Early American Wall Stencils in Color


Book Description

Full-sized patterns traced in New England homes and stencils from early coverlets, together with complete directions showing how anyone can use them with ease.




Early American Stencils on Walls and Furniture


Book Description

Uses photographs and text to illustrate the variety of stencils used as decorative art during the early nineteenth century




American Wall Stenciling, 1790-1840


Book Description

A generously illustrated survey of an important post-revolutionary American decorative art form.




Early American Cut & Use Stencils


Book Description

Fifty-four full-size stencils include flowers, leaves, acorns, vines, willows, fruit compositions, and other authentic designs.










Early American Wall Stencils in Color


Book Description

Full size patterns traced in New England homes and Stencils from early coverlets, and directions on how to use them.




Stenciling the Arts & Crafts Home


Book Description

Stenciling the Arts & Crafts Home by stencil guru Amy Miller is a complete guide on how to create and use Arts & Crafts stencils to create authentic d cor in craftsman-style homes.




2,286 Traditional Stencil Designs


Book Description

Masterfully executed designs in reproductions of two rare catalogs: ornamental borders, corners and frames with intricate floral and foliated patterns, architectural ornaments and design elements, religious symbols and figures, much more.




Borders and Scrolls


Book Description

Borders and Scrolls provides a fascinating glimpse of domestic wall painting in the historic Northeast. It looks in detail at how and why Americans in New York, Vermont, Massachusetts, and Connecticut decorated the walls of their houses in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Wallpaper was just too expensive for even well-to-do merchants and farmers, who turned to craftsmen to stencil and freehand paint the walls around them. Much of this exquisite domestic art does not survive today: houses were remodeled, some torn down; walls have been repainted, papered over, or removed. Striking examples of those that remain are found in this richly illustrated volume, which reveals intricate technical processes, schools of design, similar designs and techniques on other objects and media, and engrossing histories and stories surrounding the houses, families, and craft painters. Margaret Coffin is the author of Death in Early America: The History and Folklore of Customs and Superstitions of Early Medicine, Funerals, Burials, and Mourning and The History and Folklore of American Country Tinware, 1700–1900.