| HOUSE AND GARDEN 
February, 1910 
53 
gj.fi 
i[ .-Tv||§§| 
j|t 
An upper bay should usually have some ap¬ 
parent support, even if only brackets 
The railed-in flat roof of this bay is floored 
and used for outdoor sleeping 
Bay-windows seem always to fit well into a 
half-timber house 
Modern English plaster houses are frequently 
seen with this curious flat-roofed type 
The half-brick jog back before the angle 
sides start lends character to this bay 
An unusual two-story bay on a rather 
narrow gable end 
The home of Mr. J. W. Dow, architect, has 
this light and graceful bay over the entrance 
In this country house the bay has been em¬ 
ployed to break the long roof slope 
This five-window cement bay must make an 
attractive end feature for its room 
NINE TYPES OF BAY-WINDOWS 
