vitanola
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 4,254
- Location
- Gopher Prairie, MI
Well, an Early Victorian house was generally fully carpeted, preferably in a reversible Ingrain, but lesser rooms would have used Venetian or common rag carpets, sewn together and stretched from wall to wall, for hardwood flooring was a great rarity before the '80's. It was not unknown for the impecunious to lay only a thin strip of carpet around the edges of the room, covering the center with a Drugget, a coarse canvas carpet protector, leaving the impression of expensive all over carpeting.
Sorry that you hate wallpapers so. It is nearly impossible to to a correct impression of a pre-war interior without at least some of it. You have not lived until you have hung century old cheap wallpaper. On a ceiling. The place that I'm currently restoring will pretty much be papered throughout, save for the kitchen and bath which have of course been finished in sanitary enamel.
Sorry that you hate wallpapers so. It is nearly impossible to to a correct impression of a pre-war interior without at least some of it. You have not lived until you have hung century old cheap wallpaper. On a ceiling. The place that I'm currently restoring will pretty much be papered throughout, save for the kitchen and bath which have of course been finished in sanitary enamel.