Italianate or West Coast Stick Style
Some comments on this home in an old home hunter blog identified this home as an Italianate Victorian. While the blog administrator insisted it was Stick Victorian. The home seems to include and is missing elements of both styles. Based on the book; A Field Guide to American Houses 1st edition. (the key).
Present
Italianate - low roof pitch and hip, bracketed and boxed roof wall junction, copula roof elaboration, window bracketed tops, window pairs
Stick - windows bracketed
Missing
Italianate - arches, pediments, classic porch columns, quoins, pilasters
Stick - patterned stick-work on walls, steep roof pitch, trussed gables, open eves, dormers
Exceptions - turned porch columns, beaded horizontal siding, no spindles, corbels, or spandrils
The revised 2nd edition of the book discusses the difference between Stick and Italianate out on the "West Coast" (California - i.e. San Francisco row house) which includes some more detail on the characteristics at a finer level of execution. Based on this edition, the home includes more stick style elements for a Victorian. Although the overall impression is Italianate some subtitle differences are attributed as stick style elements. The merging of the Stick and Italianate styles seems to have taken place, so perhaps we have an Italianate-Stick style Victorian home. The inexpensive mass production of redwood decorative elements allowed for much variation and selection from catalogs.
Present
Italianate -
Stick - box bay windows, brackets align with windows and corners, vertical strips on sides of windows, flat top upper window panes, short vertical boards at cornice
Missing
Italianate - slanted side bay windows, arched upper window pane
Stick - false gables over bay windows, vertical stripes on corner boards
Present
Italianate - low roof pitch and hip, bracketed and boxed roof wall junction, copula roof elaboration, window bracketed tops, window pairs
Stick - windows bracketed
Missing
Italianate - arches, pediments, classic porch columns, quoins, pilasters
Stick - patterned stick-work on walls, steep roof pitch, trussed gables, open eves, dormers
Exceptions - turned porch columns, beaded horizontal siding, no spindles, corbels, or spandrils
The revised 2nd edition of the book discusses the difference between Stick and Italianate out on the "West Coast" (California - i.e. San Francisco row house) which includes some more detail on the characteristics at a finer level of execution. Based on this edition, the home includes more stick style elements for a Victorian. Although the overall impression is Italianate some subtitle differences are attributed as stick style elements. The merging of the Stick and Italianate styles seems to have taken place, so perhaps we have an Italianate-Stick style Victorian home. The inexpensive mass production of redwood decorative elements allowed for much variation and selection from catalogs.
Present
Italianate -
Stick - box bay windows, brackets align with windows and corners, vertical strips on sides of windows, flat top upper window panes, short vertical boards at cornice
Missing
Italianate - slanted side bay windows, arched upper window pane
Stick - false gables over bay windows, vertical stripes on corner boards

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