HERE is a three-bedroom house that should appeal to the conservative home builder. The exterior is in brick featured by a bay window in the living room, and the garage is detached.
The front entrance is dignified and in excellent taste, and enters directly into a living room, the principal feature of which is the picture window on one side and the fireplace on the other. An unusual feature of the living room is an alcove for books. This enters a bedroom which can easily be converted into a study or den. Adjacent to the living room is the dining room, with exposures on two sides, and separated from the living room by sliding doors.
Between the dining room and the kitchen is the breakfast room, accessible from the hall and equipped with a built-in sideboard and corner china cabinets. The kitchen, which adjoins the breakfast room, has the usual kitchen appointments.
The bedrooms are of generous size and well ventilated, with large closets and direct connections with baths. One bath is accessible from the hall, for visiting guests. The hall is the center of all activity and contains the usual appointments of telephone desk, mop and broom closet, and linen storage cabinets.
The garage is located directly back of the house, is connected with the kitchen by means of the service porch, and has in it a laundry and toolroom. This garage may be placed anywhere else on the site, if you wish.
A design of landscaping is suggested for the garden lover, and the toolroom can easily be adapted to a workroom by installation of necessary facilities.
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source: The Progressive Farmer – Distinctive Southern Homes | 1950
Gemini AI Rendering
HERE is presented the rambling-type house developed to meet the particular requirements of the small-home builder in the South.
Generous porches with low sweeping roofs are designed for outdoor living and dining, and for the development of recreation and hobby areas. The kitchen is small and designed to provide the greatest convenience in minimum space. It has a streamlined cabinet at the north end, and space for the hot-water heater, range, refrigerator, and a small table.
The isolation of the sleeping units from all noise of operation of the household makes this plan particularly desirable. The hall is minimum in size.
The bath is in an ideal location for convenience of the sleeping units, and still close enough to the semipublic spaces to make its use convenient for guests.
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source: The Progressive Farmer – Distinctive Southern Homes | 1950Gemini AI Rendering
This house was planned for a young family—it is a house designed to grow. The original unit, composed of three rooms and bath, has all the essentials of comfortable living. The rooms are of good size, the exterior has attractive lines and good proportion, and the arrangement affords the maximum in convenience.
A generous, covered porch is supported by iron trellises on which climbing vines may be trained.
From the porch one enters a foyer into which all three rooms open. This foyer gives a further effect of spaciousness and eliminates traffic through the living room in reaching the bedroom and kitchen.
The living room features an attractive open fireplace, and the windows in this room are grouped in such a way as to provide plenty of light and ventilation.
The bedroom has an ample closet and a private bath with shower. Windows on three sides of the bedroom give the good ventilation so necessary in our warm Southern climate.
The kitchen has a built-in dining space immediately to the right of the door, where it is out of the way of sink-to-stove traffic. Sink, drainboards and cabinets are on the right; stove, refrigerator and water heater on the left. There is a window at the end of the breakfast nook and another above the sink. In the original unit the back door opens directly into the yard.
The extension provides for a bedroom, a bathroom with tub (accessible from hall), a dining room (this room can be used as a third bedroom if the family prefers), three large closets, and a service area just outside the kitchen.
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source: The Progressive Farmer – Distinctive Southern Homes | 1950
Gemini AI Rendering
THROUGH its pleasing, balanced proportions this small Colonial house achieves beauty and character. The plan arrangement solves the problems of economy through compactness and a most intelligent relationship of all living areas. Each room is easily reached from the large living room or any other part of the house. Even with the compact arrangement, every room is provided with large windows on two or more walls to provide light and good ventilation.
The large entrance porch is beautifully designed in the Colonial style as a feature to the front of the house. Upon entering the living room, the first thing that meets the eye is the fireplace which has been designed to give charm and dignity to the entire room. There is a built-in book alcove between the living room and dining room for choice books.
Each bedroom is large and provided with ample closet space. The master bedroom has its own bath and two closets. Both the dining and breakfast rooms are large and nicely located for serving either formal or informal meals. The rear screened porch offers many advantages for afternoon and evening visiting and games.
A stairway is shown to the attic which may be used for additional rooms or storage space. The second floor plan indicates how this space may be developed into two large bedrooms, a play room and a bath. The cost of making use of this feature would be small. However, the stairway may be omitted entirely and turned into closets instead.
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source: The Progressive Farmer – Distinctive Southern Homes | 1950
Gemini AI Rendering
The central bedroom is a dual purpose room, separated sufficiently from the other bedrooms so that it may be used as a guest room, study, sitting room or den, and is conveniently located to the breakfast room and kitchen. Note how generous the living room has been made and how the wall and furniture space is increased by the use of an entry. The living and dining rooms may be shut off entirely when not actually in use and passage made through the back center room.
A well located breakfast room, necessary for comfort and convenience when the dining room is not required, is included in this plan. The kitchen and dining rooms are both large and well arranged for service and beauty. The double car garage is placed close to the house and connected by a screened breezeway for protection in bad weather; it may be used also as a sitting porch, or outdoor living or dining room.
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source: The Progressive Farmer – Distinctive Southern Homes | 1950
Gemini AI Rendering
There is something irreplaceable about holding physical pieces of cinema history. Today, I’m thrilled to share the latest addition to my collection: the original 1996 press kit for the neo-noir crime thriller, Mulholland Falls.
Directed by Lee Tamahori and featuring an absolute powerhouse of an ensemble cast—Nick Nolte, Melanie Griffith, John Malkovich, and Chazz Palminteri—this film captures the gritty, sun-drenched atmosphere of 1950s Los Angeles perfectly. This kit includes the original production notes and several stunning black-and-white publicity stills, including some incredible shots of Melanie Griffith and Jennifer Connelly.
A true highlight of this kit is the photography featuring Jennifer Connelly, who plays the pivotal role of Allison Pond. Even in a film filled with tough guys and "Hat Squad" detectives, Connelly’s screen presence is undeniable. There is a timeless, ethereal quality to her beauty in these stills that perfectly evokes the classic Hollywood starlets of the 1940s and 50s. Whether it’s the way she holds the light or that signature blend of innocence and mystery, she truly serves as the haunting, beautiful heart of the film’s central mystery.
Getting to see these images in their original high-contrast print format really highlights the incredible cinematography of Haskell Wexler. It’s a reminder of why we collect in the first place—to keep these moments of celluloid magic alive.