If I won the lottery, which I wouldn’t because I don’t play. You bet I would select a gorgeous home like this to restore and upkeep. Absolutely stunning.
Oh my! Vicksburg; my great grandfather was captured at Vicksburg and sent to a prison in Ohio where he escaped and made his way to Alabama where he joined up with another unit. He was 16 years old.
❤ Thank you for showing us another beautiful historical home. If not for you I wouldn't get to see these lovely homes. So pleased there are people willing to preserve them. They are truly national treasures !!❤
A masterpiece example of the QA home. It's out of this world especially with the greenhouse, which is to die for. I would keep an antique vibe in the kitchen and bath areas to not disturb the flow of this beauty. I usually just watch your content but had to comment on this one. Bravo!
I'm absolutely blown away at the price on this property. Even though it sits on less than an acre of land, a $315,000 price tag makes this property one heck of a deal. No doubt it is close to town. Which is a plus when it comes to running errands & taking care of life's daily Business. The house looks like it needs quite a bit of work but it would be well worth every minute of effort once completed. This house has so much character. Something the modern home lacks in comparison. Thanks for sharing!
Real estate is location, location, location. It is about the price I would expect in the historic, Old West End in Toledo, Ohio. The Old West End is an intercity neighborhood where the titans of industry build their homes at the turn of the last century. The money started moving to other neighborhoods in the 20's and 30's. An intrepid group of preservationists started revitalizing the neighborhood about 50 years ago. It is now a well established historic community in a metropolitan area with generally low housing costs and it is an inner city area with the problems that many do not want to deal with.
Oh this home is gorgeous! The box head windows get me every time! Love all the unique details of older homes. They took so much pride in their work and it was quality. I recently found out that my great Grandpa was a blacksmith in our area and I hope someday to go down that rabbit hole. My grandparents were born on Laurel Valley Plantation in Thibodaux, Louisiana where I currently still live. All of the history and work that went into these homes, properties, etc is just amazing.
I absolutely _LOVE_ these Queen Anne Victorian houses! I love the craftsmanship and just the class of them. Ideally, I'd love to build a brand new one with all the bells and whistles of the craftsmanship, but updated with appropriate insulated walls, roof and attic, tripleglazing, floor heating, ground heating system, original lookng roof with solar power, and with computer controlled lighting etc etc. But I could definitely be very happy in e.g. this one or one the other beauties that have been shown by you Lane ☺️👍
Although your video has nothing to do with what I'm about to comment, your dress is very elegant and you look gorgeous in that outfit. And by the way thank you so much for sharing your passion for beautiful historic houses with all of us, your videos are really inspiring, God bless you and your husband, greetings from Switzerland.
Beautiful home!!! I lost count of how many times Laine said “In case you are new here…” 😂 There are so many amazing things y’all could film in Vicksburg! It is rich in history, architecture, and also haunted history.😉
i would love to finish out this house. too bad i don't have the means to do so. i would also love to see the attic space if there are stairs to it. i always love attic spaces in 19th century homes.
What a fabulous home and what a fabulous tour!! Notice that rainbow light in the tree on the right at about 17 seconds in! Hoping this goes to new caretakers who will really love it!!
I appreciate the history lesson‘s you offer….which I have been gaining my Masters Your Passion is appreciated, the more the better! Inspired Honored Thank You ❤❤❤
Beautiful house❤ by the way lysssssssss, fleur-de-lis in French the S at the end is actually pronounced, it's lissss😊. In French a tourêtte is just a small tour, it's a difference of "grandeur "😅 but what it was describe is called a beffroi , à beffroi is build on top of existing buildings and don't connect to any level, a beffroi was usually build for bells or clocks. And if the tour is a house,like living quarters for the seigneur or châtelain than its a donjon, the chateaux used to have "ramparts" with tours and a donjon(much bigger) where sometimes the seigneur with his family lived.
This makes me want to move to America and purchase this home! here in Canada you cant even find a starter home under 700-800K, this home is a dream and a steal of a price! one day...
It’s got great potential. One of my favorite parts of these tours is Layne’s house detective skills explaining the changes and context. Thank you for sharing this!
Description of all the details, clues, observations of architecture, manufacture of wood and hardware are interesting. Old house investigation is fascinating!
Vicksburg has that dramatic River Hills landscape and such a varied collection of buildings strewn around those bluffs perched here and there amongst the battle sites. Its very unique 😊
Sooooo amazing in awesome condition love that pressed trim throughout!! Love it's all neutral showing off all her curves!!! And beautiful architecture!! Thank you for sharing this treasure!
Dibs on that tower bedroom, lol! Those appear to be Master & Mistress adjoining bedrooms, as you say, definitely a thing in the 1870s. I love the pressed wood trims; the painted ones will show more detail once stripped. I can see this as an affordable hot trend during a time when commercially produced options were popular, and a way to get an expensive look without having to pay for hand carving. While the kitchen and bath remodels are a bit modern for my taste, I think they are overall good, and just need some color and personal style added. My 1931 house has a lot of colored tile, so the white everything look always makes me balk. House does need some work, but so much space and nice options. Any house of this age with so much exterior wood will need maintenance. I love the choice of colors; Queen Anne is the most fun style for fancy paint jobs. :)
I don't see many Queen Anne styled homes in my area. If many were built, survived or were modified over the years. What I do see, like mine, the inspector stated, are collections of various stick construction styles. It's something I call "Midwest vernacular." My home is a Cape Cod but has an Arts & Crafts style fireplace and box which was commonplace at the time of my home's construction. Homes on the university area run the styles and periods. We lost several when the university bought them up and demolished them to create modern campus housing. "Up the pike" in Urbana, Ohio, they have at least 5 examples of Second Empire style of which one was a hotel and now converted to senior housing.
I have the same question! I don’t mind most of the other white paint, especially compared to what it looked like before. But I’d love to figure out how to strip the trim without ruining the patterns.
Great job Lynn. I like the way you explain the details in the houses and the historical facts around their period. Very educational. Do you have background in history?
This house needs some renovation but that is a good price for its historical history I love this house ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤heart and soul and I love this home Ithink it is priceless I wish iwas a millionaire when I see these kind of homes for sale because I love history and ilove queen Ann style so much wood fireplaces
My fiance and I were going to buy this house to restore, but lost it to another contract. I hope who ever purchased it gives it the care it so deserves!
@OurRestorationNation that's what I was thinking, the close-ups show how much paint is built up poor house looks like it needs to breathe.. love the video!
Another beautiful house. I enjoy your historical info. Your vids are the one that I up the video quality to HD and slow down to normal speed. The video itself seemed to be disjointed, particularly after the kitchen the camera wound its way through a back room to a screened in porch, to outside, back to the main stairs and then upstairs with no description or layout info. While there as description of the fireplace tile in the bedrooms and the windows, the rest of the upstairs was just a randomly moving camera. I have no sense of the layout of the house. I only know that there is a back set of stairs because the camera momentarily stuck its lens into it. I was disappointed that there was no mention of the greenhouse shown in the introduction. I don't mean to be overly critical, but I miss the greater info and your willingness to show the good, bad and ugly of a house that you have done in the past. I hope you can return to the videos of the past. I realize that it may be getting you too close to the Realtor position that I know that you are not and I do not know the legal issues involved, but you use to have the "If this was my house..." comments. I think those help promote preservation which you obviously support.
You almost got no commentary at all as when we arrived at the house we realized our microphone equipment no longer properly connected to the new camera we bought. So we had to leave Laine shooting B roll and head off to the closest Walmart to get you mic’d commentary. Then, it was 95 degrees with 72% humidity and no AC in the house. The house itself is wandering, disjointed and difficult to film, and made even more so by the conditions. Sorry this one video wasn’t up to your standards, but sometimes we do the best we can in the circumstances and move on. Try to show some grace and remember that there are exactly two people scouting, scheduling, traveling, researching, shooting, editing etc these videos. When ONE falls a little short of your expectations maybe you could simply let that slide, understanding that, under the very best of circumstances, these videos take a week of work to produce, if everything goes perfectly.
Thank you for this well-done presentation. I would like to vote for removing the "dramatic" music. Is Lizzie Borden about to jump out of an armoire, wielding an axe? No? Then, please take it away. Also, if you know of the ownership history of a house, please, please share it with us! This house fairly screams Civil War Profiteer. No native of Vicksburg had the money in the 1870's (I don't think) to build a house like this one. Historic photos would also be wonderful, if you can get them. I lament the many layers of paint obscuring the wood trim detail in some of the rooms, especially the acres of white paint covering so much up! I love the geography of the renovated kitchen, but not the style. I cringe whenever I see stainless steel in an old house! The best kitchen remodels, for me, in Craftsman, Edwardian, and Victorian houses are the ones that stop in about 1940, with everything deliberately retro. I hate going from 1910 (or thereabouts) to 2024 when I move from one room to another. I've seen too much of this where I live and it's a pet peeve.
Oh dear ! The architecture of this house could not be any further removed from the period of Queen Anne . Indeed , it bears no discernible resemblance to any type or period - it’s merely a suburban mish mash of design , materials and ideas.
@@OurRestorationNation Richard Norman Shaw knew what he was doing unlike this mess. Furthermore , he wasn’t even alive during the Queen Anne period. Tut tut , I suggest that you do some research if you are not trained in the subject .
My Masters Degree in Historic Preservation would disagree with you… as would EVERY preservation professional in the US. You obviously can’t even be bothered to google properly, much less admit the error of your ways, so just do us both a favor and leave my room. Let me say it in language you’ll understand: review the link provided then get thee gone. isarchitecture.com/style-101-queen-anne/
@@OurRestorationNation Now Im truly disgusted - your lack of manners and the sheer folly of your last statement causes me to question the veracity of your claims. Indeed I shall “get gone” and be delighted to so do whilst retaining the privilege of opinion and expressing it , opposite this very channel. Master degree indeed ? Have the standards of education in the US really fallen to such an abysmally low level ? Good luck to you .
See, here’s the thing; you don’t get to “have an opinion” about scientific fact. And historic preservation is, in fact, a science. At least here in the US it is. We are actually considered scientists, as our CV’s clearly state. So, you DO have the right to be wrong. You can be just as wrong as you want to be, but you do not have the right to express anti-scientific gibberish on a channel dedicated to the spread of the SOI Standards for Historic Preservation. You have given me quite a good laugh today. It’s always hilarious when someone is shown to be incorrect, but instead of just saying “oopsie” and backing in to the shrubs as is appropriate, one doubles and triples down and then resorts to calling someone a bully. It’s okay, go find you a safe space where you can roll all around in your opinions. Here, however, we will vehemently defend the science.
If I won the lottery, which I wouldn’t because I don’t play. You bet I would select a gorgeous home like this to restore and upkeep. Absolutely stunning.
Me too!!!
I think the same way! I'm always planning on what to do when/if I win the lottery but I don't ever buy tickets!
Well then I wish you will! I really do 😅Good luck!
$315,000 for that home is a steal! The outside needs the biggest work.
Oh my! Vicksburg; my great grandfather was captured at Vicksburg and sent to a prison in Ohio where he escaped and made his way to Alabama where he joined up with another unit. He was 16 years old.
Beautiful house. These houses needs kids to bring life and fill them up with laughter...make memories.
The pressed trim with the hops vine is gorgeous. I wish they still made it. I would buy a piece just to hang on my wall as art. 😂
❤ Thank you for showing us another beautiful historical home. If not for you I wouldn't get to see these lovely homes. So pleased there are people willing to preserve them. They are truly national treasures !!❤
A masterpiece example of the QA home. It's out of this world especially with the greenhouse, which is to die for. I would keep an antique vibe in the kitchen and bath areas to not disturb the flow of this beauty. I usually just watch your content but had to comment on this one. Bravo!
Laine, you forgot to mention your restoration work in the introduction. It's what got me hooked!
Me to
I'm absolutely blown away at the price on this property. Even though it sits on less than an acre of land, a $315,000 price tag makes this property one heck of a deal. No doubt it is close to town. Which is a plus when it comes to running errands & taking care of life's daily Business.
The house looks like it needs quite a bit of work but it would be well worth every minute of effort once completed.
This house has so much character. Something the modern home lacks in comparison.
Thanks for sharing!
Crime. That's why it's so low.
@@ArkansasSquaw
It would suck to have a beautiful home in a crime-ridden neighborhood.
@@terrihoeper yes it would. Heartbreaking...
Real estate is location, location, location. It is about the price I would expect in the historic, Old West End in Toledo, Ohio. The Old West End is an intercity neighborhood where the titans of industry build their homes at the turn of the last century. The money started moving to other neighborhoods in the 20's and 30's. An intrepid group of preservationists started revitalizing the neighborhood about 50 years ago. It is now a well established historic community in a metropolitan area with generally low housing costs and it is an inner city area with the problems that many do not want to deal with.
LOVE it! ❤ And, Laine, you are exceptional. Your passion for fine, historical architecture is palpable.
Always wanted to see this home. So unique.
Awesome video.
Perfect balance of talk, pics, & music.
Great job, y'all!
Oh that bottle green time took my breath away! Wow!!
Oh this home is gorgeous! The box head windows get me every time! Love all the unique details of older homes. They took so much pride in their work and it was quality.
I recently found out that my great Grandpa was a blacksmith in our area and I hope someday to go down that rabbit hole. My grandparents were born on Laurel Valley Plantation in Thibodaux, Louisiana where I currently still live. All of the history and work that went into these homes, properties, etc is just amazing.
OMG! Love. I can hear the old money at the time screaming, “Carpetbagger!!”
I absolutely _LOVE_ these Queen Anne Victorian houses! I love the craftsmanship and just the class of them.
Ideally, I'd love to build a brand new one with all the bells and whistles of the craftsmanship, but updated with appropriate insulated walls, roof and attic, tripleglazing, floor heating, ground heating system, original lookng roof with solar power, and with computer controlled lighting etc etc. But I could definitely be very happy in e.g. this one or one the other beauties that have been shown by you Lane ☺️👍
Although your video has nothing to do with what I'm about to comment, your dress is very elegant and you look gorgeous in that outfit. And by the way thank you so much for sharing your passion for beautiful historic houses with all of us, your videos are really inspiring, God bless you and your husband, greetings from Switzerland.
That green tile surround and the blue tile surround were my favorite!! ❤❤ Beautiful home! I hope it finds its next owner who will love and cherish it!
Beautiful home!!! I lost count of how many times Laine said “In case you are new here…” 😂
There are so many amazing things y’all could film in Vicksburg! It is rich in history, architecture, and also haunted history.😉
Thank You
😢
i would love to finish out this house. too bad i don't have the means to do so. i would also love to see the attic space if there are stairs to it. i always love attic spaces in 19th century homes.
Well that was quick! It seems this beauty is pending already! ❤
What a fabulous home and what a fabulous tour!! Notice that rainbow light in the tree on the right at about 17 seconds in! Hoping this goes to new caretakers who will really love it!!
Thank you for doing what you do!!!
Talk about character. This house has got an abundance of it. Absolutely gorgeous.
Oh. My. Goodness!! What a beauty! Total dream home. Laine, you look lovely in that awesome dress. ❤💕
I appreciate the history lesson‘s you offer….which I have been gaining my Masters
Your Passion is appreciated, the more the better!
Inspired
Honored
Thank You
❤❤❤
Beautiful house❤ by the way lysssssssss, fleur-de-lis in French the S at the end is actually pronounced, it's lissss😊. In French a tourêtte is just a small tour, it's a difference of "grandeur "😅 but what it was describe is called a beffroi , à beffroi is build on top of existing buildings and don't connect to any level, a beffroi was usually build for bells or clocks. And if the tour is a house,like living quarters for the seigneur or châtelain than its a donjon, the chateaux used to have "ramparts" with tours and a donjon(much bigger) where sometimes the seigneur with his family lived.
Beautiful nostalgic property😮😊
Thank you Kevin and Laine! With a couple of cleaning people I could really live in this home!
This makes me want to move to America and purchase this home! here in Canada you cant even find a starter home under 700-800K, this home is a dream and a steal of a price! one day...
Vicksburg is SOOOO wonderful!
It’s got great potential. One of my favorite parts of these tours is Layne’s house detective skills explaining the changes and context. Thank you for sharing this!
Description of all the details, clues, observations of architecture, manufacture of wood and hardware are interesting. Old house investigation is fascinating!
You look fabulous! I adore these homes and I am so thankful for people realizing the history and preserving it
That is a spectacular house! All of those windows!! 🥰♥️
Vicksburg has that dramatic River Hills landscape and such a varied collection of buildings strewn around those bluffs perched here and there amongst the battle sites. Its very unique 😊
Thank you for showing this lovely house. Let’s hope whoever buys it, honours it. It seems a beautiful place to enjoy life.
Sooooo amazing in awesome condition love that pressed trim throughout!! Love it's all neutral showing off all her curves!!! And beautiful architecture!! Thank you for sharing this treasure!
Heart be still! Oh my?
Beautiful home and property! I hope it goes to someone who will appreciate her! ❤️
Such a beautiful home
Glorious
Love ❤️ love ❤️ it when you educate us on architecture.🥰
Love the music accompanying this presentation .
This house is more valuable (to me), and somehow, more affordable than the home in which I currently reside. Simply stunning!
Love that you are reviewing this home. ❤
Lovely. Thank you for that!
Absolutely love this! The windows are spectacular! This home belongs on many acres!
Dibs on that tower bedroom, lol! Those appear to be Master & Mistress adjoining bedrooms, as you say, definitely a thing in the 1870s. I love the pressed wood trims; the painted ones will show more detail once stripped. I can see this as an affordable hot trend during a time when commercially produced options were popular, and a way to get an expensive look without having to pay for hand carving. While the kitchen and bath remodels are a bit modern for my taste, I think they are overall good, and just need some color and personal style added. My 1931 house has a lot of colored tile, so the white everything look always makes me balk. House does need some work, but so much space and nice options. Any house of this age with so much exterior wood will need maintenance. I love the choice of colors; Queen Anne is the most fun style for fancy paint jobs. :)
🔹So many gorgeous details in this home🔹
Beautiful
It’s so pretty! Needs a young couple with a lot of energy to lovingly restore it 😊
I’d add a bunch of mid century and late Victorian furniture to bridge the gap between the 30’s and today. A great house. ❤️
Always excited to see a video from y'all. Love your dress.
Another beauty. Thanks for sharing more history ❤️
Beautiful oldie!
Another great video! Another beautiful home! Thanks guys! ♥️
I ❤️❤️❤️ your channel Laine! Great to see your beautiful face and all these amazing homes!! 🤗🤗🤗
Your video presentations have only gotten better over time.
Hi both lv Ann uk I always love to see these beautiful homes ❤️❤️❤️🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
Gorgeous!❤
I so wish I could buy this home!
Beautiful home that needs just a couple more updates.
Me looking like I can buy this and it’s already pending. Shucks! 😂I love it!
So beautiful!! Question: is it surprising the mantle in the formal receiving room wouldn't be more ornate? That hearth tile is amazing!!
I don't see many Queen Anne styled homes in my area. If many were built, survived or were modified over the years. What I do see, like mine, the inspector stated, are collections of various stick construction styles. It's something I call "Midwest vernacular." My home is a Cape Cod but has an Arts & Crafts style fireplace and box which was commonplace at the time of my home's construction. Homes on the university area run the styles and periods. We lost several when the university bought them up and demolished them to create modern campus housing. "Up the pike" in Urbana, Ohio, they have at least 5 examples of Second Empire style of which one was a hotel and now converted to senior housing.
Beautiful home. By the way, you look great in your red dress
What a beautiful house. So many goodies in there. And Laine you look gorgeous in that red dress. Thanks for sharing.
It says there is already a pending offer lol, that didn't last long, she is beautiful and that price is equally as beautiful lol 😍😍😍😍
Oh that green tile around the upstairs fireplace, gorgeous. And they sure liked their white paint, haha.
Queen Annes are traditionally white, inside and outside.
❤❤❤magnifique, elle besoin de beaucoup de décapage ❤❤
This is a great home!
Hermosa y Elegante,Gloria a Dios Aleluya Amén 💋🙏
I loved the house!
Absolutely beautiful ❤️
Beautiful home! Wonderful fireplaces but no outside chimneys?
May I ask, if you wanted to remove the white paint off of the pressed moldings so you could see the patterns easier how would you go about doing that?
I have the same question! I don’t mind most of the other white paint, especially compared to what it looked like before. But I’d love to figure out how to strip the trim without ruining the patterns.
Gods she's beautiful 😍
Great job Lynn. I like the way you explain the details in the houses and the historical facts around their period. Very educational. Do you have background in history?
This house needs some renovation but that is a good price for its historical history I love this house ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤heart and soul and I love this home Ithink it is priceless I wish iwas a millionaire when I see these kind of homes for sale because I love history and ilove queen Ann style so much wood fireplaces
When we moved to Vicksburg in 2017 we tried to rent this house.....but that was a no go!
Well now you can buy it!? 😊
@@megfuchs9425 that is not on the plans and more we are building our forever home in Arkansas
@@robinbriggs4976 I'm happy for you! I hope it really is the house of your dreams.
My fiance and I were going to buy this house to restore, but lost it to another contract. I hope who ever purchased it gives it the care it so deserves!
Dang. I’m sorry you missed it. Hopefully they’ll restore and not replace.
This house is beautiful! What is the music from? It is also great
What a beautiful home! Thank you for sharing and teaching us Architectural History! Love it! B~}
I love the house. The colored tiles are amazing, too bad someone went so overboard with the white!
Couple questions: remove paint from cast-iron and repaint marble or just fo-marble on top? Also pressed wood thats painted.. remove that too?
I’d remove all the paint. In the mantels you’ll get way better results on the faux marble if have a nice clean surface
@OurRestorationNation that's what I was thinking, the close-ups show how much paint is built up poor house looks like it needs to breathe.. love the video!
Cute dress! What do your shoes look like? 😂 JK! Husband said this house is worth moving back to his hometown!
I’m wondering when this was filmed because it has been sold.
According to the realtor website it’s sold.
We filmed this on Tuesday. It’s just pending now so it might still be available.
Thanks for the info of when you filmed ☺️ yes, it is pending, not sold :)
This looks like a George Barber
😍
Another beautiful house. I enjoy your historical info. Your vids are the one that I up the video quality to HD and slow down to normal speed. The video itself seemed to be disjointed, particularly after the kitchen the camera wound its way through a back room to a screened in porch, to outside, back to the main stairs and then upstairs with no description or layout info. While there as description of the fireplace tile in the bedrooms and the windows, the rest of the upstairs was just a randomly moving camera. I have no sense of the layout of the house. I only know that there is a back set of stairs because the camera momentarily stuck its lens into it. I was disappointed that there was no mention of the greenhouse shown in the introduction.
I don't mean to be overly critical, but I miss the greater info and your willingness to show the good, bad and ugly of a house that you have done in the past. I hope you can return to the videos of the past. I realize that it may be getting you too close to the Realtor position that I know that you are not and I do not know the legal issues involved, but you use to have the "If this was my house..." comments. I think those help promote preservation which you obviously support.
You almost got no commentary at all as when we arrived at the house we realized our microphone equipment no longer properly connected to the new camera we bought. So we had to leave Laine shooting B roll and head off to the closest Walmart to get you mic’d commentary. Then, it was 95 degrees with 72% humidity and no AC in the house. The house itself is wandering, disjointed and difficult to film, and made even more so by the conditions. Sorry this one video wasn’t up to your standards, but sometimes we do the best we can in the circumstances and move on. Try to show some grace and remember that there are exactly two people scouting, scheduling, traveling, researching, shooting, editing etc these videos. When ONE falls a little short of your expectations maybe you could simply let that slide, understanding that, under the very best of circumstances, these videos take a week of work to produce, if everything goes perfectly.
What a house. Craftsmanship. You look lovely today. Nice to see a lady behave like a lady.
Apparently someone’s never heard of painters tape or removing hardware prior to painting😂
You aren’t wrong 😂
Beautiful house! Too bad they ruined with white white white paint!
A few thousand to have it removed would be worth it.
Nice home. Too bad about the kitchen.
Sweet but needs a lot of work and massive paint stripping.
Not a fan of the new kitchen or bathrooms...
It's a beautiful house. But I'm old and couldn't properly care for it. This house seems to scream for a young family.
Thank you for this well-done presentation. I would like to vote for removing the "dramatic" music. Is Lizzie Borden about to jump out of an armoire, wielding an axe? No? Then, please take it away. Also, if you know of the ownership history of a house, please, please share it with us! This house fairly screams Civil War Profiteer. No native of Vicksburg had the money in the 1870's (I don't think) to build a house like this one. Historic photos would also be wonderful, if you can get them. I lament the many layers of paint obscuring the wood trim detail in some of the rooms, especially the acres of white paint covering so much up! I love the geography of the renovated kitchen, but not the style. I cringe whenever I see stainless steel in an old house! The best kitchen remodels, for me, in Craftsman, Edwardian, and Victorian houses are the ones that stop in about 1940, with everything deliberately retro. I hate going from 1910 (or thereabouts) to 2024 when I move from one room to another. I've seen too much of this where I live and it's a pet peeve.
Oh dear ! The architecture of this house could not be any further removed from the period of Queen Anne . Indeed , it bears no discernible resemblance to any type or period - it’s merely a suburban mish mash of design , materials and ideas.
Lemme guess… you’re from the UK, please google Richard Norman Shaw and then delete your uneducated comment.
@@OurRestorationNation Richard Norman Shaw knew what he was doing unlike this mess. Furthermore , he wasn’t even alive during the Queen Anne period. Tut tut , I suggest that you do some research if you are not trained in the subject .
My Masters Degree in Historic Preservation would disagree with you… as would EVERY preservation professional in the US. You obviously can’t even be bothered to google properly, much less admit the error of your ways, so just do us both a favor and leave my room. Let me say it in language you’ll understand: review the link provided then get thee gone.
isarchitecture.com/style-101-queen-anne/
@@OurRestorationNation Now Im truly disgusted - your lack of manners and the sheer folly of your last statement causes me to question the veracity of your claims. Indeed I shall “get gone” and be delighted to so do whilst retaining the privilege of opinion and expressing it , opposite this very channel. Master degree indeed ? Have the standards of education in the US really fallen to such an abysmally low level ? Good luck to you .
See, here’s the thing; you don’t get to “have an opinion” about scientific fact. And historic preservation is, in fact, a science. At least here in the US it is. We are actually considered scientists, as our CV’s clearly state. So, you DO have the right to be wrong. You can be just as wrong as you want to be, but you do not have the right to express anti-scientific gibberish on a channel dedicated to the spread of the SOI Standards for Historic Preservation. You have given me quite a good laugh today. It’s always hilarious when someone is shown to be incorrect, but instead of just saying “oopsie” and backing in to the shrubs as is appropriate, one doubles and triples down and then resorts to calling someone a bully. It’s okay, go find you a safe space where you can roll all around in your opinions. Here, however, we will vehemently defend the science.
Has its original slate roof.....so cool....