{"id":551037,"date":"2025-05-29T13:49:33","date_gmt":"2025-05-29T17:49:33","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.finehomebuilding.com\/?p=551037"},"modified":"2025-07-29T15:14:44","modified_gmt":"2025-07-29T19:14:44","slug":"windows-common-to-the-arts-crafts-era","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.finehomebuilding.com\/2025\/05\/29\/windows-common-to-the-arts-crafts-era","title":{"rendered":"Windows Common to the Arts & Crafts Era"},"content":{"rendered":"
Double-hung and casement Arts & Crafts windows were an unobtrusive yet radical break with tradition. For example, the bilateral symmetry of Victorian doors and windows\u2014which often were grouped in twos, as with side-by-side double doors and two-over-two window sash (double-hung windows with two narrow panes of glass in each sash)\u2014was often abandoned for a less static rhythm of threes. A key example is the Chicago window, an early \u201cpicture window\u201d with two narrow lights (panes) flanking a large center light.<\/p>\n
This simple change in the math resulted in the transition from tall and vertical (Second Empire, Queen Anne) to ground-hugging and horizontal (the Arts & Crafts Bungalow). You see this geometry and massing in residential architecture ranging from the Japanesque \u201cultimate bungalows\u201d of Greene and Greene to the thousands of low-slung houses built by developers.<\/p>\n
Think of it this way: Rather than the tall, narrower windows seen on Victorian styles like Italianate or Stick, the typical Arts & Crafts window has a three-light upper sash over a single-light sash. Variations include multiples of three in the top sash: six, nine, or 12 lights. On even modest storey-and-a-half bungalows, the living room\u2019s large square or rectangular window is usually flanked by narrow three-over-one sash windows. Another variation is a large pane with a transom-like row of fixed, rectangular lights above. Diamond patterns formed by crossed or intersecting muntins are slightly dressier but not uncommon.<\/p>\n