40 
House & Garden 
INVITING 
ENTRANCES 
TO THE 
HOUSE 
kjooSw 30 ? 
Another of the 
doors in the 
Vaughan residence 
is cut in the old 
Dutch fashion and 
lighted by a square 
panel above, giv¬ 
ing the door an 
unusual interest of 
line and decora¬ 
tion. Shield panels 
add to the effect 
Far a Dutch Co¬ 
lonial type the 
Germantown hood 
and settles form the 
most pleasing and 
simple entrance 
A hooded entrance 
lends protection to 
the door of the 
home of G. A. 
Blake, Esq., 
Charles City, Iowa 
The broken pedi¬ 
ment is a type 
often used suc¬ 
cessfully with a 
Colonial entrance 
porch. From the 
residence of W. B. 
Johnson, Esq., 
Charles City, Iowa 
The entrance 
should crystallize 
t he architecture. 
In the residence of 
H. P. Vaughan at 
Sherborn, Mass., 
the architecture is 
Cape Town Dutch, 
and the doorway 
typifies it. G. P. 
Fernald, architect 
An overhang forms 
the porch roof in 
the residence of G. 
R. Morris, Charles 
City, Iowa, the 
entrance coming at 
one corner up a 
flight of brick steps 
(Left) The half-timbered house 
can have a separate entrance 
porch, as in the residence of 
Mrs. C. P. Orvis at Scarsdale, 
N. Y. J. A. Bodker, architect 
(Right) Tudor brick arches 
with a whitewashed brick ves¬ 
tibule form the entrance to the 
home of Gardner Steel, Esq., in 
Pittsburg, Pa. Louis Stevens 
was the architect of the house 
■ 
