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Arts-and-Crafts
Style
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The arts-and-crafts movement was a reaction to the Industrial Revolution’s
reliance on mass production and the Victorian era's focus on heavy ornamentation.
Popular during the early 1900s, this style glorified craftsmanship in simple
shapes with exposed joinery, spare ornamentation and strong lines. Materials
used to embellish the look include metals, stained glass and painted tiles
and fabrics featuring stylized floral motifs. Notable artisans of this period
are William Morris, Gustav Stickley and Charles and Henry Greene.
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Colors
- Burnished brown represents the rich woods used for the furniture and trim
and the burnished gold represents the mica glass used for lampshades. Accent
colors include deep forest green, sapphire blue and dusty rose, which garner
attention against the dense neutrals.
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Lighting
- Mica shades set in hammered copper or burnished brass set the tone for
an arts-and-crafts design. The broad horizontal lines echo those found in
the linear architectural features.
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Furniture
- Pieces are well-proportioned with strong lines, rich finishes and spare
ornamentation, except for the occasional hammered metal accent. The back-to-basics
philosophy of the movement required furniture to be purposeful, functional
and long-lasting.
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Woodwork
- As a reaction to the Victorian era's expansive use of heavy, dark, carved
woodwork, the arts-and-crafts style relied on a lighter palette with neutral
colored walls as the background to richly-stained woodwork.
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