Sunrooms
THERE are countless fascinating schemes for arranging sunrooms. One,
which we have recently seen near Philadelphia, was the result of
enclosing a large piazza, projecting from an immense house situated
in the midst of lawns and groves.
The walls are painted orange and striped with pale yellow; the
floors are covered with the new variety of matting, which imitates
tiles, and shows large squares of color, blocked off by black. The
chintzes used are in vivid orange, yellow and green, in a stunning
design; the wicker chairs are painted orange and black, and from the
immense iridescent globes of electric light hang long, orange silk
tassels.
Iron fountains, wonderful designs in black and gold, throw water
over gold and silver fish, or gay water plants; while, in black and
gold cages, vivid parrots and orange-colored canaries gleam through
the bars. Iron vases of black and gold on tall pedestals, are filled
with trailing ivy and bright colored plants. Along the walls are
wicker sofas, painted orange and black, luxuriously comfortable with
down cushions covered, as are some of the chair cushions, in soft
lemon, sun-proofed twills.
Here one finds card-tables, tea-tables and smoking-tables, a
writing-desk fully equipped, and at one end, a wardrobe of black and
gold, hung with an assortment of silk wraps and "wooleys"for an
un-provided and chilly guest, in early spring, when the steam heat
is off and the glass front open.
Even on a grey, winter day, this orange and gold room seems flooded
with sun, and gives one a distinctly cheerful sensation when
entering it from the house.
Of course, if your porch-room is mainly for mid-summer use and your
house in a warm region, then we commend instead of sun-producing
colors, cool tones of green, grey or blue. If your porch floor is
bad, cover it with dark-red linoleum and wax it. The effect is like
a cool, tiled floor. On this you can use a few porch rugs.
Black and white awnings or awnings in broad, green-and-white
stripes, or plain green awnings, are deliciously cool-looking, and
rail-boxes filled with green and white or blue and pale pink flowers
are refreshing on a summer day.

An
Extension Roof in New York Converted into a Balcony
Shows how to utilize and make really very
attractive an extension roof, by converting it into a balcony.
An awning of broad green and white
stripes protect this one in winter as well as summer, and by using
artificial ivy, made of tin and painted to exactly imitate nature,
one gets, as you see, a charming effect.
By the sea, where the air is bracing, and it is not necessary to
trick the senses with a pretence at coolness, nothing is more
satisfactory or gay than scarlet geraniums; but if they are used,
care must be taken that they harmonize with the color of the awnings
and the chintz on the porch.
Speaking of rail-boxes reminds us that in making over a small summer
house and converting a cheap affair into one of some pretensions,
remember that one of the most telling points is the character of
your porch railing. So at once remove the cheap one with its small,
upright slats and the insignificant and frail top rail, and have a
solid porch railing (or porch fence) built with broad, top rail.
Then place all around porch, resting on iron brackets, rail-flower
boxes, the tops of these level with the top of the rail, and paint
the boxes the color of the house trimmings. Filled with running
vines and gay flowers, nothing could be more charming.
Window boxes make any house lovely and are a large part of that
charm which appeals to us, whether the house is a mansion in Mayfair
or a Bavarian farmhouse. Americans are learning this.
The window and rail-boxes of a house look best when all are planted
with the same variety of flowers.
Having given a certain air of distinction to your porch railing, add
another touch to the appearance of your small, remodeled house by
having the shutters hung from the top of the windows, instead of
from the sides.
A
charming variety of awning or sun-shades, to keep the sun and glare
out of rooms, is the old English idea of a straw-thatching, woven in
and out until it makes a broad, long mat which is suspended from the
top of windows, on the outside of the house, being held out and
permanently in place, at the customary angle of awnings.
We first saw this picturesque kind of rustic awnings used on little
cottages of a large estate in Vermont, cottages once owned and lived
in by laborers, but bought and put in comfortable condition to be
used as overflow rooms for guests, in connection with the large
family mansion (once the picturesque village inn).
The art of making these straw awnings is not generally understood in
America. In the case to which we refer, one of the gardeners
employed on the estate, chanced to be an old Englishman who had
woven the straw window awnings for farmhouses in his own country.
The straw awnings, with window boxes planted with bright geraniums
and vines, make an inland cottage delightfully picturesque and are
practical, although the sea might destroy the straw awnings by high
winds.
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