Built
1900s to 1930s
Recognizing the Old Portland home
You’ll
know it’s an Old Portland home when it looks like a Craftsman Bungalow,
but has a second story. In the rest of the country, these houses would
be classified as Craftsman Foursquare, or simply considered oversized
Bungalows. Exterior features are its cubical shape, a hipped roof and front roof dormer, front porch (ranging
from wraparounds to simple stoops) and windows usually grouped in pairs.
Inside you’ll usually find four bedrooms and heavy, square woodwork.
Restoring
the Old Portland home
To retain and add value to this home style, you’ll
want to do the following:
Upgrade the roof, electrical, plumbing and
HVAC systems, then concentrate on cosmetics.
Repair or replace any damaged or missing
moldings.
Repair any chipped or discolored plaster on
the ceilings or walls.
Re-glaze and repaint exterior windows.
Replace any newer fixtures with period pieces.
Don’t make the mistake of polishing or replacing the dark brass in
these homes. That patina is what gives it its historical value.
If you’re going to replace the windows (a good
idea for energy efficiency), check for companies that will build new
ones to match the existing windows. Replacement doors also can be
built to match the originals.
If the woodwork has already been painted,
consider stripping and staining it to bring back the home’s original
charm. In the bedrooms, the woodwork can be painted a light color.
Refinish or restore the floors, which should
be wood, tile or stone.
Retain original fireplace materials: stone or
brick with wide wood molding on the sides and a mantel
above. Fireplaces also may have decorative tile around the edges.

Picking
your colors
The Old Portland home’s palette is muted: quiet
greens (think sage), creams (often muted), reds and golds (think mustard
or orange-hued yellow). Play off the colors found in natural wood,
stone, terra cotta and brick.
Decorating
your Old Portland home
These homes should look like they were designed
after the manner of honest craft traditions.
You can start with cozy amber-hued lanterns
hanging from the ceiling, or sconces on the porch or hallway walls.
Simple hanging globe fixtures were also de rigueur in this
period.
Use iron and copper blacksmithing for pot
racks and firewood holders, and iron or hand-hammered copper for
fixtures.
Try your hand at stenciled decorations on
walls.
Bring in Prairie-style lamps with leaded glass
panels, art glass shades and patinaed brass bases.
Place a beveled glass mirror or
countryside-mural art over the fireplace mantel, and Craftsman
lights on either side of the mantel.
Display candles in hand-hammered copper
candlesticks.
Turn a bedroom into a library, complete with
dark woods and lots of built-in bookshelves. (The library was the
typical hideaway for the “man” of the house.)
Furniture of the period was usually mahogany
with mortise-and-tenon and peg construction. Tables and desks
sometimes had inlaid tiles or green marble tops.