Arts and Crafts Exterior Design Ideas
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Oak Hill Building & Remodeling
Robert Miller Photography
Photo of a large arts and crafts three-storey blue house exterior in DC Metro with concrete fiberboard siding, a shingle roof, a gable roof and a grey roof.
Photo of a large arts and crafts three-storey blue house exterior in DC Metro with concrete fiberboard siding, a shingle roof, a gable roof and a grey roof.
Cumberland Custom Homes
Finished front elevation with craftsman style details.
Large arts and crafts two-storey blue house exterior in DC Metro with wood siding, a hip roof and a shingle roof.
Large arts and crafts two-storey blue house exterior in DC Metro with wood siding, a hip roof and a shingle roof.
Find the right local pro for your project
Hart's Design
This beautiful little Craftsman in Credit River
Basic concept design is available on the website
https://www.hartsdesign.com/fullscreen-store-page/comp-jql1rjw5/6cdc53f4-ce3e-46f7-a96e-ea93be499bbb/1/%3Fi%3D1%26p%3Dkbm3w%26s%3Dstyle-jql30y7i
Bali Construction
Photo of a mid-sized arts and crafts one-storey brown exterior in San Francisco with wood siding and a gable roof.
Lindsey Markel
After building their first home this Bloomfield couple didn't have any immediate plans on building another until they saw this perfect property for sale. It didn't take them long to make the decision on purchasing it and moving forward with another building project. With the wife working from home it allowed them to become the general contractor for this project. It was a lot of work and a lot of decision making but they are absolutely in love with their new home. It is a dream come true for them and I am happy they chose me and Dillman & Upton to help them make it a reality.
Photo By: Kate Benjamin
Clare Castle Custom Homes
Craftsman entry, Hardi board siding cedar columns.
Photo by Steve Groth
Large arts and crafts two-storey green exterior in Chicago with mixed siding.
Large arts and crafts two-storey green exterior in Chicago with mixed siding.
A.Pro Builders Inc.
Mike Procyk,
This is an example of a mid-sized arts and crafts two-storey green exterior in New York with concrete fiberboard siding.
This is an example of a mid-sized arts and crafts two-storey green exterior in New York with concrete fiberboard siding.
Highland Builders LLC
Modern mountain aesthetic in this fully exposed custom designed ranch. Exterior brings together lap siding and stone veneer accents with welcoming timber columns and entry truss. Garage door covered with standing seam metal roof supported by brackets. Large timber columns and beams support a rear covered screened porch. (Ryan Hainey)
Evergreen Custom Construction
Inspiration for a mid-sized arts and crafts two-storey green house exterior in Other with mixed siding and a gable roof.
Old Town Design Group
This home was constructed with care and has an exciting amount of symmetry. The colors are a neutral dark brown which really brings out the off white trimmings.
Photo by: Thomas Graham
Passages Custom Homes LLC
Shultz Photo Design
Design ideas for an arts and crafts two-storey grey exterior in Minneapolis with concrete fiberboard siding and a gable roof.
Design ideas for an arts and crafts two-storey grey exterior in Minneapolis with concrete fiberboard siding and a gable roof.
Great Northwest Homes
We are just loving the black and cedar trim combination! The open beam entry gives this home a striking appearance.
Bill Johnson Photography
Photo of an arts and crafts two-storey grey exterior in Seattle with mixed siding.
Photo of an arts and crafts two-storey grey exterior in Seattle with mixed siding.
Red House Architects
The front porch of the existing house remained. It made a good proportional guide for expanding the 2nd floor. The master bathroom bumps out to the side. And, hand sawn wood brackets hold up the traditional flying-rafter eaves.
Max Sall Photography
Hoffman Grayson Architects LLP
Originally, the front of the house was on the left (eave) side, facing the primary street. Since the Garage was on the narrower, quieter side street, we decided that when we would renovate, we would reorient the front to the quieter side street, and enter through the front Porch.
So initially we built the fencing and Pergola entering from the side street into the existing Front Porch.
Then in 2003, we pulled off the roof, which enclosed just one large room and a bathroom, and added a full second story. Then we added the gable overhangs to create the effect of a cottage with dormers, so as not to overwhelm the scale of the site.
The shingles are stained Cabots Semi-Solid Deck and Siding Oil Stain, 7406, color: Burnt Hickory, and the trim is painted with Benjamin Moore Aura Exterior Low Luster Narraganset Green HC-157, (which is actually a dark blue).
Photo by Glen Grayson, AIA
Moore Architects, PC
The Cleveland Park neighborhood of Washington, D.C boasts some of the most beautiful and well maintained bungalows of the late 19th century. Residential streets are distinguished by the most significant craftsman icon, the front porch.
Porter Street Bungalow was different. The stucco walls on the right and left side elevations were the first indication of an original bungalow form. Yet the swooping roof, so characteristic of the period, was terminated at the front by a first floor enclosure that had almost no penetrations and presented an unwelcoming face. Original timber beams buried within the enclosed mass provided the
only fenestration where they nudged through. The house,
known affectionately as ‘the bunker’, was in serious need of
a significant renovation and restoration.
A young couple purchased the house over 10 years ago as
a first home. As their family grew and professional lives
matured the inadequacies of the small rooms and out of date systems had to be addressed. The program called to significantly enlarge the house with a major new rear addition. The completed house had to fulfill all of the requirements of a modern house: a reconfigured larger living room, new shared kitchen and breakfast room and large family room on the first floor and three modified bedrooms and master suite on the second floor.
Front photo by Hoachlander Davis Photography.
All other photos by Prakash Patel.
Arts and Crafts Exterior Design Ideas
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