Painted Ladies

Painted ladies is an American vernacular term, used as an endearment, introduced in the 1970’s to describe polychromed Victorian houses in the greater San Francisco area, which are usually painted in a multi-colored pastel scheme. The term’s popularity spread east in the late 1970s and 1980s, however its use began to decline in the 1990’s and is seldom used in 2000, replaced by more accurate terminology such as polychrome, etc. Those familiar with historic preservation view the term painted ladies as bordering on kitsch. As a rule, highly decorative homes built during the Queen Anne style era (late 1800s) were painted in multiple colors as to draw attention to the elements of the design. After 1900, Queen Anne style fell from popularity, replaced by the classical revival schools of design; whites and light crme’s dominated these types of wood structures, and so many Victorian homes were subsequently painted all white, or one color, as a means of simplifying painting and modernizing facades by playing down their highly ornamented style details.

External links

See also


There is also a butterfly called a Painted Lady.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
faculty psychology
le bon
the military revolution
vince ditrich
aspen music festival and school
christian martyrs
perdue
pathos
king's school, macclesfield
fight club (film)
daniel lapp
black volta
agf
malta national football team
christian and missionary alliance
torso in the thames
jason scott (life tabernacle church)
texans for a republican majority
wasi'chu
1998 australian waterfront dispute
girlfriends
lyce claudel transitway station
preki
shiva naipaul
kriya
belarus national football team
steam locomotive nomenclature
catherine of saxe lauenburg
john byrne leicester warren, 3rd baron de tabley
larry harvey
nice & smooth
price daniel
twyford, berkshire
carnival (ep)
tracheoesophageal fistula
paul garon
villa montalvo
list of people by name: shf shz
cilaos
harkishan singh surjeet
callus (cell biology)
xabi alonso
list of people by name: shb shd
raf wittering