MikeKardec
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,157
- Location
- Los Angeles
My grandmother lived in a big old Spanish style house in the Los Feliz area of LA, nearly underneath the Griffith Park Observatory. You entered the house via a porte-cochère which lead to a small hallway and then a central two story hall with a stairway and second floor rooms opening off a balcony that was sort of a continuation of the stairway. The entire wall of the room at the front of the house was Tiffany glass and in the morning the sun coming through the outside windows of that room would light up the main hall. I believe that room had once been my grandfather's office, it was right beside the master bedroom, and the "children" (several generations of them) were not really allowed in there, though he was long dead.
That house also had two enclosed gardens, one with a wonderful cracked and leaking fountain. It was pretty rundown in my youth but filled with mementos of a once opulent lifestyle.
My current house (ca 1938) had a "telephone room." A closet that housed a small build in desk, a phone jack and a stool plus a shelf for phone books. I love that but I had to turn it into a clothes closet. My previous apartment had decorative plaster moldings framing nearly every single wall panel.
But the old fashioned detail I think is really cool is this --
I just got back from Germany and I saw this sort of curtained inglenook in a number of old houses like the Cecilienhof Palace, where the Potsdam Confrence was held. If it's really cold that looks like a great place to draw the curtains and warm up.
That house also had two enclosed gardens, one with a wonderful cracked and leaking fountain. It was pretty rundown in my youth but filled with mementos of a once opulent lifestyle.
My current house (ca 1938) had a "telephone room." A closet that housed a small build in desk, a phone jack and a stool plus a shelf for phone books. I love that but I had to turn it into a clothes closet. My previous apartment had decorative plaster moldings framing nearly every single wall panel.
But the old fashioned detail I think is really cool is this --
I just got back from Germany and I saw this sort of curtained inglenook in a number of old houses like the Cecilienhof Palace, where the Potsdam Confrence was held. If it's really cold that looks like a great place to draw the curtains and warm up.