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Architecture QuattrocentoQueen Anne Style architecture

Queen Anne Style - Table of Contents ............................. Illustrated FURNITURE Glossary
Queen Anne Style in Buffalo, NY - INTERIORS
1880-1910
Queen Anne interior features include the following: ...

 


Queen Anne Style architecture
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Queen Anne, Stick, Shingle (1880s-1905)
STYLES MENU
(In roughly chronological order)
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Queen Anne With Patterned Shingles
Victorian House Photos: Queen Anne
Patterned wood shingles give texture to the siding of this Queen Anne Victorian in Saco, Maine. Also note the sunburst design in the gable.

QUEEN ANNE (c.1885-c.1905)
Colorful, individualistic, and exuberant describe the Queen Anne style, the culmination of the elaborate architectural styles of the late 19th century.

The Queen Anne was asymmetrical in shape with large porches and wide verandahs, usually one-story high and wrapping around one ore two side walls extending the house to include outdoor living space.

Queen Anne
A sub-style of the late Victorian era, Queen Anne is a collection of coquettish detailing and eclectic materials. Steep cross-gabled roofs, towers, and vertical windows are all typical of a Queen Anne home.

Queen Anne
2 - 3.5 stories
The Queen Anne is the most elaborate of all 19th century house styles. It reflects the eclecticism of the late 19th century. Queen Anne houses are very vertical, which is evident in their 2.5 to 3.5 stories.

Queen Anne in Ontario
Queen Anne in Ontario is similar to that found in the United states.

Queen Anne sash - A window with many small geometrical shaped panes running along the edges
quoins - Alternating large and small stone, brick or wood used to decorate and accentuate the corners of a building ...

Queen Anne Style -- Popular late 19th century revival style of early 18th century English architecture, characterized by irregularity of plan and massing and variety of texture.

Queen Anne: The Queen Anne style of house named (unaccountably) for the English monarch of the 18th century is often referred to as "Victorian," since it dates from the reign of Queen Victoria (1837-1901).

Queen Anne
A period in English furniture design from 1702-1714, characterized by an adaptation of Baroque and the extensive use of the cabriole leg. Walnut was the dominant wood.
R ...

Queen Anne - (Refer: Edwardian).
Quoin - A stone or brick used to reinforce or decoratively distinguish an external corner or edge or a wall from adjacent masonry.

The Queen Anne style was invented in England about 1860, where it was popularized by a number of architects, particularly Richard Norman Shaw.

QUEEN ANNE VICTORIAN
Walls: Half Timbering, patterned wood shingles, patterned stick-work on walls
Parapet on gabled roof
Side-gabled, front-gabled or hipped with cross gables Roof: Steep pitch,
gabled or shaped dormers ...

Not to be confused with the architecture of the reign of Queen Anne (1702-14), this usually refers to a later Victorian style that sought to revive the domestic classical manner of the mid 17th century.

Common in Queen Anne Styles among others. A turret is a smaller structure while a tower begins at ground level. (like oriel window) a small, slender tower, usually corbelled from a corner of the building it doesnÆt touch the ground.

Queen Anne Floor Plans
Ranch Floor Plans
Saltbox Floor Plans
Shed Style Floor Plans
Shingle Style Floor Plans
Southern Floor Plans
Split Level Floor Plans
Tidewater Floor Plans
Tudor Floor Plans
Victorian Floor Plans ...

The "Federation" style home was popular from the 1890's to about 1910 and generally refers to the Queen Anne style of architecture. Most Federation style homes on Tamborine Mountain were built between 1920 and 1930.
Building Terminology ...

Antebellum, Bungalow, Craftsman Bungalow, Greek Revival, Italianate, Neoclassical, Queen Anne, Tudor Revival
Roof Types
Gable, Hipped, Mansard, Shed, Saltbox, Pyramidal, Gambrel, Flat
Shingles ...

Turret - A small tower, often at the corner of a building. Common in Queen Anne Styles among others. A turret is a smaller structure while a tower begins at ground level.

turret - a small slender tower usually at the corner of a building, often containing a circular stair. The Queen Anne style employs the turret as one of its primary characteristics and is derived from medieval castle construction.

late medieval architecture, a type of construction in which the heavy timber framework is exposed, and the spaces between the studs filled with wattle-and-daub, plaster or brickwork. The effect of half-timbering was imitated by the Stick, Queen Anne, ...

encouraged manual skills and simplicity; Baroque; Classical which is based upon Greco-Roman styles; Gothic which originated in Europe and was popular between the late 12th century and early 16th century, characterised by pointed arches; Queen Anne ...

See also: House, Architecture, Victorian, Gothic, Colonial