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LONG AND RAMBLING in appearance. Actually squared to perfection. The covered porch almost 50 feet long, runs back more than 20 feet as a breezeway. Provides protected passage to garage from front door or kitchen. Ideal center hall plan makes every room a dead-end room. No through traffic. Three bedrooms, two baths, five closets plus spacious walk-in closet grouped and secluded at rear of house. Coat closet off of front vestibule.


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source: 53 house plans for 1953 by Rudolph A. Matern

Gemini AI Rendering



 


TWO COMPLETE DWELLINGS under one roof. With the snug appearance of a one-family house. Charming exterior with long low lines, beautiful oversized windows. Wide roof overhang and dooryard fence give a friendly, comfortable atmosphere. First floor luxuries: Spacious outdoor dining terrace adjoining dining room. Drop-leaf bar in living room. Large log-burning fireplace. Semi-circular breakfast nook in kitchen. Vanity and cabinets in bathroom. Second floor: Cozy apartment with center hall foyer. Open plan living room-dining room. Full ceiling height at rear of house concealed from street.



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source: 53 house plans for 1953 by Rudolph A. Matern

Gemini AI Rendering



 


TWO-STORY with second floor overhang. Bespeaks stability and permanence. Excellent example of efficiency and economy in square construction. Entrance vestibule with closet. Living room and dining room extend approximately 23 feet through house. Spacious kitchen with adjoining lavatory—a welcome feature. Second floor: Three comfortable bedrooms with cross ventilation. Bath and linen closet off hall.



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source: 53 house plans for 1953 by Rudolph A. Matern

Gemini AI Rendering



 The postcard slipped into my hands with the kind of quiet charm that makes time feel a little softer. I’d been sorting through my collection—carefully, almost ceremonially—when this new addition settled into place. Scene in South Park, Rochester, N.Y. The caption alone felt like an invitation, but the image… the image pulled me in completely.



I found myself lingering on the winding path first. It curved through the park with that gentle confidence older postcards often capture, as if the world moved at a pace that allowed you to actually follow such paths without rushing. The grass looked impossibly green, the kind of green that belongs to early summer mornings before the heat settles in. Tall trees framed the scene, their branches stretching wide like they were trying to hold the sky in place. And somewhere in the distance, a shimmer of water caught the light—just enough to hint at calmness without revealing its whole story.

What struck me most was the stillness. Not the empty kind, but the peaceful kind. The benches scattered along the path felt like quiet witnesses to decades of conversations, daydreams, and stolen moments of rest. I imagined people who once sat there—strangers to me, but somehow connected through this tiny printed window into their world.

Adding this postcard to my collection felt like adding a breath of fresh air. It carries that nostalgic serenity I’m always chasing in old paper: the sense that someone, somewhere, once stood in this exact spot and thought, This is worth remembering. And now, years later, I get to remember it too.

What I love about collecting postcards is how they become little time capsules. This one, especially, feels like a soft reminder that beauty doesn’t need to be dramatic. Sometimes it’s just a park, a path, a few trees, and a sky that can’t decide between clouds and sunlight. And somehow, that’s enough.

 


A RETURN to the more leisurely pace of yesterday. Gracious central foyer with wide stairway to second floor. Living room runs from front to rear. Has fireplace, large broad bay and two exits to covered porch protected from street. Breakfast nook off oversized kitchen has own covered porch. Note guest room-study. Second floor: three bedrooms, two baths, maid's room with bath. Southern accent provided by balcony with distinctive wrought iron work.



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source: 53 house plans for 1953 by Rudolph A. Matern

Gemini AI Rendering



 I felt a quiet thrill when I slipped this postcard into my collection—one of those small, electric moments only fellow collectors truly understand. The scene pulled me in instantly: Spring Street in Los Angeles, looking south from Franklin, captured at night in what must have been the early 20th century. Even though I’m holding a simple printed card, it feels like I’m peering through a window into a city that was still discovering itself.

What struck me first was the energy. The street is alive with movement—horse‑drawn carriages rolling alongside electric streetcars, pedestrians weaving between them, and that wonderful “HOLLYWOOD” sign glowing on the front of a trolley. It’s a snapshot of a city in transition, where old and new forms of transportation coexist under the same moonlit sky. I found myself imagining the sounds: the clatter of hooves, the hum of the streetcar lines, the murmur of people heading home or out for the evening.



The architecture adds another layer of charm. The buildings lining the street are tall, ornate, and confident, the kind of structures that seem to announce a city’s ambitions. Their windows glow warmly, reflecting the streetlamps below. There’s something cinematic about the whole composition—almost as if the postcard itself is a still from an early film noir, long before the genre even existed.

As I studied it, I realized how much I love postcards like this: not the polished tourist shots, but the ones that capture a city in motion, full of ordinary life. They remind me that history isn’t just grand events—it’s the everyday bustle, the small details, the way people moved through their world. This card, with its mix of moonlight, electric light, and human activity, feels like a love letter to a city growing into its identity.

Adding it to my collection feels like adding a tiny piece of Los Angeles’ memory. And as always, I’m left wondering about the person who first bought it. Were they a visitor enchanted by the city’s nighttime glow? A local proud of their modernizing streets? Someone sending a glimpse of their world to a faraway friend? I’ll never know, but that mystery is part of the charm.

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