Bracketed cornice: term used especially when the brackets are not modillions Egyptian cornice AKA: Egyptian gorge / Cavetto cornice / Gorge-and-roll cornice / Gorge cornice ...
bracketed: supported with brackets brownstone: a brownish-red sandstone used as a building material, especially for facades of houses ...
v - past tense, past participle ˈbracketed - 1 to enclose (words etc) by brackets.
main section is bracketed by narrower end bays, more of less of equal height. Type 1850 ...
Bracketed Stairs - Stairs with treads carried on a cut string, usually with overhanging nosings Brad - A wire nail usually 50 to 65 mm long, with rounded built head and/or; ...
Bagging The process of applying thin mortar to a masonry wall with a coarse material such as hessian Balcony A cantilevered or bracketed platform projecting from a wall with access from an upper storey Bargeboard A sloping board fixed to ...
The Mission Revival style replicated the materials and details of California mission churches of the 18 th century, such as tiled roofs, curved parquets and gables, bracketed eaves, and arched arcades.
There is an ornate bracketed cornice along the eave side of the roof, complete with a scalloped frieze. The brackets are painted the same colours as the slate making up the roof finish.
The Italianate style is also known as Tuscan, Lombard, or bracketed. History of Italianate Architecture The Italianate style began in England with the picturesque movement of the 1840s.
The other prominent, dominating feature that helps to distinguish an Italianate building are the large bracketed eaves underneath the roof. They appear in a near infinite variety of styles and sizes.
The bulk of the capital may either be convex, as in the Doric capital; concave, as in the bell of the Corinthian capital; or bracketed out, as in the Ionic capital. These are the three principal types on which all capitals are based.
An architectural style derived from the Italian villa architecture that became common in England in the Nineteenth Century and subsequently in Australia in the 1870s and 1880s. Commonly uses picturesque forms, the tower canted bay windows, bracketed ...
See also: Bracket, Architecture, House, Cornice, Eaves
 
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