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Crandall, Crawford, Clayton, and Croft: Y'all need a half bath on your first floors for guests. I don't care where you put it. Just do it.
ReplyDeleteCroft, you're exterior is very charming, but damn, you're a tiny domicile. "Ideal for the discriminating family? Two adults in one bedroom and three children stuffed in the other?
And these kitchens...are y'all on CRACK?
No. 1,2 and 4 have more descent bathrooms. For the bedrooms, those around 13f x 11f are quite nice ones. mine is 13 x 13f and I like this kind of space.
ReplyDeleteAll have the big dining rooms and ridiculously small kitchens typical of the era. The Crawford's kitchen has a "nook" that looks like a table and benches, i.e. an eat-in kitchen, which is very advanced for that era. The Crockett has a half-bath downstairs, also advanced for that era (didn't it occur to anyone that this is a desirable feature in a house?) But the Crockett has the worst kitchen, measuring a mere 9' x 8'. And what's the thing sticking out into the kitchen of the Crayton that looks like a big ironing board?
ReplyDeleteThe ironing board is behind a cabinet door and folds out from the wall. Many houses of that time had such a convenient feature.
Delete-Rj
I've got to start calling my bedroom, my chamber.
ReplyDeleteSean - *chuckle*
DeleteI would live in Crockett and Croft!
ReplyDeleteAre these in the Sears, Roebuck & Co. catalog?
ReplyDelete