Antique Victorian Houses Architect House Floor Plans CD
Convenient Houses with Fifty
Plans for the Housekeeper - 1889!
CD
REPUBLICATION
by
Louis H.
Gibson
Author of
Beautiful
Houses
Up for bid is a CD
REPUBLICATION of the original "Convenient Houses with Fifty Plans for the
Housekeeper" published by C. J. Peters & Son, Typographers and
Electrotypers, Boston. This author provided some of the best books of the
time regarding Victorian era house and home architecture! The low to moderate
income families of the time clamoured for this type of item and with good
reason! (Original is NOT for sale)
This
HISTORIC item contains 40 CHAPTERS (337 pages!) of steel plate
etchings, floor plans, front and side elevations, and
fundamentals for creating the extremely handsome ORIGINAL VICTORIAN ERA HOMES!
There are 50 DIFFERENT HOUSE FLOOR PLANS included! If there are multiple
floors per house the floor plans for all levels are included! Many of the 50
designs range from cottage style, summer homes all the way to town houses.
They range from 2-room dwellings to multi-level structures with planned space
for libraries, pantries, porches, storage cellers, sculleries, dressing rooms,
attics and even attic closets! You will also find historical facts
regarding architecture of practical house building as well as various RARE and
UNIQUE guidelines to assist you along the way to recreating the household
architecture of a classy and gentile society!
Architects,
students of design, architectural historians, old house restorers and historical
home preservationists will find this book of home plans on cd a spectacular
source book of authentic Victorian home designs! Order yours
today!!!
Here is an OLD,
resourceful and exceptional home architect house and floor plan CD
PREPUBLICATION. These homes are the essance of the characteristics of the
homes built by our American ancestors during the Victorian era! This is the
perfect opportunity to purchase your own version of another
wonderful instructional book revealing our heritage from early America and
Europe!
Contents:
The Architect and The
Housewife
Chapter
I.
The
Housekeeper and the Architect. -- Floor-Plans as related to Good Housekeeping.
-- Labor-Saving Devices. -- Economy and Good Construction. --
Compact Houses Not Necessarily Crowded. -- Wood-work that is Readily
Cleaned.
Chapter
II.
Housekeeping Operations. -- The Work of the Housekeeper. -- The Average
Housework of a Week. -- The Architect's Lesson
Therefrom.
Chapter
III.
Modern Conveniences. -- A Little
History. -- Plans that Make Extra Work. -- Modern Conveniences
Enumerated.
Chapter
IV.
Modern Architects and the Housekeeper.
-- Misplaced Houses. -- Old Colonial Poverty in Modern Colonial Houses. --
Affectation in Design. -- Natural Development of American Architecture. --
American Architecture and American Homes.
A Journey Through the
House
Chapter
V.
Journey Through the
House. -- Porch. -- Vestibule. -- Hall. -- Long Halls and Square Halls. -- The
Hall that is a Room. -- Reception-Hall. -- Parlor. -- Sitting-Room. --
Dining-Room.
Chapter
VI.
Kitchens. -- The
Kitchen a Workshop. -- Work to be Done in a Kitchen. -- A Plan. -- Fittings. --
Dish-Washing Coveniences. -- Sink and Tables. -- China-closet. -- Pantry. --
Cobination Pantry. -- Pantry Fittings. -- Work in a Pantry. -- A Doughboard. --
Flour-bin. -- Pantry Stores. -- Cupbaord. -- Refrigerator Arrangements. --
Pantry Utinsils. -- A Dry-Box. -- Soap-Box. -- Ventilation of Kitchen. --
General Principles of Kitchen Planning.
Chapter
VII.
Cellar. -- Fuel
Departments. -- Furnace Conveniences. -- Coal-bins. -- Cement Floors. -- Light
in the Cellar. -- A Cellar-closet. -- Outside Cellar-door.
Chapter
VIII.
A Low-cost Laundry. --
Blue Monday. -- Basement Laundry. -- Low-cost Conveniences. -- Inexpensive
Laundry Fittings. -- Hot and Cold Water Arrangements. -- A Labor-saving Laundry.
-- A Place to do Fruit-canning.
Chapter
IX.
The Second Floor. --
Stairways. -- The Combination Stairway. -- Ideal Number of Bedrooms. Large
Closets and Plenty of Them. -- A Linen Closet. -- Placing of Gas-fixtures. --
Servant's Room. Bath-roon. -- An Attic. -- Attic Closets.
Chapter
X.
Plumbing. -- Is
Plumbing Entirely Safe? -- Completeness in Plumbing Apparatus. -- Labor-saving
Plumbing Apparatus. -- Sewer Connections. -- Soil Pipe. -- A Trap. -- Accidents
to Traps. -- Frequent Use of Plumbing Apparatus Desirable for Safety. __
Water-closets. -- Simplicity in Plumbing. -- Drain Connections. -- To Keep
Plumbing Apparatus From Freeziing. -- Cistern Water Supply. __ Grease Sink. --
Flushing of Drain. -- Bath-tub.
Chapter
XI.
Heat and Ventilation.
-- Common Heating Arrangements. -- Present Methods Generally
Unsatisfactory. -- Ideal Conditions. -- Proper Amount of Moisture
Rarely Attained. -- A Furnace Defined. -- Methods of Reaching Best Results. --
Supple of Proper Amount of Moisture. -- Removal of Foul Air. -- Supplying Fresh
Air with Proper Moisture and Indirect Radiation. -- Low-cost Heating Apparatus.
Chapter
XII.
Heating Devices as We
Find Them. -- Furnace Estimates. -- Combination Hot Air and Hot Water. --
Dish-warming Arrangements. -- How to Get a Good Heating Apparatus.
Chapter
XIII.
The House and Its
Beauty. -- Artistic Surroundings. -- Beauty More a Matter of Intelligence than
Money. -- Vestibule Decorations. -- Beauty in the Reception-hall. -- Mantels and
Grates. -- Fret-work and Porteres. -- Spidle Work. -- Simple Forms of Good
Decoration. -- Wood-carving. -- Door and Window Casings. -- A Conservatory. --
Stained Glass. -- A Cabinet on the Manel. -- Tinted Plastering. -- Frescoing. --
Safety in the Selection of Colors. -- An Attractive Sitting-room. -- Parlor
History. -- The Ideal Parlor. -- The Library. -- Place of Quiet and Rest. --
Library Furnishings. -- The Dining-room. -- Social Relations of the Dining-room.
-- Dining-=room Decorations. -- Conservatroy and Dining-room. -- A Wood Ceiling.
-- Beauty in Bedrooms. -- Quiet and Light.
Chapter
XIV.
External and Internal Design. -- An Old
Topic Before the People. -- The Architectural Student's Dream. -- A Beautiful
Home the Housekeeper's Ambition. -- It Costs No More to have a House Beautifun
than Ugle. -- Architectural Educaiton. -- Charles Eastlake's Biik. -- Vulgar
Architectural Revivals. -- The Growth of the Artistic Idea. -- Beauty a Matter
of Refinement.
Chapter
XV.
Evolution of a
House-plan. -- Respectable Dimentions for a Moderrate Price. -- Six Plans. --
Costs from $1,500 to $2,600.
Chapter XVI.
A Small Pocket-book and
a Large Idea. -- Ambition, Dollars, and a Good House. -- The Growth of the
Housekeeper's Ideas. -- Points about the House - $2,900.
Chapter
XVII.
"We Know What We Want."
-- A Coventient Plan. -- Meeting the Wants of People Who Build.
Chapter
XVIII.
Two Good Rooms in
Front. - The Combination Pantry. -- Too Much Cellar a Burden. -
$2,500.
Chapter
XIX.
Sitting-room and Parlor
in Front. -- A Connecting Vestibule. -- A Central Combination Stairway. -- Good
Rooms in the Attic.
Chapter
XX.
A Compact Plan. -- An
Isolated Reception-room. -- Combination Stairway. -- Description of the
Floor-plan. -- Cellar Arrangement. -- Dining-room and Conservatory. Another
Plan.
Chapter XXI.
What Can be Done for
$1,600? -- The Closet in the Hall. -- A Small Convenient Kitchen. -- Closets in
the Bedrooms.
Chapter
XXII.
Outgrowths of ONe Idea.
-- Everything Counts as a Room. -- One Chimney. -- Conveniences of a Condensed
House. - Cost from $1,600 to $2,800.
Chapter XXIII.
One-Story Plans. --
Description of Floor-plans. -- Bath-room Next to Kitchen Flue. -- Kitchen,
Porch, and Pantry. -- The Exterior. -- Enlargements on this Plan. -- Other
One-story Houses.
Chapter XXIV.
Side-hall Plans. --
Plans with Bedroom on First Floor.
Chapter XXV.
Miscellaneous
Collection. -- Short Descriptions of Eleven House-plans. -- Varying Costs. --
Square Plans. -- One-chimney Plans. -- Rear and Side Hall.
Chapter XXVI.
Eight Plans. -- Each
Suited to Family Requirements. -- Double Houses. -- An Elaborate
Floor-plan. -- A Shingle House. -- A Brick House.
Practical
House-building.
Chapter
XXVII.
Practical Points. --
Water. -- Location of House on Lot. -- Draining the Cellar. -- Mason Work. --
Foundations. -- Walks. -- Piers. -- Flues. -- Cisterns. -- Damp
Course.
Chapter
XXVIII.
Brick Foundations. --
Laying Brick. -- Colored
Mortars. -- Colored Bricks. -- Brick Veneering. -- Hot-air Flues. -- Details of
Brick Construction. -- Chimneys and Flues. -- Hollow Walls. -- Cellar. --
Ash-pits. -- Grates.
Chapter
XIX.
Stone Masonry. -- Cut
Stone. -- Terra Cotta. -- Privy Vaults. - Cisterns. -- Filters for Cisterns. --
Brick Pavements. -- Cement Pavements.
Chapter
XXX.
Carpenter-work. --
Framing. -- Size of Timbers. -- Height of Stories. -- Joist. -- Stud Walls. --
Outside Sheathing. -- Building-paper. -- Roofs. -- Outside Finish. -- Outside
Shingle Walls. -- Outside Casings. -- Windows with Box Frames. -- Hinged or
Pivoted Windows. -- Outside Shutters. -- Porches. -- Lattice Porches.
Chapter
XXXI.
Inside Wood-work. --
Floors. -- Soft and Hard Wood Floors. -- Tabulated Statement of Inside Finish.
-- Different Kinds of Wood. -- Doors and Frames. -- Fly Screens. -- Inside
Casings. -- Wainscoting. -- Inside Shutters. -- Wood-work for Plumbing. --
Kitchen Sink and Fittings. -- Kitchen Tables. -- Cellar-sink Fittings. --
Wood-work for Bath-tub. -- Water-closets. -- Wash-stands. -- Tank. -- Picture
Moulding. -- Closet Fittings. -- Broom-Rack. -- Fittings. -- Pantry Fittings. --
Stairways.
Chapter
XXXII.
Plastering. -- Gray
Finish. -- White Hard Finish. -- Back Plastering. -- Gas-piping. -- Tin Work. --
Gutters. -- Valleys. -- Down Spouts. -- Galvanized Iron-work. -- Hot-air Pipes.
-- Thimbles. -- Painting. -- Staining. -- Oil Finishing. -- Interior
Staining. -- Floor Finish. -- Glazing. -- Plate-glass. -- Bevelled Glass. --
Cathedral Glass. -- Hard-ware.
Chapter
XXXIII.
Practical Plumbing. --
Wood-work for Plumber. -- Excavating for Plumber. -- Water Distribution. --
Outside Fixtures. -- Hydrants. -- Street-washers. -- Soft-water Supply. --
Hot-water Supply. -- Soil Pipe. -- Inside Fixtures. -- Kitchen Sionk. -- Cellar
Sink.
Chapter
XXXIV.
Plumbing Work
Continued. -- Bath-tubs. -- Bath-sprinklers. -- Foot-tubs. -- Safes. -- Water
Closets. -- Wash-stands. -- Laundery Fittings. -- Set Tubs. -- Outside Drains.
-- Grease Sinks. -- Nickle Fittings.
Chapter
XXXV.
Cost of a House. --
Schedules of Costs. -- What Goes into a House. - Schedule "B." -- Cost
Details.
Chapter XXXVI.
Varying Building
Values. -- Cost of Appuratences. -- Praces of Labor and Material on Which
Estimates are Based.
Business
points in Building
Chapter
XXXVII.
Low-cost Houses. --
Methods of Making Contracts. -- Architects; Estimates. -- Building by the Day.
-- The Safest Plan. -- Gaurding Against Liens.
Chapter
XXXIX.
Building Associations.
-- Why Dividends are Large and Interest Low. -- Building Associations and
Savings Banks. -- Association Securities. -- Building-association Methods. --
Different Plans. -- Borrowing from a Building Association. -- A
Building-association Report.
Chapter
XL.
Purchase of a Lot. --
The Best the Cheapest. -- A Good Lot as a Basis of Security. -- The Basis of
Value is the Rental.
The CD
Republication you will receive is representative of the types of home
building expertise of earlier American and European culture! If you're into
nostalgia like I am you will have many hours of enjoyment studying the
architectual designs and craftmanship in this item!
This information has been scanned onto CD-ROM using the Adobe
Acrobat Reader PDF format. You may download the latest FREE version of this
software quickly at
www.adobe.com
. This is NOT a copy of another CD-ROM. You will receive an ORIGINAL CD
reproduction of this resourceful dressmaking item.
The text is viewed easily from
your computer or you may choose to print each page as you read this amazing item on
antique frock making. Every page has been meticulously scanned, cleaned and burned
to preserve this ANTIQUE item's information and patterns to CD-ROM! The format
of this resource has so many more advantages than the original book.
What are the
benefits of an antique book CD Republication?
* Every image and every page has been
scanned at a high dpi to produce crystal clear images and you never have to deal with
any crumbling old paper!
* These scans are completely sizable. You can
enlarge and print according to your visual needs! They
are reformated in full-page sizing for better viewing of details, etc.!
* Each page is saved in PDF
format at high resolution and is readily accessible using the downloadable Adobe Acrobat Reader
software program. This program is very user friendly and allows you to print
any one specific page, pages or the entire CD contents!
* Each time you want to use an
image, a page or pages you can print it out. Every one will be as crisp and
clear as the last!
* YOU WILL FIND YOUR CD REPUBLICATION HAS A HUGE
ADVANTAGE OVER A BOUND HARDCOPY PAPER REPRODUCTION, IN THAT, IF YOU SPILL
COFFEE, TEA OR SODA ON YOUR PRINTED PAGE(S) YOU CAN JUST PRINT ANOTHER!
* A CD REPUBLICATION PROVIDES YOU WITH UNLIMITED CLEAN
COPIES FOREVER!
* Each CD-ROM comes in a PROTECTIVE CASE!
Curious about the
quality of these scans? Please contact me and I will forward an image for your
own personal inspection! Scale it, edit it, print it to fit your needs and you
are surely going to be quite pleased with the results! You will appreciate the
attention taken in providing a TOP QUALITY PRODUCT that you will use for many
years to come...
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