168 AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS April, 1909 
32—The honizontal lines suggesting clapboards 
house built for Mr. Craw 
Fenn, of Upper Montclair, is a pleasing 
and restrained treatment in half-tim- 
bered work in gray-green. The shingle 
roof is also gray-green of delightfully 
varied texture, as the shingles take the 
color differently. The lines of the en- 
trance are well suited to the stuccoed 
walls, with their broad square surfaces, 
and the window grouping is particularly 
attractive. 
The living-hall (Fig. 40) is of Flemish brown, the walls 
covered with golden-brown Japanese grass cloth. An effec- 
Sun Farlor 
Wr x/0-9 
Dinijeg korn 
MRO 415-0" 
Living ken 
/S-O 4 
10-6 * //-O" 
| Etceplion Koom 
give a certain unity to the design of the 
at Brantwood, New Jersey 
tive feature of the living-hall is a fire- 
place (Fig. 41) built of cement with a 
massive mantel. The fine paintings 
over the fireplace are the work of the 
owner. Off the living-hall, on the same 
floor, is his studio. The dining-room 
(Fig. 42) is in soft brown-chestnut. 
The second floor has four bedrooms and 
bath with tile floor and wainscot. 
Interesting and attractive as these 
typical stucco and half-timber houses are, they are perhaps 
not such striking witnesses to the all-round usefulness of 
Chantes 
19-0 015-0" 
Chanley 
/S-O'4 16-6" 
Chanler 
Bb xIS-O 
33—A feature of the floor plan is that the main living-rooms are placed at the rear of the house 
