Culture

Tudor Style Home in Old Torrance

tudor.jpgWe happened to drive through a section of Old Torrance last Saturday while we were out running errands. On our way through the area, I snapped this photo of a classic Tudor style home. Most homes in this area were built in the 1930s and vary in their architectural styles from Craftsman to Spanish Revival to Tudor and more.

Click on the image for the full-sized view.

I looked up some history about the Tudor style on Answers.com:

Tudor style, descriptive of the English architecture and decoration of the first half of the 16th cent., prevailing during the reigns (1485–1558) of Henry VII, Henry VIII, Edward VI, and Mary I. It is the first of the transitional styles between Gothic Perpendicular and Palladian architecture, the other two being Elizabethan and Jacobean. The rise of new trading families to wealth and the enrichment of court favorites by Henry VIII with lands and riches derived from his suppression of monasteries resulted in the building of many manor houses. In these the fortified character of earlier times gave way to increased domesticity and privacy.

Although the great hall still remained the focus of the establishment, its importance now decreased with the introduction of other rooms such as parlors, studies, bedrooms in greater number, and quarters for dining. Rooms frequently were fitted with oak paneling, often of linen-fold type; walls and ceilings received rich plaster relief ornament; and articles of furniture came into greater use. Domestic exteriors exhibited Perpendicular features in modified form, notably square-headed, mullioned windows and arched openings of the four-centered or so-called Tudor type. Other characteristics were the use of brickwork combined with half-timber, high pinnacled gables, bay or oriel windows, and numerous chimneys of decorative form. Principal Tudor examples are parts of Hampton Court Palace, begun in 1515, and many colleges of Oxford and Cambridge. Noted country manors include Sutton Place, Surrey; Layer Marney, Essex; and the splendid Compton Wynyates, Warwick.

Holly Hill House on Catalina Island

I used the zoom feature on my little Canon A710 IS camera to capture this image of Holly Hill House, about a mile from our balcony at the Hotel Metropole. Read what some other websites are saying about this house below the image.

hill-house.jpg

From Island Life:

The charming Queen Anne style cottage on the bluff over looking Avalon Bay has been a local landmark since 1890. The third oldest house in Avalon, its history mirrors that of the town. The house has always been a private residence, and Vlctor Kreis, the current owner, has restored it and furnished it with turn-of-the-century antiques.

From Silvery.net

The picturesque Holly Hill House is one of the top three or four icons on Santa Catalina Island. It’s perched on one side of the little valley that forms the edges of the City of Avalon. The vintage home is representative of the Queen Anne variant style of classic Victorian architecture. Supposedly, the little turret caught fire and burned, but this was fully restored by the home’s present owner.

From Catalina Images

Built in the late 1800’s almost single handedly by Peter Gano using his horse, “Mercury”, to haul large timbers and lumber. It was to become home for him and his betrothed who lived on the mainland. Her fear of isolation on the island ended their wedding plans and made Peter an embittered man. Legend has it that he posted a sign on his property saying, ” No women allowed”, and lived in the house alone for several years until he sold it and moved back to the mainland. The Queen Anne style of the Holly House is just one very fine example of many of the diverse architectural sights of Avalon.

Headaches

Two concepts of headaches:

  1. being in an accident at rush hour
  2. inching through traffic in the aftermath of an accident

I’ll take 2 any time . . .

doink.jpg

Seen on my evening commute through Hermosa Beach.

Tuzigoot Panorama

Once home to the pre-Colombian Sinagua Native Americans, the ruins at Tuzigoot, near Cottonwood, AZ, is a very interesting place to visit. It was a stop on our tour through Arizona last month. This is a picture of the ruin as seen from the road leading up to the park entrance. I’d like to take credit for this panorama, but it actually is a shot that Verna took from the truck as we drove up to the ruin. I cropped the image for this widescreen view.

tuzigoot-pan.jpg

Bob’s Hawaiian Shirts – Cuckoo for Kokopelli

cuckoo-koko.jpgWell, that’s the name Bob gave to this pattern. We bought this shirt in Arizona last year during our excursion along Old Route 66.

The colorful pattern includes icons from Native American folklore and a variety of reptiles, birds and animals thought to be associated with the ancient Anasazi fertility and agriculture god. Like most fertility deities, Kokopelli presides over both childbirth and agriculture. He is also a trickster god and represents the spirit of music. Click on the image for the wallpaper-sized version.