, alas, what was true of New York during the Hudson-Fulton Celebration is becoming more and more generally true of all our national festivities, even of those which are world-wide and ages-old in interest. What of joy and of peace have we left in Christmas, in Fourth of July? Is anything of the original significance felt today in that old, most romantic of festivals, Thanksgiving, the day made sacred by the celebration of the home instinct of a nation ? There may still be in the hearts of a few old, old fathers and mothers, of ancient spinsters and aged bachelors, a homesick memory for the real days when Thanksgiving meant bringing the family together joyously from city and country, of happiness in talk of the past and the future; but to the most of us, and to practically all children, it has become a day merely of feasting, without reverence for its inception or without memory. To the average housewife it has grown into one of the many regular burdens of the calendar, when uncongenial relations must be brought together, when a miracle of work must be accomplished. Naturally, in place of happiness there is boredom, born of isolated selfish interests and lack of mutual human sympathy. Thanksgiving has become a sacrifice to tradition, and Christmas is but little better. The latter has come to be a time when our interest is divided between feasting and gifts, and so sordid is the point of view that both the presents we make and the presents we receive are usualIy an equal disappointment to us. The one illuminated spot in the midwinter holiday is the joy of the unsophisticated child, and here is a toast to every one of them left in our conventional land. For the real Christmas, believed in and heartily loved, is the splendid true romance of two worlds, for it touches the heart of the child spiritually as well as humanly. And it is a 225
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world-wide sadness that the selfishness and ungoverned greed of grown-up folks should have been allowed to encroach in such a heedless way upon this beautiful festival, one of the most hallowed mem*ories of childhood. Do we realize that in taking from our children their right to happy picturesque holidays (holy days) we are .robbing them of a heritage of thoughts which will leave barren or meager many a retrospective hour of later years ? As for the Fourth, the greatest American national holiday-that day formerly so sacred in village life, when the reading of the Constitution brought tears to the eyes of the people, when their honest poor little celebration stood as a memorial to their great heroes, the statesmen who had launched the nation into existence, when the few small skyrockets were sent up into the air as a symbol of better days to come, of greater advancement, of perpetual growth for the nationit is scarcely necessary to say more than that today the more intelligent of our citizens are beginning to legislate against it as a devastating nui,sance. It is worth considering to what extent we are responsible for this deplorable attitude toward sincere and simple pleasures. But then, if we can place the responsibility is there any hope amongst us of a readjustment of conditions? Or are we building our nation too remote from right lines for possible improvement? For it, at least, seems as though the purpose of our life had grown to be a disregard, as a non-essential, of anything that does not purpose financial returns. Thus, our celebrations are left in the hands of a powerful few, for along that road lie opportunities for greater graft. Our very holidays, so we are told, are often granted in order that railways and public entertainments may profit, and all our picturesque ceremonies that were formerly based upon sentiment, from Easter to christening day, have grown to be an opportunity for bartering gifts. Our Christmas has become a clearing house for old presents, and
Thanksgiving Day an opportunity to establish a satisfactory social balance. Whats in it for me ? is our sprightly national attitude toward public celebrations and private ceremonials. We crave gain without adequate labor, and all the thought and force of our lives we are largely willing to give toward this end. It has been cynically said that Thanksgiving would take on a new lease of life if p&es were given for the best dil:ner party, and that Christmas would turn over a new leaf if Wall Street tips were concealed in the fragrant balsam boughs. And yet, the whole matter, it seems, could be readjusted by so simple a condition as individual sincerity. No societies or committees would be needed, not a regulation or a rule, no readjustment of poverty or riches, no revolution or social cataclysm, neither conservative nor radical would be banished, no brother would be asked to depend upon brother or parent upon child. It would be just for each human being to face life individually with sincere purpose. The desire to be a part of what is true in life would solve the whole question.
NOTES
HE National Arts Club showed its interest in the Hudson-Fulton Celebration by collecting together nu-
merous
paintings,
old prints
and
engravings presenting the growth of the city from the advent of Henry Hudson to the present day. Turning to the right, as one entered the gallery, first appeared a series of engravings with Dutch texts, showing the inhabitants and animals native to New Netherland in 16og. The pictures were enlightening to say the least. There was a stalwart family of savages idealized to an extent that put James Fenimore Cooper to shame, for they radiated in deportment and expression the culture and intellect of several centuries of European civilization. The most noticeable example among the fauna of the new country was a unicorn.
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These surprising illustrations were completed by an interesting collection of Indian relics taken from and about New York. The Colonial period was represented by old maps and drawings of Colonial days and a fascinating collection of engravings. A particularly striking one showed the city of New York in the distance. In the foreground two youths were evidently enjoying a pleasant day in the country, in a shady spot that now would be in the vicinity of ,Chambers street. They are sitting picturesquely under a tree, which the artist, with charming irrelevance, caused to be a palm. The Revolutionary period contains some interesting old documents and pictures of the stirring events previous to the Revolution, with illustrations and remarks concerning them from the newspapers of foreign countries. There was also a copy of the Royal Gazette from 1783. The period from 1809 to the present day gave us one exceedingly comforting thought, that the traffic on Broadway in 1855 was not one bit better managed than it is today. A color print depicted a series of most hair-raising catastrophies, occurring or about to occur, in front of P. T. Barnums famous museum, and the title beneath led one to suppose that such stirring events were common at that In the background a six-horse time. team attached to the big sleigh which used to replace the Fifth Avenue bus in winter, appears to be in paroxysms of terror. A horse attached to a cutter containing a lady and gentleman had also become terrified and was shying and snorting in an alarming fashion. The lady, very unwisely, was trying to jump from the sleigh. At the right, two gentlemen were running to her assistance and losing their hats in the excitement. We should say that this warranted a busy day for the Broadway reporters and, undoubtedly, would result in someone writing a letter to the Times about the congestion, but the title of the picture was
REVIEWS
simply A Scene on Broadway. There was a very interesting collection of drawings by Felix Darley, drawn for the American Art Review between the years 1846 and 1849. They were in illustration of the Legend of Sleepy Hollow and were very interesting in execution. One of the particularly noticeable exhibits was a collection of old bandboxes covered, as was the custom, with wall paper. It is an interesting fact that it is only from these old bandboxes that we have any record of the older fashions in wall-paper. Modern New York was represented in a series of pictures by well-known painters of the city, and drawings and plans for municipal improvements. The exhibition showed a great deal of care and careful preparation, and was well worth visiting.
HE National Society of Craftsmen have sent out their first cards for the season, inviting the public to an exhibition and sale in modern craftwork. The keramic display was noticeable. Mrs. Leonard exhibited a beautiful platter in dull green and green-blue and Miss McCrystle, of Chicago, had a particularly graceful and well-decorated tea set. Mr. Callowhills luster work ably represented Miss Wakethe Boston contribut.ion. man, of Cos Cob, Conn., had a very attractive pottery vase, of which the lower thirds were dark blue, and near the top was a broad band of a lighter shade with deer represented in a misty white. some fairly attractive There was bronze work, particularly two little bells modeled in the form of dancing maidens. The upper parts of their bodies formed the handle and their filmy skirts, held out on either side, made the dome of the bell. The silver work, although attractive, was particularly expensive, out of all proportion to the cost of material and It was mostly of the labor involved. plain hammered variety, without decorative design. The shapes were graceful, 227
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and the designs suggested the Colonial period in silver. There was some good work in bookbinding, and the needlework exhibit was very interesting, especially the dainty pieces of neckwear done in teneriffe and tatting. The rugs were very interesting in color and pattern. The jewelry case showed some use of It is encouraging to see imagination. how much our jewelry has improved during the last few years. The American handicrafts seem to maintain a higher level in modern jewelry than almost any other nation. One noticeable piece was a pendant of two herons in flight, their bodies framing an oval of pink quartz. The chain was of silver links, varied here and there with bars of delicately colored enamel. There was also a handsome necklace composed of disks of abalone shell of very fine color and polished so smoothly that they were as effective as black opal. The use of abalone has been a valuable addition to the jewelry of the craftsmen. We are always interested in these exhibits, but we feel that the prices which are asked for the work are almost always unreasonable. Of course, handwork is more beautiful and, justly on account of the time and skill required, is more costly to produce. We do not feel, however, that the products can, as a rule, command the prices asked, and this means discouragement to the craftsman and the public. Columfor an interesting course of public lectures upon The Technic of Art, to be given at Havemeyer Hall on Monday afternoons The lectures will be ilat 4.15. lustrated with specimens and experiments. Thefirst four lectures will be by Professor Charles E. Pellew upon Practical Dyeing, and will be followed by lectures upon paints and pigments, practical art metal work and other subjects The of special interest to craftsmen.
228
REVIEWS
lectures are free, and no ticket or registration is required. The dates and subjects of Prof. Pellews lectures are as follows : Monday, October 1&h, Dyeing of Cotton with Modern Dyestuffs ; October 25th, Tied and Dyed Work; November 8th, The Preparation, Dyeing and Adulteration of Natural Silk ; November Igth, The Preparation and Dyeing of Imitation and Artificial Silk. handicraft and advanced, are also being arranged for this winter at Columbia University, under Prof. Pellews direction, in connection with the Department of Extension Teaching. Last year the subjects taught included not only dyeing of cotton, wool and silk yarns and fabrics, but also the dyeing and finishing of raffia, artificial silk, leather, feathers, etc., tied and dyed work, stencil work and batik, and other topics quite outside the ordinary work of a dyeing laboratory. N August, agog, THE CRAFTSMAN pubI lished an article on pageantry in America, called The Drama of Democ It was profusely illustrated with zt?ographs of the Coburn Players in Percy Ma&ayes The Canterbury Pilgrims, and also of the Westchester County Pageant, which took place last May in Bronxville. The latter pictures, which were extremely interesting as a permanent expression of the beauty of the Pageant, were also significant as examples of achievement in photographic art. By some oversight these pictures were not credited (as was our purpose and would have been our pleasure) to the artist who took them, Mrs. Orrin Sheldon Parsons, through whose kindness THE CRAFTSMAN secured the opportunity of using them. As Mrs. Parsons not only knows the country where the Pageant took place, but also the history, and the people who were the actors therein, of necessity her pictures were of very great human interest as well as valuable in their artistic and piccourses in P RACTICAL dyeing, both elementary
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NOTES:
turesque expression. We regret very much our failure to credit the photographs individually to Mrs. Parsons. NE Hundred Country Houses is the title of the book recently compiled by Mr. Aymar Embury II. It contains one hundred beautiful plates representing specimens of modern American architecture by architects in different parts of the country. The illustrations are prefaced by an introduction upon the historical development which has preceded what the author calls the new American architecture. He begins his introduction by a quotation from the Mediseval architect Villard dHonnicart, whose sketch books, which have been preserved, are full of notes like this, Heres a good tower; if it were changed thus: I could use it for my church. All architectural design, he continues, has been built up from the study of old architecture modified to meet the requirements. From time to time, both here and abroad, art writers have bewailed the fact that America, a land unfettered by tradition and unhampered by the monuments of a dead past, has not developed an original and characteristic architecture. Had we descended from the aboriginal Americans such an architecture might have come to pass, but unfortunately European traditions came to us with our European blood. It can hardly be said, however, that we failed to create a new style. Our Colonial style, although it relates to the Renaissance in England, is truly indepcndent. In the architecture of today historical styles are being employed, modified and modernized to suit conditions. The results show a certain relation to the parent styles which enables one to classify them under certain heads, the New England Colonial, the Classic Revival, the Japanesque, etc., but they really compose a single modern type of archiThe hundred examples of countecture. try architecture selected are treated in groups under the head of the style that 6
REVIEWS
is most strongly suggested in their contour, and the book closes with two interesting chapters upon the garden and the considerations preeminent in planning the house. The book is the result of thorough investigation, and the examples and descriptions of the various styles would be of great interest and value to anyone who is contemplating building a home. The houses are of various sizes from the small country cottage to the large residence, and each one is a gem of its kind. The work of this young architect, of which one or two examples appear in the book, is exceedingly interesting and peculiarly brilliant in design. We have found it of such interest and promise that in this issue of the magazine we have reproduced several of his houses accompanied by an article upon the work that Eoi;esd,oing. (One Hundred Coui;~ . By Aymar Embury II. strated. 264 pages. Price, $3.00 net, postage 30 cents. Published by The Century Co., New York.) Storv of New Netherland, Elliot Griffis has given us a book that is compiled from carefully collected data, which, quite apart from the interest it will hold for the seeker after historical facts during the time of the Hudson-Fulton Celebration, is a work of distinct importance and one that will fill a gap in the records of what is known of the birth and growth of the American nation. Mr. Griffis contends that most of the grotesque stories about the Hollanders in New Amsterdam grew up in later times, long after Dutch ceased to be spoken in Then their geographical names America. were corrupted, and a luxuriant crop of mythology, like fungus, gave the funny fellows their chance. The book is the result of earnest research and study during long years lived among descendants of the early Dutch settlers in America, and Mr. Griffis says that he is indebted to many archivists for his facts. and quotes a list of authorities The I NWilliam
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: REVIEWS
HE Care and Feeding of Children, by L. Emmett Holt, M.D., LL.D., is a little book for mothers, and nurses outside of institutions, and has proved one of the most valuable of all books of reference upon the general care of young children. It is now in its fifth edition, revised and enlarged, and contains all the latest information that science has contributed to nursery hygiene. To those who are not already familiar with it we will say that the author has endeavored not to alarm the mother by acquainting her with all the possible diseases that her child may have, but has confined himself to endeavoring to keep her eyes open to matters which are her chief and direct concern. It is the needs of the well child, not the sick one, which mainly have been considered, because it is the well child that, in most cases, is left to the care of nurse or mother. The little volume contains an exhaustive account of the care of infants and their feeding, and the diet of older children, as well as a miscellaneous collection of information on hygiene. It is compiled in the form of a catechism and is a most convenient reference book, brief, clear and comprehensive in statement. (The Care and Feeding of Children. By L. Emmett Holt, M.D., LL.D. 195 pages. Price, 75~. Published by D. Appleton & Co., New York.) PEN Country, by Maurice Hew-lett, is not along the usual line of this clever English word master. Senhouse, the vagabond, who appeared in Half Way House, is again the principal character, but Mr. Hewlett makes the mistake, we think, of drawing him too much in detail, for instead of getting a happy impression of a delightfully artistic creation as we did in Half Way House, we encounter a clear-cut picture of a man too eccentric, too inconsistent, too. peculiar to seem at all real, and what is worse, we feel that this Senhouse is not real to Mr. Hewlett himself. The story, as a story, is not to be taken seriously
at the end of the volume. It is written in an easy, flowing style, history interspersed with anecdote and stories of the early Dutch settlers, together with some of their myths and beliefs and those of the Indians, and it makes interesting as well as valuable reading. (The Story of New Netherland, The Dutch in America. By William Elliot Griffis. Illustrated. 292 pages. Price, $1.25 net. Published by Houghton, Mifflin Company, Boston.) HE Danger Mark, by Robert W. Chambers, furnishes us with a realistic study of a heroine who is a dipsomaniac. Will the public never tire of the mental, moral and physical struggles of drug-takers and hereditary drunkards ? There seems to be so much similarity in all the soul experiences of those that Mr. Chambers dissects to make a Roman holiday. We wonder what has become of the author of The King in Yellow, that ghostly fantasy and entrancing piece of imagination that made one's blood run cold and ones hair stand on end for no reason at all, apparently ; and of The Maker of Moons and of Lorraine and of the other charming tales of the FrancoPrussian war. We find less stirring the society of sensualists, beautifully gowned and immaculately tailored. Charming and well-bred they may be and, undoubtedly, well served up, but when one comes to the third course of their emotions and desires one craves the salt of rationality and common sense. Mr. Chambers has so great a gift of storytelling and can so well project himself into his characters and make them so vivid and magnetic, and he has proved himself, in times past, to have such a deep vein of originality and invention, that this repetition of plot and types seems unworthy the mans inherently great gift. The story is, however, well told, and will make a few hours pass pleasantly. (The Danger Mark. By Robert W. Chambers. Illustrated by A. B. Wenzel!. Price, $1.50. Published by 495 pages. D. Appleton & Co., Yew York.) 230
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nor do we think such was the authors intention, inasmuch as its action appears to be only an excuse for Senhouse to write long letters (a difficult form of reading) outlining and expounding a philosophy none too novel. The style is Mr. Hewletts developed to the nth power, and here lies the cause of our plaint. Mr. Hewletts clever sayings and epigrams, when given not too often, are extremely amusing, but when, as in this book, they fall close upon each other, the result is a blurred impression, and the reader finds it impossible to pleasurably remember any of the many that interested him at the moment he read them. (Open Country. By Maurice Hewlett. 322 pages. Price, $r.50. Published by Chas. Scribners Sons, New York.) HE Melting Pot, by Israel Zangwill, has been staged with fair success before New York audiences, but it is not essentially an acting drama, although there are intensely dramatic situations here and there throughout it. The hero is a young Jewish composer who has escaped the Russian slaughters and has come to America. To him the country is, in actuality, the immaculate ideal that inspired its founders ; the meeting ground of freedom for all who are suffering oppression. The young Jew carries it farther and sees the America of today as Gods vast crucible, amalgamating the nations to produce a mighty race of justiceloving heroes. It is good to be reminded now and then that we do owe our existence to an ideal as noble as this, and to reahze that it is the force of this ideal which, in spite of every violence, still somehow illumines the country. The words in which Mr. Zangwill makes his young Jew remind us of it are burning and prophetic. The piece has a high literary quality, but it lacks humor and action to make it a successful stage (The Melting Pot. By Israel drama. 200 pages. Price, $1.25. PubZangwill. lished by The Macmillan Company, New York.)
REVIEWS
Grounds is a unique book whose purpose, as set forth in the preface by Alfred East, R.A., is to show the influence of a favorite landscape upon an artists work. We are shown how Constable was influenced by Dedham Vale, and how the hills that surrounded Titian in his youth worked upon his art. The varying influence of a beautiful spot upon different people is shown, too, and we are made aware that if a half-dozen men were engaged in sketching the same place, each picture would show quite a different result, and there would be an individual point of view expressed in each mans work. The book is crowded with illustrations of the various beautiful spots drawn by artists well known as the painters of those special localities, and there are interesting descriptions of the localities done by the artists themselves. Such a compilation will undoubtedly be of interest to the art student, for he will be brought in touch with regions that have proved inspirational to others, and which may prove stimulating to him. (SketchBy Charles Holme. Iling Grounds. lustrated in color. 252 pages. Price, $3.00, postage, 35 cents. Published by John Lane Company, New York.) Talk on Point of View, by Alice Katherine Fallows. Among the crafts there is one which we can least afford to overlook and which, in the long run, gives strength and purpose to all the others. This is the craft of living. The three little books in review are by Miss Fallows, the daughter of Bishop Fallows, one of the inaugurators of the doctrine that life is not what we find it, but what we make it. Each book is full of common sense and helpTheir dainty binding ful suggestions. of red and gray adds to the attractiveness of a bedroom reading table and they are of a size to be easily caught up in moments of weariness when the pressure of daily life bewilders us and we need 232 Hygiene : M ENTAL Relaxation : The A
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: REVIEWS
suggestion of his becoming neither fish nor fowl. Again we feel that the great possibilities in Mr. London as an author lie in the fields of his most intimate knowledge. (Martin Eden. By Jack London. 412 pages. Price $1.50. Published by The Macmillan Company, New York.) blanuscript, by is a late addition to the Little Books on Art series brought out under the editorship of Cyril Davenport. Chapters I and 2 are taken up with explanatory matter to prepare the reader for an understanding of the thorough description of the different branches and schools of illuminating and illuminators. One of the most interesting chapters is that devoted to the rise of national style, for here we are shown the distinguishing marks of the different manuscripts on view in the museums, and it should arouse our interest enough to inspire us to a more or less careful study of this most engaging art. (Illuminated By John W. Bradley. IlManuscript. lustrated, with frontispiece in color. 290 pages with bibliography and index. Price, Published by A. C. NcClurg $1.00. 81 Company, Chicago.) Directory and has just been brought out in its ninth edition and contains in compact lorm a list of prominent architects all over the country, the architects of the Boar<1 cf Education, the architectural c;ocief:es and organizations of the world, the architectural schools, the names of the principals in the building departments of large cities in the United States and Canada, and much other information of particular interest. The most notable feature is the directory of periodicals which contains the names of those that are prominent in the architheir subscription tectural field, giving price and the date of issue. (The Architectural Directory and Specification Index. 212 pages. Price, $3.00 net. Published by Wm. r. Cnmstock, New York.) Architectural T HE Specification Index 6
to be reminded to ston and see if we are not doing everything fifty times-fortynine in our mind and once actually. (Mental Hygiene : A Talk on RelaxaBy Alice tion : The Point of View. Katherine Fallows. 38, 36 and 38 pages respectively. Price per volume, 35 cents, Published by A. C. McClurg & net. Company, Chicago.) Glass Processes, by Duthie, is a book published in the Westminster series. It has been Mr. Duthies work to bring together in one book all of the various Like all methods of glass decoration. other books of the Westminster series, Decorative Glass Processes is extremely simple and practical, and is well illustrated throughout with reproductions of some of the best pieces of glass decoration in the world, and of the instruments used in staining and cutting and embossing the glass. Another feature which makes it interesting to the layman is the glossary in the back, where are given the definitions of all the technical terms used in decorative glass work, permitting one to read the book with the same interest and understanding as the professional glass worker would B ~rt~~,~ey~~~~D~;;;~ I9cesses. y Index and glos262 pages. lustrated. sary. Price, $2.00. Published by D. Van Nostrand Company, New York.) 66 by Jack London, work inasmuch as it represents the authors partial return to the direct and vigorous style which made such books as The Sea Wolf and The Call of the Wild remarkable. The story is of a young sailor, uneducated and perhaps a brute in many ways but possessed of imagination, who, for the sake of a none too interesting girl of higher caste, educates himself and strives to reach her social position. Personally we find the hero much more charming in his primitive state, for as he progresses mentally and socially there is the faintest 232 Eden, M ARTIN is a significant
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John Davey, the Father of Tree Surgery, Has Given the World a New Profession
Wonderful in its results, useful beyond calculation and of the most interesting character. John Davey first conceived the idea of tree surgery and the methods which saved tens of thousands of Americas finest trees are the direct result of his genius. Mr. Davey is beyond peradventure the worlds greatest tree man and the long experience back of the Davey service gives knowledge of the kind that cannot be obtained from books. This know how makes the efficiency of the Davey work altogether beyond comparison. The Davey Training School stands alone. It combines the theoretical and the practical in a way that has never been attempted elsewhere. In It the Davey men become experts through the a plication of instructions based on John Daveys life work in t Ke saving of trees. The name Davey, thus inseparably interwoven with the science of tree surgery, means much or little to you according to the value you place on your trees.
If you have to engage a lawyer, you want a successful one, if you must call a physician or surgeon, you want one in whom you can place absolute confidence; if you employ a tree surgeon you should have the best-not experimentors or men of doubtful reputation in the rofession. If you wls 3 to save your trees, you need the services of tree surgeons who can give results. The Davey experts alone can thoroughly satisfy you. We are just now pre aring a beautiful new booklet, which will be a veritable delight to t K e tree lover, fully explaining our work. Its cost is too great to permit promiscious distribution, but if you have trees and are Interested in their preservation, we shall be glad to mail you a copy without charge. Send us your name and address today, for prompt attention, addressing Desk 2.
Note:
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The
Craftsman
xvii
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piizizz
A first -class, elegantly finished Oak Cabinet. A practical Work Bench with Vise: 95 of the fin111 est tools made: when closed, an attractive piece of furniture : when opened, immediately ready for work with every tool easy to No present for man or boy of such Nothing handier, nothing more practical. reach. lasting educational value. We have four smaller Wall Cabinets, with same qualitytools, but not so many.
The same superior quality that car- penters and mechanics have bought of us for -61 years.
No. 47
\Ve ore
at $7.50
in the
pioneers
No. 53 al S 15.00 No. 54 set bears 011~ regular high-grade tool outfits for home use ever Order direct (we have no agents, or said for d atalo~ue No. z?oi,
at $20.00
gnarantee of
Munson-Whitaker
Commercial and Landscape Foresters
Kindly mention The ... Craftsman
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850 Tremont Bldg., Boston. 1210 Monadnock Bldg., Chicago. 1710 Flatiron Bldg., New York
XVI11
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AC rowning
Craftsman
Feature
A Ruberoid
Craftsman principles apply as well to roofing matenal as to the style of a roofs architrct~~w. IIUI~~ROII) is the acceptr(l craft3m.m roofing. Rrcause it combines every craftsman llrinciplc-llcautv, simplicity, durability. 1:ightren yenrs ago the first RUl?I:ROID roof, nrrc laid. These ale giving service to-day, and lpr& good for many years to come. There hare been over 3o suhstitntes for this prcr ;\lnny had sinnlar name5. and of readv ,ofinp. looked like KUI3I:R011) . . Sane could possibly be so good. Ipor no other maker can ~1.w RUP,EROTD GurnTo this gum i% due UT exclusive pntvtltcd product. RIJlll;liOlI)S wonderful proprrti~~s-its splendid re. sisting qualities.
Roof
So are skill is quickly
seams or joints to invite the elements. required in laying, and repairs, if any, and caidy made.
Beautiful Lasting Colors -Geside being the most practical, RKI<l~ROID, in shades, is the most beautiful looflng. Rich, subdued colors-red, brown, green and bronze -ZIIY RU1il?1~011~S. Colors that will harmonue aitb any scheme of decoration. .\nd there is no possibility of their fading or washing 0tT. Ii? they are part of the roofing itsclf-im;wgnatcd into its fibre by a patented process.
Waterproof,
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A RUREROII) Roof is proof axain.;t heat or cold, rain or snow, wind or ar:lther. .\nd burning emhers null not set fire either tv the Roofing or the timhers underneath. Nor is there opportunity for leaks. RURi<ROlD gives practically a one-piece roof, without treacheruS
The
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Standard
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Paint
William Street
The xix Craftsman
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Concrete nrrds protxtion ;IRainst the rnvngrs of darn~mess. TVater often strikes through and ruins It gives beautiful effects in the interior decoraion. use of interior decoration. Ihy Stale Brick and Cement Coating has been end:xstd by the Na ional I;o:xd of Fire Underwriters and, therefore, will lessen insurance rates when ap[Ged to w-ooden partitions or used for interior decoration. It corn-s in twenty-four beautiful shades. Address for Catalog and Color Card Wadsw,oco, I;;wland .. . Paint andVamishMakers axd Lead Corroders 82-84 Washington street
BOSTCN. MASS.
Tceo Gwen and Two Glaze art imponsiblr to imit;ltc and impossible to Thr &VP has a depth and d4irac.v that ~~lacrs it in a class bv itself.
I Ill/
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YORK, N. Y.
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The
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To make concrete construction successful requires proper proportions of the ingredients, in&gent application, good design and careful workmen. All these are important, but the most important of all is to get the right cement.
Portland Cement is a general term, like flour or woolen. Atlas Portland Cement is the best kind of Portland Cement that can be made. By having your architect specify Atlas, you will get a building material that has all of the good qualities. This will give you a house that is fireproof, sanitary, cool in summer, waTm in winter; which reduces coal bills, fire insurance, cost of painting, repairs and upkeep. This same material-that is, Atlas Portland enable you to beautify your placeCement -will building walks, fences, terraces and all the other details of building which go to make a country place
THE
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the ~~~9 (sent free), is a book valuable to every present or prospective builder of a house or country place. Other books that will interest You ax:
Concrete Houses&Cottages.Vol. 1. LargeHouses. $1.00 Vol. II.Small Houses. 1.00 Concrete in Hiahway Construction.. . . . 1.00 Concrete in Railroad Construction. .. . . . 1.00 Reinforced Concrete in Factory Construction .lO (delivery charge) Free ..... . . oncrete Cottages.. 2.00 : onerete Country Residences (out of print). . . .
Atlas is the brand of Portland Cemenf purchased Government for use in building the Panama Canal.
by the
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BGlt of aevrr.d layers with are pe&ct doors. the grain running crosswise, making shrinking, warping or swelling impossible. Veneered in all varieties of hardwood-birch, plain or quartersawed red or white oak, brown ash, &hogany. Morgan Doorsarelight, remarkablystrongand absolutely perfect in every detail of construction. Each Morgan Doorisstamped~~2lorganwhich guaranteesquality,style, durabiliryandsatisfaction.
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The first adjuster successfully invented to make Casement Windows (swinging out) not only beautiful but practical in all climates and all seasons where flies and mosquitoes abound.
A child can operate it in the dark without disturbing screen, shade or storm sash, locking it securely, closed or open at any angle to catch a breeze.
OUR FREE CASEMENT HAND-BOOK TELLS ALL ABOUT IT AND ALL YOU OUGHT TO KNOW ABOUT CASEMENTS
CASEMENT HARDWARE
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Craftsman in Hardwood
Designs Floors
In Craftsman houses, the money that is usually expended for superfluities in the way of characterless decorations and impractical floor-coverings, is devoted to the lavish use of hardwood. And the most important use of hardwood is for floors. Have you ever priced high grade made-to-order carpets? Then have you compafed these prices with those of beautiful, inlaid floors. ) If so you know that the greatest simplicity and directness of the use of 3ur native woods under-foot are not the only qualities that recommend them for your home. MoreYou can lay fine parquetry flooring at practically the same cost as a good carpet. They last a life time. over Wood Mosaic Floors require no renewing. We make a specialty of the simple designs, ship-decking, Indian borders, and other styles recommended by the Editor of THE CRAFTSMAN. In addition we have countless harmonizing and appropriate designs of our own, as well as reproductions and adaptations from the elaborate floors from the palaces of 1Surope and the mansions of America.
Wood- Mosaic
A
Floors
From our own forest in Indiana comes the beautiful Quartered White Oak, which is the basis of our work. In addition, we carry many other domestic and imported woods. Woods of nearly every color are represented in our assortment. From our forests to your floors, each step We operate our of the work is our own. own saw mills and lumber yards, where woods are cut and seasoned. Thus we are enabled to provide raw material so far ahead as to insure thoroughly seasoned, perfectly dry flooring. We keep our flooring in heated rooms until the moment of shipment. It is always in perfect condition. Ordinary lumber-yard flooring is left out in open sheds until it is ready to be used. Thus it becomes saturated with moisture. Such floors warp, twist. and shrink. Unsightly cracks appear which afford a lodging place for dirt.
storage rooms until the. moment of shipment. That is why our floors with intelligent Hidden care will not warp, twist or crack. flaws will not develop, for none exist. Moreover, they have a lasting beauty and permanence that make them the most perfect of all floors. We have agents in the large cities who are flooring experts. Where we have no agents, a skillful carpenter can lay these floors by following our plans and instructions for laying and finishing. Send us a rough sketch of rooms, with accurate measurements, and we will give you exact estimate of cost of the flooring.
Write for Our Free Book --, Whether you are going to build a new home or remodel your old home, you should have This our handsome new book of designs. book consists of photographs t&en direct from the floors, and shows the natural-wood colors. It also contains valuable information on what to seek and what to avoid in hardwood floors. Write for it today.
NO FLOORS
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Wood-Mosaic Floors are seasoned and They are kept in heated kiln - dried.
Wood
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Feltoid Casters
Protect your Floors and Ilugs FELTOlD CASTERS will not. cannot war or scratch or tear. If you equip your fumitore with them you can move it as easily, as often as you please without the trace of a scratch or scrape on your floors I wear or tear on we* your finest rugs. ,Be on every pirce of
The
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Hand-
PEQUOT
They stand
RUGS
Simplicity
Craftsman
in a class by themselves-The
Where artistic effect and durability are desired at only a moderate price these Rugs are without a superior. We produce a larger, better and more elaborate range of colors which are wholesome and agreeable. We are the oldest established in this line of weaving.
Send stamfl for booklet
TtiE
BURNS
6r BASSILK
__.
GO. \ *.H
--
CHAS.
42 Yantia Road,
H. KIMBALL
Norwich Town, Conn.
Hardwood
QUARTERED QUARTERED PLAIN POPLAR OAK and BLACK
Lumber
WHITE RED OAK OAK
WALNUT
Manufactured
to please
LOUISVILLE,
KY.
Kindly
mention xxiv
The Craftsman
www.historicalworks.com
ESTIMONY from -4ctual Users - From Decorators of thirty and forty years experience - From Managers of Hotels - From You can read anywhere the claims Owners of Handsome Homes. But read HERE that other floor finishes make for themselves. what the REAL USERS-the practical people, who have made actual The plain story of their experiences-the comparison-say for US. unbiased re ort of their comparison-is the best recommendation that 8 ON FLOOR FINISH could have. FARRING
The testimony of these experienced users speaks stronger for FARRIHGTOH FLOOR FINISH than anything we could say for ourselves. Supported by the testimony of people who have used it under man varying conditions, we make the fo Y lowing important claims for Farrington Floor Finish: I.---It is more convenient to use. z-Rooms can be used practically without interruption. 3.-Any handy help can apply it. 4.-Dries in an hour. S.-Has no annoying or sickenin smell,, as is the case with varnfs I! or pamt. 6.-Does not scratch white. 7.-1s not marked white by water. S.-Is not brittle. 9.-Is not slippery, glassy or dan~TO,IS to walk on.
ro.-Holds its beauty longer-no constant polishing. II.-Gives a hard elastic surface. ~a.-Does not gather dirt. r3.-Can be cleaned easily with a damp rag. I+-Gives longer service. lg.-Needs no constant renewing, as is the case with wax, oil or shellac finish. r6.-Renewing is easier, quicker, other and costs lass than any 17.-No costly heavy expense for stripping the old coat away when Farrington Floor Finish is renewed. r&-Simply mo ping the old coat of Farrington F Poar Finish away with denatured alcohol is all that is needed to prepare the floors for a new coat. 19.-Any scrub woman can prepare the floor for refinishing.
zo.-Places that get unusu;l~ wear-pathways on IltWY floor-can he touched up easily with a few minutes work, from month 10 month, or from week to week, if necessary, without requiring you to go over the whole floor. This is imnossible with shellac and many other finishes. zr.-The fact that rooms can be in practically uninterrupted use by quests and members of the family, is important, both in hotels and clubs, as well as in the home. za.-Guest rooms can be finished between breakfast and lunch. z3.-Dining rooms can be finished after supper and will be ready to walk on hours before breakfast. Every one of these statements is backed by the testimony of people who have found out these facts by tl-rir own actual use of Farrington Floor Finish.
WHAT
ACTUAL
USERS
SAY
FOR US
Farrington Floor Finish when he first used it, as he was afraid it would not work. Now he wants nothing else. He tells me it goes a good deal further than varnish. Hereafter I shall use nothing else, and you will hear from me from time to time with other orders. YOU are at liberty to publish this letter, as I know that all who are in the hotel business would want it.-W. H. WINGATE, Manager, RICH~~ONDWELLINGTON HOTEL. EAST BZTTIIEL, VT. - Farrington Floor Finish has given me very good
NEW YORK Crw.-Having tried l:arrinaton Floor Finish on oak floors and woodwork, our . finds it more desirable than t e finish he has been using. Its appearance is very good. We have found it very satisfactory in every respect. -DAVID H K~ort . . . . ..et T TEL EARLL~ 103 Wkerly Place: THE 36 Washington Square $%fY*~e Jvoson, 53 Washington S&e.
NOBTK
rington anything
ADAMS, Mass.-I !ind FarFloor Finish superior to in the varnish Qne CSP
cially for bathrooms, as there is no smell, and as it is quick drying. I can do a bathroom while the gllests are at breakfast, and they do not notice the change until they go into the room, and-are amazed -at the absence of varnish smell. For door sills, and around the edges of rugs, I find that nothing can surpass Farrington Floor Finish. It certainly is a boon to the hotel man who wants to keep his house looking fresh and clean all the time and who also desires to lessen his expenses in a great many ways.. My house man called my attention to
Farrington
Kindly mention The Craftsman XXV
www.historicalworks.com
BEST
FLOOR
FINISH
EVER
USED
satisfaction. I applied it to m fJJ;i f myself. I am not a painter. it on a kitchen, a dining room. and a sitting room. TWO of these floora were hardwood-birch and maple. The other was Georgia quartered I also used it over oilcloth pine. and linoleum in another dining room. I find your finish dries quickly, and, while the cost is about the SCOIIC as any other I have investigated, it is very economical to use. The only other kind I have actually used was but with every new can I bought it seemed to be poorer qual::feyy ;oeerruend ,it w=aT;ly;; w;; the same as Farrington Finish, but it did not begin to cover the space,
with it, in&din the floors whi$ tiit. were of North $3arolins suits were remarkable. The interio; trim was of North Carolina hard ine; the doors were Washington r. I had them use one coat of raw 1 linseed oil and two coats of Farrington Finish, both coats being applied by men who were not regular painters. All of these woods. after the varnish dried, became very rich and soft looking and with an even surface-an effect which I have
you have ever found. I am sendin another order for Farrington %l oar Finish to be used on one of the finest places here. I wilt recommend it to all my friends.L. ABBOTT. The Young Mens E* lub has used thirty-seven gallons of Farrington Floor Finish on their new clubhouse. This s eaks pretty well for Farring. oar Finish. The first twelve ton F P gallons must have proved satisfactory, as they reordered twenty-four gallons in one order. Mr. May. nard and Mr. Abbott say that they never saw anything equal to Farrington Floor Finish. LYNN, Mass-1 have used Far. rington Floor Finish for the past eighteen months in the Oxford Club at Lynn. and have used it also on othei floors, and in every case where it has been used it has given the best satisfaction. 1. used it on J,yd ----&;$e;m;;k$=ch had be== *=d IfhrvT were always turning white. moved this old wax and shellac and applied Farrington Floor Finish and he has never had any trouble &ce. At the club, especially on the smoking+xm floor, we had atways used wax, and it required twelve to fifteen pounds to go over it, and it was never s2tisfactorv. Since using Farrington FIoor Finish on it, J have never had any farther tronble.ALBERT RENDRICK, care of Oxford Club, Lynn.
BOSTON. MASS.-I have recently used your new Farrington Floor Finish, treating a red birch wood. I found great satisfaction in the ease with which it is applied-one can cover the same space in much less time. As it sets or dries with rapidity, its use insures a saving of time and a good surface-heel-nails or other injury do not discolor the surface. There is sufficient gloss to give the surface the same appearance as wax but is entirely free from being slippery, which is very desirable-rugs or mats will stay in their places surprisingly well upon its surface. It is free from unpleasantness in its application after a very brief time-and one can touch up such nlaces as are most used witboat the necessity of covering the entire floor. While all can he readily cleaned with a damp rap and its lustrc restored-I shall he pleased to recommend its use to my clients. --C.. WTLTON Lewrs, Architect.
spots that get the most wear. Its quick-drying quality makes it porr sible to do that at night, the room being ready for use the next morning.. That fact alone, in my mind, is enough to discount all the other floor preparations. I have had my patience sorely tried with the other finishes.-HAa0r.n V. ALLRN.
LYNN, Mass.-Several weeks ago I bought of W. H. Hutchinson, Lynn some of your Floor Finish, and have finished several floors in my house with it. I am more than pleased, and cannot say enough for It Is far beyond my expecta&IS. We commenced to strip the floors of the old varnish about I oclock, and finished at 4. At 6 oclock we were walking on the floors, and the next day we were dancing on them. We could not see a white scratch on the floor. Before applying the finish we bleached they were our floors, and before thoroughly dry we applied the finish. After they were fimshed. and up to the present time, they have not shown any signs of turning white from moisture. I can recommend Farrington Floor Finish to anyone who wants a first-class floor fmish. --JOHN CALLACIXAN, hn?ntor, ESsex Machine Co., Lynn, Mass.
Rugs stay in place better-**Not dangerous or glassy *-*Wont show laps **-** No constant attention needed No waiting for floors to dry -No bad smells --Costs less per year-- Looks better and keeps on looking better I
I
never been able to obtain with any other varnish in the market.-& w*Im J. DOIIERTY, counssllor at Law, 365 Washington Street.
SOMERVILLIS, MASS.-Your Floor Finish is the bestI have ever used -dries quickly, will not show laps, and will not scratch like most of the other varnishes. I use two barrels every month and know that I can save money by using your varnish and give the people, for whom I do the work, the best of satisfaction. It is first-class for old and new work.-Coriveasz C. C~rw: C. Cain & Co., Painters and Decorators, 11 Loring Street.
MAGNOLIA, MASS.-I would not recommend any other if Farrin on Floor Finish could be had. I $ ave used thirty-seven gallons of Farrington Floor Finish on the floors of the Young Mens Club, Magnolia, Mass., and we have perfect floors. It has not changed the color of the whitest maple, and wears like iron. In forty minutes we were walking over the floors without the slightest inury whatever. It is not sli ery. d e tried Farrin $ on Floor flPnish on our bowling a eys. The bowler, in starting down the bed, naturally slides. But with Farrington Floor Finish on the floor be could not, as it brought him up with a round turn. We did not like it there (therefore waxed on top of Farrington Finish), but this is no objection to its being used on other floors, but, rather, it is one of the strongest points in its favor. I have been in the paint business over thi and this 1s the best floor =% %rr;
3.4
MAICHESTER, MASS.-I am much oleased with your Floor Finish. I have tried a number of kinds, but yours aives the best satisfaction. I find that Farrington Floor Finish rrives a fine gloss and is not sli pew. It keeos the floors in fine con Brtion. -c. 0. Lee. RosyoN.-Through a Boston attorney I was introduced to Farrington I had the inside Floor Finish. woodwork of two houses finished
School
Street.
EAST WAREHAM, MASS.--I have been in the house painting business about 30 years and have finished m..yy floors, in many ways, and in R~V~P my opinion of your Farrington Floor Finish (after having given it a very severe test) I think I cover it all when I state that it has been mqre sajisfactory t\an any other ;udk-drymq floor fimsh I have ever .-I. F. WXWlTEYoRE.
Flo.ors
Kindly mention xxvi The Craftsman
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BEST
FLOOR
FINISH
EVER
USED
BOSTON~ M.us.-Send me two alions Farrm on Floor Finish, l%at a ast year has wthstood purchased the wear in a most satisfactory manCY. It does not show the- dust. My women did my office beautifully while I was out on a call, and the g;;Tzw Edr on my return.-DR. Street E OVELL, Wilkes Dispensary. BOSTON, Mass.-We arc gIad to say to you that, from the use of Farrin ton Floor Finish in apartment a ousts, we are having very satisfactory results. We consider it, by all accounts, the best floor finish we have used. Yours truly, ALVORD Rnos. & Co., Real Estate, 79 Milk Street. WEST SOMERVILLE MASS.-I have used Farrington Fin?sh since it was first introduced into this section. I have used many different kinds, but Farringtons for mine. I used it on all my floors and it is the only finish I ever found that I could use on my bathroom sheathing that wouldnt turn white from the steam. I was paying a aintcr $1.2 er year to keep my kite Ren floor poP. Ishedone gallon can of Farringtons and a little of mv own time does the same work. -1 put it on at night and in the morning it is as hard as flint and I have never had it stick or discolor the wood.-H. H. DAVIS, 32 Hawthorne Street.
NORTH ANDOVER, MASS. -I first heard of Farrington Floor Finish through a newspaper advertisement. We had our painter apply it on a clean maple floor. We find it is the finish we have
found that it was all that was claimed. After that time they never used anything else while I was with them, and I believe they arc using it yet. I know you have a big succcss coming to you with Farrington Floor Fimsh.-M. H. DONN,ELLY, Anti uc and Modern Furniture, 237 Bowjoin Street. LUDLOW, VT.--Let me testimony to the superior of Farrington Floor Finish other finishes I have ever add
qualities
my
used it on floors that I have painted and grained. also on a dinin -room Hoor which I had painted blat a , and can assure you that I am perfectly satisfied with your finish. I have had 40 years experience in the painting business and I consider your floor finish a boon to painters, as the floor qu+on is one of the proposltlos .we run .up I have appbed the fimsh myself and find it easy to apply, works freely, dries in an hour so it can be walked on. No bad smell, and gives the appearance of a waxed floor. I have recommended it to the S. N. E. Tel. Co.-EDGAR N. RICH,
necorat0r. WINSLOW, N. J.-We have used your Farrington Floor Finish, and among all the floor finishes we have employed we can truly say that vows is unexcelled. We arc not afraid to pronounce it the very best in the market. You may use this letter as you see fit, publish it, or show it-as we only state the plain it.-IouLaoua IN THE truth in PINES, C. R. DEMON,TGORD.
wont for busy rooms and hard use - Gives a rich effect I ocver could get before - * Saves labor, time and annoyance
it -&* Water
best floor
. We are oleased to recommwd it to any per&n who is desirous of having nice floors.DAIIS & FURBER MACHINE Co.
DORCHESTER, Mass.-Let me write a good word for you in praise of your Farrington Floor Fimsh. For refinishing old floors of rooms that arc in constant use, your finish Folks caves all kinds of trouble. J do work for have asked many times what materials I have hsed as they wrant some for their own use. I think the s ecially commendable Floor Finpoints about 2 arrington ish are--I,.its durability--z, its body -3, its qmck drying qualitws-4, its freedom from varnish odors-5, its CCOO*Y. In fact I find that, for my line of work, there is mr comparison between any of the other floor finishes and Farrington Finish. It would ;; m.morc general use I amters generally un%%?d har Bwood finishing and if they were not afraid to tackle an I ran across a sample innovation. of your finish when I was with the Shawmut Furniture Company and
have been in the business 40 years. During that time I have tried every kind of finish that is known to the trade. I will testify to the exact truth to every one of the claims I see you arc makin in your advertisements, and I w 7 1 stand read to prove it. I have clipped and %ept your advertisement to show my customers. And I add something you have not mentioned. I recommend my customers to use Farrington Finish in places where shellac is used. It is a better filler. It goes on smoother. It does not raise the grain. And it does not color the most delicate wood. It is ten times more elastic than any other finish. It does not cost more than one-third. I have tried Farrington Floor Finish on all kinds of fine grained woods, and it bears up so perfectly that I can do a first-class job with one coat for filler and two finishing It wont scratch white like coats. shellac and all other fillers will. The difference between Farrington Floor Finish and all others is its durability, lower cost of up-keep, its beauty, convenience, and case of application. Costs less than half, wears twice as long, work of appl ing it is reduced one-half, cost an % labor of keeping it in condition is insignificant. It has given en&x satisfaction to everg one P have ever used it for.P. SAUNDERS, Decorator and Painter. EAST HAMFTON, CONN.- -I wish to inform yru tlwt I am hignly leased with the Barrington Floor $*mish. I have used it on old oak floors with perfect success. I have also
SOUTH B~AINTRE~J, MASS.-I have used many kinds of Floor Finish and can say that yours certainly comes up to all expectations. I have used it on birch and pine floors and I find it does all YOU claim it will In all ways it-gives great satisdo. faction.-I,. B. BARNI@. KENNEBUNKPORT. M&-We have lc$q< the needof a good Floor This season we have used F&ri&ton Floor Finish and have found it far superior to anything we have ever used. It is easily apt olied, looks well, very durable,. and is not expensive.-Saave:Y & CAMPBELL.
YORK BEACH, Me.-1 have given your finish a good test on my kitchen floor. I find that it is all right in every particular and all that you claim it to be. In fact, it is the
I have ever found with-
My customers are all pleased with it.-J. B. PAUL, Hardware and Paints.
LYNN, MASS.-I was looking for a finish to ap ly to a newly-laid oak floor in a bat K room, something that water would not spot, and was induced to try the Farrington Floor Finish and I was so well pleased with it that I have continued to use it ever since on all my wood floors that I had been applymg shellac to previously, and I shall continue to use it, as it is easily applied, does not stain the wood, is free from odor and is not so slippery as a Furthermore, it is waxed surface. so easily cleaned, and can be SO quickly applied and the floor is so soon in condition to walk on that I consider it an ideal finish for hardwood floors.-E. J. THOMPSON.
Farrington
Kindly mention The Craftsman
xxvii
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BEST
FLOOR
FINISH
EVER
USED
MILPO~D, N. H.-We find Farrington Floor Finish will do all you claim. When I placed my first rder, you will remember I told u I would test it personally be r ore recommending it to my trade. One of my customers, a painter, was putting new floors 1x1 his house and consented to try it. He is very much pleased with the result and will use Farrington Finish regularly. He says it is the best floor finish he has ever used and he has been in business 3 years. YOU are at liberty to use this letter.-CHARLES R. Dolce. Hardware and Paints, 1<merson Building, South Street. &iarr,V~,LE, R. I.-To be honest and just I feel I should say that the I:arrington Floor Finish we purrbased from you has given us better satisfaction and value than any other finish.-EucEN.E I,ESSI\RD, Rector, St. James Church.
It costs considerably less, is easy to apply and costs nothing to renew or keep in condition. I like the appearance it gives and find no odor after using it. My first trial of Farrinaton Floor Fmish was made because somebody sent me a postal card telling me about it. I tried it on hard pine floor in a dining room, on which several different kinds of finish had been used. It gave the
your Farrington Finish a great time saver and consequently more economical. We have used it throu hout the whole house. the floors %eing of maple. We applied the finish ourselves.-J. H. PERRY.
EASTON, Pa.-We have used ou,r Farrington Floor Finish on I library and parlor, the floors bei& laid .in soft pine. F!oors had been ~ymusly covered wth finThm was removed and your finish was applied by a painter. We like the floor covering b:tter than any we hare ever used. It is as bright now as the day it was put on -had no bad smell-is not shppery. I have nothing but praise for it.I?ASTN KENNEY, sAN,ITARIIJM, c.
HABTPOBD, CONN. Farrington Floor Finish is the best 1 ever used on any kind of work.-Gee. F. GEENIE~, 244 Jefferson Street.
PROVINCETOWN, MASS.-1 have found Farringtoo Floor Finish thoroughly satisfactory in every rcspect.-THE NEW CF:NTFZALHOUSE, I. E. POTTER. Proprietor.
Count how many say in plain wordsThe Best I Ever Used * -They have tried other kinds-and they know what they arc talking aboutThey have nothing to gain by overstating the facts
SPENCER
M.D.
of
satisfaction.-F.
N. FinJ.
BBOCKTON, Mass.-1 must say that Farrington Floor Finish has given great satisfaction, drying hard in about one hour. I find it ives a fine hlstre. Though it is a% nt three months since it was applied, the floors are in perfect condition at this time.-C. E. BURTON. CONWAY, MAss.--Barrington Finish wears the best of
finishes I have all the known.
NEW YORK CITY.-I tried 6 als. of Farrington Floor Finish in f une of this year. Since then I have ordered two cases of IZ gals. each. I find your floor finish far superior to varnish, shellac and other floor finishes which I have used. It does noit sccech pr leave white marks. ulckly and leaves P ssy surface, a smooth, hard, g not slippery nor dangerous to work LIP. It is easily applied, and has no disagreeable odor. I can thoroughly recommend it to per.sons who want nice floors.-THE D~rxous~e, P. A. MACINTYRE, Supt. CONCORD, MASS.-We have used Farrington Floor Finish and find it very good indeed. -COLONIAL
INS, W. ROLLINS.
Floor
floor
ever
RIDGEFIELD, COW.-I find Farrington Floor Finish gives very good satisfaction. We have used it on both new and old floors. We saw at our first trial of it that we could finish floors with it immediately after floors were completed, thus avoiding waste of time. We were in a great hurry to get our house ready for occupancy, and we found
your
The fact that we have proved this to others must certainly indicate to you that the matter will repay
irtvestigotion.
To FARRINGTON COMPANY, Dept. G. S., Metropolitan Tower, New York City. Under your Guarantee of Satisfaction or Money Back, I send you, enclosed, $2.50, for -which send e 0~ G?llon o.f Farrtngton Flopr Ftn, wth hrtef, clear, defimte rn-
structions for the Farrington Method of Finishing Floors. In return for our Guarantee of Satisfaction or J ney Back, I promise that the materials will be used only according to the Farrington Method. Signed .......................... Name of House or Firm.. . . . . . . . . . Address ......................... Shipping Directions . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . My Dealers Name and Address.. .. Have you ever used the Farrington Method or Farrington Floor Finish before? .................... Address your trial order thus:FARRINGTON. COFPANY, Dept.&S3~;tropohtan Tower, hlakers of Fluid Gloss floor polish, and Liquid I,ustre for furniture and fine varnished surfaces.
Farrin&ton
Kindly mention The Craftsman xxv111
...
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Heating System
Look into it, IZOW,whether you are building fashioned, inefficient heating apbaratus. The pound of coal, leaving nothing but fine white By a scientific plan of circulation, it ashes. gets the heat from the fire and distributes it, through steam or hot water radiators, with As a result it will remarkable efficiency. keep the whole house comfortable day and to night, in all weather, and save one-third It one-half of the coal ordinarily consumeq. is doing this now in thousands of homes. It will -do it *for you. Get an estimate on home from any reputable heating your plumber or steamfitter. book that tells all about Or write to us for a the Model System. or worrying along with some oldMode1 thoroughly consumes every
MODEL
Model
76-76
Heating
Company
The Ledom is as good a kitchen range as the Model is a heating systemwhich is saying a great deal. alone saves half of the usual coal con-
Tks
Kindly mention The Craftsman
Model
Boiler
xxix
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1Ocean Fish
in Gloucester, to your home
Direct from the wharf
you know, what make of heating apparatus is installed in the majority of the He will teil you that homes he has built.
Richardson6 j+pton
Fresh Warm Air Heaters and Steam or Hot Water Boilers
are heating more homes than any country. public other buildings make in and this
Send
for
Descriptive
Price
List
Do not overlook the vital importance to the health of your family, of efficient apparatus for the heating and ventilating of your home. Before closing your specifications, let us show you the immeasurable superiority of Richardson & Boynton Heaters.
We sAaZZ be @zsed to smd ORrepcst our latest booR- The Tmth Ahut
Ifeatix~,
g-z~ifrg i7#wnratiun
06u2d
Richardson & Boyatoa Co.. Fresh Warm Air Haters Richardson Boilers for Steam or Hot Water Heating Richardson & Boynton Co. I Perfect Cooking Ranges
Treasure Chest
is a positive household necessity for DrOfecfinP fine. furniture. sent
BQS!??
BOSTON I
damp.
kercp w&os.
TRIAL
rfigsex
with p$vilege of wtum. if unsatisfamry; all delivery al>d enaea pad by us. Ptlce s24.50 prepatd naat of Ideal wedding. birthday or Xmas gift. Write at once Iver. fnr illustrntnl catalog.
f& and ~ahable fabrics from moths, dust and It is the most useful article ever produrrd in CICPXM.artistic direct from factory to home on I I days FREE
.I?
I
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What Make
HIS is a black-and-white reproduction of the decorators colored drawing showing one of the bedrooms in our Model House treated with SherwinWilliams Products. If you look at the colored reproduction in our Model House portfolio, you will be charmed 111 with the attractiveness of this bedroom. doing this you must not overlook the fact that this issimply an ordinary square bedroom, without any attractive architectural details such as are found in thousands of houses all over the countrytoday. The attractivenessof!heroom is due to the judicious and intelligent use of color. The ceilings and walls are treated with Flat Tone, the frieze is stenciled, the floor is hard pine stained, the woodwork is enameled white. Then with the selection of draperies and rugs suggested by our Decorative Service,
Stencils and Stencil Materinls is tile title of a little book which tells how to decora+ with stencils. !3ent free.
SHER
w/N$~(//
1~~s
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withstands the severest wear and tear-the Lcontinual walking, the scraping of -chair legs, the weight of heavy furniture, the hard romping of children-all of this it will withstand, without crack\ > ing, peeling, or turning white.
That is why we saytest it yourself.
\ L
Hit it with a hammer or stamp on it with your heeZ-you may dent the wood but you cant crack orgeelthe
And our other varnishes for every purpose are just as good as 61. Ask for The All Star Line.
xxxii
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you ever get hold of a varnish that would dry hurd in half an hour - and wouldnt show scratches or heel prints ? Did you ever see a shellac that wouldnt pull or crawl before you could get it spread ? lap,
Try Under-Lac
Over stain, dye, filler or on YOU can USC it wherever >rou would use shellac or varnish. bare wood. To brighten up old varnished, oiled or shellacked surfaces. To preserve and beautify linoleum, oil cloth, etc.
Till not lap, pull or crawl. Gives More artistic -more satiswork. in every way than shellac or varnish -and COS!S less. Gallon cans, each $2.50. Under-kc is made of pure gum and spirits. to the recentremovalof the Revenue Tax. we are enabled to use Denatured Dries hard in a half-hours time.
1 that formerly sold for $2.60 per gallon -can now be bought for 4%.
One test mill convice vou that Under-Lac the world for its purlws&
hasnt an equal in
Kindly
mention
xxx111
The ...
Craftsman
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Fosters
A Dream
IDEAL
of
Luxury
Spring
It gently yields to the pressure of thr body I exact proportIon to werght, conforms perfectly to every carve, thus gw1ng perfect support at all points. It 1, a double-decker -two spn s in one; does not roll to the centera % never sags like woven-wile and other spnngs. A prmless boon to invalids; a dehghtful luxury for all. Made ather upholstered or ulain. Extensivelv uv=d hv Imdinrr hot&-its merits se&e and retain pat-
7
-
-.
-
St., Utica. N. Y.
11 Cabots
Shingle
Stains
not only beautify your house, hut thoroughlv preserve They are mode of Crt,owte, the best wood I hc \hrgles. walls prewrvntwe known. and thousands of roofs--and al ,o--ha\, lwrn s+a~ne<l an<1 i~rewrvrd by them. Send Free. for Samples of Wood and Cwculurs.
Inc.,
Dyke Mill Bayberry Made by hand from stri&ly Dips. pure, dark green, bayberry
wax, without either dye or adulterant. $1.45 brings a sample dozen to your fireplace or dining-table. THE DYKE MILL, Montague,Massachusetts. Dyers, Weavers and Furniture Makers.
I
SMOKY FIREPLACES
No matter how handsome, the fireplace is a This fault failure if it smokes in the room. can be avoided in your new house.
Send for our Hints on Fireplace Construction, eontannng reliable rules for the prr lortioninp of fire. places and flues, and catalogue of our Ereplace Throats and Dampers, Iron Coal Windows, etc.
THE
H. W.
COVERT
NEW
YORK
CO.
.--.__
For durable painting of all kinds u\e Kational Lead Companys Pure White Lead (Dutch Roy Painter trade mark). a NatIonal Lead Company.
Infornmtion on
request.
111Broadway.
N.Y.
GUSTAVSTIC CEY, The Craftsman, 41W. 34th St., New York City
iOFH+HARfF
~~)RMm;;---INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
Mosteconomical. healthful and s:itisfacto~.f~olclor new floors-different patterv to match furnishings-outwear carpets. Stocks carried in leading cities. Prices and catalogue of design FREE THE INTERIOR MANUFACTURERS, HARDWOOD COMPANY,
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mention vvviv
The
Craftsman
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MURDOCK-SHAW
124 FEDERAL STREET : :
CO.
BOSTON, MASS.
.4 A DUTCH One SCENE IN INLAID WOOD Owr Hzczdrcd Patterns i~z Tlood
A Xantei
For
MISSION, Con
Also Interior and
COLONIAL.
Finish On Hand
ETC.
and To Or&
Boston
104-108
CAjYDLESTICKS
Brass
Utica
OF
Andiron
Boston,
HIGHEST
IC&rior
Street.
Mass.
FIjVISH I
J. W.
14 HAYMARKET
BAILEY
SQ.
G9eSONS
CO.
BOsrOl
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c I
is the keynote of Ostermoor superiority. The Ostermoor Mattress is built up layer upon layer, with absoI c lutely uniform and resili. _ softness . The filmy ency from one end to the other. sheets that are the units in making an Ostermoor are spun thin as tissue-it takes over four thousand of these sheets to make the
T Built-Not . Stuffed 8
he Ostermoor Phrase,
booklet.
F. W. BIRD
Our book, The Test of Time. contains proof of Osrermoor merit and 1s handsome as eel1 as consincmc; contains over 200 illustrations-about beds; about slecpsomc thiws you will wish you had known low ae. Of course, if alno explains the mer~fs and styles of Osrermoor Manresses. Church Cushiona. etc. This book CS~S you only a postal card; with it Sleep on an Ostcrmoor Mattress for a we (end free samplea of tickinp. monrb-thcn. of for any reason youre dissatisfied. well return even
pennyof yourmoney.
HENRY
COPP
L.
WILSON
Los Angeles. Cal.
Bldg.
OAK
FLOORING
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The
Craftsman
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ERSONAL attention to the selection of hardware trimmings will k to your advantage if you are building orremodeling a home .^ and durability of the ia%:: the style of architecture with which 1 . It is to harmonize, your architects advice and your own taste should all e considered in determining the design. The result is certain to be entirely satisfactory if the chosen pattern is selected from
VI b
r- I de
wll enable you to make your selection from a number of patterns especially designed for the style of architecture you prefer. patterns illustrated will offer a wde choice. THE free-shows Door Handles. Cut Class Knobs. Knockers, etc. Address
COLONIAL B,-a,wTh~
.=v=n?v andmOr=
SARGENT 5 COMPANY,
158
100
TrueBungalow Plans
Our cabinet latchens. mantels, buffets, fireplaces, If cozy corners. etc., have been ccqned everywhere. of building, send for a copy of you are thinkin BUNGALOWC lf AFT the new book with 212 illustrations, dtxcriptmns, costs, etc.. of exteriors, plans, inside arrangements, fireplaces, mantels. buffets. cozy corners and nooks. doors, lighting fixtures. etc., and REMEMBER the BUNGALOW can be built just as snug and warm as any other style of house and IS adapted to any climate or location. z3UNGALOWCRAFT * costs $1 .OO per copy. postSample pages 10 cents. laid, to any address, h undreds of plans in stock or made to order a.~ YOU wisi. them.
The California Bungalow is a Home to Live 19-a comfortable, economical dwelling. Iti graceful lines are being adopted by people of artistic taste everywhere. They are suited to all climstes and surrcandings. If you intend to build a Home to Live In xv or later, get Home Builders collec5.u of 100 homes (not houses) including floor plans and elevations, exGet them direct from California terion and interiors. Builders and they will be authentic. This book gives more ideas about building 1, lg and 2 story bungalows and furnishing them than any other work published. Plans, together with full specifications, can be purchased of Home Builders at low cost. This collection shows how we live in California-you can have a Home to Live In just like our homes. 100 plans. post paid, for $1.00. Write for them now.
HOME BUILDERS
421 Mason LOS Opera House Building ANGELES, CALIF.
THE
BUNGALOWCRAFT
CO.
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The Craftsman
xxxvii
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Better Kind of
OOKS and feels LX-
Northrop,
Coburn
& Dodge
Co.
Est. 1884.
TaDestrolea
Have Paneled Walls
ad~ocatrd hardwoud as the most satisfying mear~ of breaking up lure spares into more siehfly panels. because of the structural effect &en by tbc cross pieces outliniur: the panels and thr beautiful friendly linirlr of which the wowl is cap2blc. So far. in spite of ifs alnost prohibitive cost. oak or a similar word has had to be employrd for this purpose. Now. however. at the cat of hieb-class aall paprr. at ax-fifth the cost of wood and at a price within the retch of all. panrled walls are to br bnd in rolls. The name of tbis patented product. imported from Austria. is
Wood-Kruste. Wood-Krusta
is made of wood fibre subircted to great pressure Tbis makes of it for all practical purposes sheets of beaotihard wood oanrlinp wbicb mav be rasilv aoolicd to anv
funirure. Wood-Krusta is bcttrr than oak. It will not split. warp or crack. It takes stain hew-r than wood. Arr you going to fix over some of your rooms 110 vou expect to build? thisF~IIor ncvt spring? of so.dont fail to WC samples of WoodNothing at anything Krusta h&x d&ding on your wall covering. Krusta is especially like its cost will add so much to a room. Wood Pr!ce appropriate for dininn rooms. halls. stairways. dons and libraries. pm yard (30 incbrs wldr) 7.50. If your decorator cannot supply it send for our free samples write fur them at once. and SUgPICStCtl treatments.
Remember the namemark it well and insist upon JUST THIS BRAND when you select your WALL COVERINGS. TAPESTROLEA has for more than twenty years been the Standard Wall Covering for people of taste and refinement. For wear and artistic qualities it stands unequalled. The name, however, must be brought to your attention by the dealer to insure obtaining the genuine. We w-ill send you a handsome illustrated booklet and samples on request.
FRANTZ
WALL
(iolr Atxm
PAPER
for Amrnra)
COMPANY
York. N. Y.
Dept. C-3.4
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mention
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s inJ&venWhll F
with
damp
sponge
or cloth.
Art Ko-Na cloth-newest of Wiggins famous Fab-Rik-0-Na creations-affords unlimited possibilities for exquisite wall effects. Delicate colors and tones in splendid variety, novel texture and remarkable durability make this covering the finest ever created for artistic wall treatment. Send for Art Ko-Na booklet of samples.
lrltR
l?TTZ
3-NA
KO-NA
are the worlds standard. The include many higher grade and complete lines 0; exclusive fabrics such as Art f;o-Na
BURLAP
KORD
CANVAS
The Wiggin Burlaps have never been and other fabric hangings. successfully imitated, either in quality or in fast colorings.
Since 1895 H. B. Wiggins Sons Co. have been the acknowledged leaders i~,fnanuf?cturing .-.--* _ --.-^... - . ..^3. I^l.__^^ I.L. ._^A_ _^_,_ 1.C^L .l. n x,-*1
To have the cleanest, brightest, most laborsaving of all kitchens and pantries, get Sanitas
ANITA
THE
WALL
WASHABLE COVER I N G
-the washable covering-for the walls. Glazed like tile in plain or decorative tile designs. printed in oil colors on strong muslin. Fade-proof, stain-proof, crack-and-tear-proof. Decoratars, paper-hangers and department stores. Then get Meritas- the guaranteed oil-cloth, for the tables and shelves. Beautiful marble and decorative patterns and fancy borders. Trade-mark on back guarantees every yard. Department, house furnishing and general stores.
These materials at modest cost.
and pantry
If you wish to decorate your liming, dining. or any other rooms, write to oltr Department of Home DKWltiOlI. Describe the room or nwms, and receive free ran&s of bcaotifnl Sanitas reproductions with sketches of clever new effects STANDARD nept. P OIL 320 CLOTH COMPANY Xew Pork City Ilroadwny,
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The Craftsman
XXXIX
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1t
ARNOLD,
YOU CHOOSE WELL MAKE THE COLORS, THE RWG.
CONSTABLE
SELLING AGENTS
6; CO.
New York
I
Broadway
and
Nineteenth
Street.
Economiz
on your meat bills by cooking your food ;n
CASSEROLE
to be Waterproofed
the
recipes
Concrete is the modern lmilding material. 11 used wholly, or in part, m every Craftsman IIOUSC. But ordinary concrete lacks stability. It absorbs molsture. This moisture freezes and expands. Then it thaws. This freezing and thawing causes the concrete to disintegrate. to crack and crumble. For home building purposes concrete must be free from dampness. It must not absorb moisture. Hence it must 1~~waterproofed.
is
Aquabar
*
will thoroughly and ~wrmancntly xvaterproof concrete. It affords positive protfct.ion against an\ destructive effects of moisture. It makes concrete absolutely impervious to dampness, Aquabar will waterproof any kmd of a concrete construction-walls, basements, floors or stucco coatings. Our, engineers will give your case their personal attentloo., without charge, if you will write us the full particulars about your concrete construction. Also write for our two free booklets and learn all about water-proofing.
will envy && the hot, tasty, savory and served in these five quaint snub Theyll all want to learn how to cook Casserole and En Marmite.
S*nd
vs
IT
E
$2.00
MAR
together with YOUI Dealers n&e. we will see that you get the Hbme Assortment at once. Be the first to sere a luncheon in this new style.
Rtght Now
Philadelphia,
Cities
Pa.
L
Kindly mention Xl The
Not-We also manufacture Asuabar Wash which is rondetfully effective in wcarnerproofin~ old concrete walls.
--Craftsman
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MADE
IN
AMERICA
Whittalls Rugs and Carpets have the rich lustrous sheen and deep thick pile that you We use the same find in Oriental weaves. wools that are used in Eastern countries - from Palestine, Persia, Arabia and the Himalaya Mountains. Whittalls
SPINNING -The
Oriental
fabrics
made in America.
long strands of wool are spun, doubled aniline dyes forced through the yarn give Carpets and Rugs their beautiful lasting and twisted into yarn, soft and silky as a spider-web. DYEING-Pure Whittalls WEAVING -
colors, shades and tints. talls weaves add grace and dignity to any home. range of colors purpose Carpets and Rugs are adapted The fineness and beauty expressed in WhitThe and shadings is of the widest. for living room, dining room. Our to every purse and sleeping
room, library, parlor. hall and den. Look for the name Whittalls as indicated above, wooen in the back. If your dealer cannot supply you, write to us direct, giving his name. Our illustrated booklet. The Mark of Qualihr. is full of valuable suggestions. Write for it to-day
M.tJ.
WvpFTALL
-
, I _I
MASS.
WORCEjSTtiR
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insurance know
should
put off a day looking up your policies. If they are in the Hartford dont worry. For 99 years it has promptly paid every If not in the Hartford and expire soon-as a re-
Agents Everywhere
If you will sen? for our Holiday booklet more suggestmns for unusual and
st
Kindly
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The Craftsman
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:.i F
Looks like new hardwood parquet flooring and has the same rich finish. Few detect the difference. Patterns adaptable for use in any room; makes your home beautiful, sanitary, Waxed like hardwood easy to keep clean. floors. A perfect setting for rugs. Far suPrevents floor draughts. perior to carpets. Will outwear the house itself.
I.ook for the NUWW l\irdorfcr siampeEd on c~wy yard.
RUGS
What to buy-what
to avoid
THIS interesting and profitable information is contained in a booklet just issued entitled American vs. It may be had free for the asking. Oriental Rugs.
ADDRESS
C. SAXONY
41 Union Square
Kindly mention The Creftsman
NEW YORK
xliii
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CraftsmanRugs Are Essential to Every Well Appointed Room in which Craftsman Furniture, Tapestries and Metal Work are Used.
It IS ncceswry that rugs used in rooms furnished and decorated according to h115 C.K.4F1.w.~Sidea shoultl be of simple though artistic tlesign and of soft colors to lx in harmony lrith thequiet and restful finish of the furniture; and thick enough and st.rong enough to be in accord with the atmosphere of ~lural)ility that is characteristic of every Clraftsman room. These are the distinguishing qualities of (:raftsman rugs. They are made of selected material of the best quality obtainable and for this reason will wxar :L lifetime without ever becoming \vorn in appearance or faded in color. The regular Craftsman Rug is of our on-n design and woven for us in Scotland The design from specially selected yarn. is worked out in three different color conbin&ions, one rug showing a ground work of deep leaf-green +th a design in Osgood and leather tones and the other, n-ith ;L groundwork of dark brown, almost thts color of old oak, with the design norked out in lighter wood brown and straw colors. The third with a groundwork of dark blue with the design \\orked in lighter
SllXk.;.
THE
REGULAR
CRAETS\IAN
RUG
Dimensions and prices are as follo\vs: $5.00 7%x10% 6.00 9 x12 18.00 10%x13% 12x15 feet, 660.00 feet, $26.00 feet, 36.00 feet, 47.00
OUR
NEW
RUG
Our next rug here illust.rated possesses bcautiful color combinations such as green on a background of deep brown, broken here and there with spots of a light golden brown. The rug is made of WOOI and in the following sizes and sold at the following prices i 3x6 feet, $ 5.00 9x10% feet, $26.50 6x9 feet, 15.00 9x12 feet, 30.00 For the buyer xT*ho cares to furnish his own design or one n ho needs an odd-sized rug, T7.e have the Craftsman Irish Rugs. These are made by the peasants of Ireland of the best woolen material. They are hand tufted and because of their extreme thickness and softness, yet. light weight, are especiallv desirable. Furnished in any clesign, color Or size at $13.50 a square ynrd.
GUSTAV
The Craf
STICKLEY
tsm
xliv
an
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MONC the distinctive features of interior decorations found in many old manions are the delicately vrought lighting fixtures in berfect harmony with their urroundings. HE ENOS (-0. MAKERSOSO&~PTING 16th St. & iice and factory: 7th Ave. and .lesrooms: 36 West 37th St.
II I
@ENNEN%
Kf TOILET
der.
ferred of its
BORATED
POWDER
first--talcum
by test, and
TALCUM
ffl
141
is the original-the
It is
by
the
best
powis pre-
the
uniformity
NEW YORK
Co., W. K. Cowan ;;;3d,hlichigan
Chicago:
Put
LOX. *
up
in the
San
Franc~co: 1748 Californj? St. ;xmd&: 94 hmg St.W. : Cutter & Plummer. Inc. I Seattle: Cm& Gleason 1914 Second Ave.
Sample box for 2c stamp Guaranteed by Gerharda1ennenChem. co. under the Pure Food and Drug Act, June 30. 1906. Serial No. IfA?. erhard Memen Co., Newark, N. J.
A House
LINED WITH A
As I these , and
nor
Wool
insects or checks
make in it.
their
wa)
out the
AND
dampness.
FREB
CIRCULAR
protection.
An an-tight steel tank in the basement stores the water aa it 18 pumped by hand or paver and forces lt through the mpes and faucets by aw compressed m the upper partion of the tank. No elevated or attic tanks to freeze and become stagnant. Water ke t clean and pure. Send for booKlet How 1 Solved the Water Su ply Problem. which t&s WHY. Our systems are sol s by dealers everywhere.
-.
Cross
Section
Throu,qfz
Hoor Room
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%raftsman Readers Seem to .Have a Way of Taking Craftsman Advertisers Right to Their Hearts and Giving Very Intimate Information as to Their Wants.
(From a letter written by Fiske &9Co.. makers of Tapestry brick, signed by F. W. Donohoe, Manager Publicity Department.) and We do not offer this as something tie have said, but something one of our advertisers said after testing THE CRAFTSMAN. While the exact wording is credited to one advertiser only. it voices the sentiment of many. who by written or spoken word have told us practically the same thing. This sentence is the keynote of the phenomenal success of THE CRAFTSMAN as a producer of actual scales. In at least two respects the November CRAFTSMAN indicates that advertisers, nationally, are recognizing this fact and striking this keynote. FIRST: This issue contains 15 per cent. more paid advertising than any previous number. SECOND: It contains our first spread.* We refer to the four page advertisement of the Farrington Co., printed in red and black. Why do Craftsman readers take Craftsman advertisers right to their hearts, while the readers of most magazines view advertisers with suspicion? This is the reason: Each is good. There are many general magazines. Each is like the others. The public gets as tired of them as the professional traveler, of hotel fare. There are several class publications devoted to art or to the household. Some are good: some are not so good. Few indeed are vital. Almost alone, THE CRAFTSMAN seems to have a legitimate excuse for Almost alone it being, other than being a money maker for its owner. seems to have a policy that is at once honest. radical, harmonious and If you dont believe it has both of these, ask the readers: constructive. they know. Now if you who read this bulletin do believe that THE CRAFTSMAN is different, and if you believe that your proposition has sufficient merit to appeal to a class of persons as discriminating as those who give THE CRAFTSMAN their support,-act! ACT AT ONCE ! ! By Get our rates. If you action we mean write us. Make us show you. are already an advertiser in THE CRAFTSMAN take the Farrington . hint: if youre not, take the hint of any one of the others. FRANK
W. NYE,
Advertising
Manager
THE CRAFTSMAN.
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The
Craftsman
xl\ ii
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floss for working if required. As all needlewomen know, the darning in of these designs is a very simple matter, and requires little more than a careful look at the pattern and a counting of the meshes to carry it out in any desired size. For the convenience of purchasers we quote here the price of the curtains complete, made and embroidered in our own workshops and sent ready for putting up at the window; and also the price of the material by the yard. PINE CONE PATTERN IN DARNING STITCH ON CASEMENT LINEN The prices for net curtains showing the same design down the sides and across the bottom are:
2 % ya;ds lo?8
2 1 T,2 ((
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$18.X$ 7:75
apair
.................................... (6 ..,...................*....*........
The rices for net curtains showing broad design across the bott.om and narrow fjorder up the side are: 2 9; y;:ds l;:g.. . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$;S; adpair
2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..a......... ................... ..... . ..*........ .
The net itszf i$@ inches wide and costs 70 cents z&d. all colors costs 5 cents a skein.
Linen floss in
In a room where it is desirable to shade the windows more than can be done with the net we use curtains of casement linen, a fabric that is looseiy woven of roughly spun flax thre;tds left in the naturai color. This is one of the few curtain fabrics we know that is more beautiful when hung against the light than it is against Its texture is rough an opaque surface or in the piece. and irregular, not unlike that of raw silk, and it is woven loosely enough to admit a mellow glow of light against which every irregularity shows. The embroidery upon casement linen is also done with the darning stitch, but in solid instead of outline figures, as the fabric is close enough to allow the use of a little more pronounced ornaAny mentation than would be desirable with the net. color may be used that harmonizes with the natural brownish tone of the linen and the general color scheme PRETWORK PATTERN In the curtains illustrated here the pine of the room. CASEMENT LINEN cone design is carried out entirelv in sage green and. golden brown, while the geom&iral design is done crreen, with the figure in the center of mainly in bright golden brown, outlined with silvery sage n square done in pale coral. The prices for casement linen curtains with embroidered design across the bottom and border up the side are: 2 ; ya;ds lo,:g . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . t8.00 ad&Pair
2
ON
each
line
1.1:
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...*.....
............
gs;
I Linen
FLOSS
casriuent
linen is 36 inches
in all
CO~OTS,
St.
GUSTAV
STICKLEY,
Kindly mention. The
The
Craftsman
Craftsman
xlix
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:s used. Feeling that a musical instrument should be a trifle less severe in style than our other fm&.ure, we have not only used every legitimate decorative effect in the construction, but have ventured upon a touch of additional decoration in the form of inlay. The piano case itself is built of carefully selected fumed oak finished in a clear soft luminous tone of brown. Around the top we have put a narrow inlaid band of very dark green wood and dark brown En&h
0
oak, both of which serve to emphasize the prevailing tones in the lighter oak of the case. The conrentionalized plant forms that appear on either side of the music rack are inlaid with a combination of pewter and a finegrained wood tha.t shows varying tones of green. Directly in the center of the dark blossom that appears in the square of pewter, is a fleck of brilliant rermillion which serves to accent the whole color combination. We selected the Everett Piano Company to make the instrument partly because we especially like the tone of the Everett piano and partly because it is so carefully made in every detail. The Everett Piano Company guarantees this piano to give absolute satisfaction in every way, not for a term of years but To that guaranty we add our own as vouching for the during the life of the instrument. case and the two together form the strongest guaranty ever put on a musical instrument. We have one of these pianos on exhibition in our New York showrooms and one in Boston, and we will gladly furnish by mail any particulars concerning them.
GUSTAV THE
STICKLEY
NEW
CRAFTSMAN
29 West
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s a correspondence pa,er for women of taste. t is the most popular of he Crane papers---unloubtedly the best writng papers made. It is n-esented by the leading stationers of the country LS their finest paper. It s used by particula! ,vomen everywhere be:ause of its real distincion. rhree New Paris 3010rings The three new Iaris Zolorings in C r a n es I,inen Lawn : Daybreak Pink, Willow Green and 3rchic1, still retain thei: popularity. lwo New Fall Shades Recently two new IJalY shades have been atldetl VidczKe, the rich light purple color of the ripegrape and ,4ewpln1r~, a~. attractive grey green These colorings are particularly pleasing, ant! have found marked favor in the eyes of women of taste. Samples Samples of Crane.> Linen Lawn in white anti the five tints will be sen on request. Cranes LVriting Papers are sold wherever good writing papers are so good dealer sold. mill be so ill-advised ac to ofler you anything else in place of Cranes,
has as much to do with the success of a letter as an appropriate gown has to do It is a5 with the success of a reception. important that a letter should bc correctly dressed as it is that you should.
EATON,
NEW YORK
CRANE
Kindly
& PIKE
PIITSFIEI
mention The Craftsman
COMPANY
J 11 > MASS.
lii
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