2012年6月3日星期日

Century-old homes in Arlington Heights part of walking tour

One thing that Steve Martini brags about is his wife’s decorating skills. And while Daisy Kessler has done a great job with color selection and finding treasures in antique shops, garage sales and on Craig’s List, the couple has also displayed considerable do-it-yourself skills on their antique house.

On the other hand, Jessica and Mike Braun moved their young children into their 100-year-old Arlington Heights home without many decorating changes.

Both homes are part of the Arlington Heights Historical Society’s June 10 House Walk and Tea. All five homes on the walking tour are historic this year to honor the 125th anniversary of the village’s incorporation. Other homes are a 1906 Victorian complete with a turret and stained glass and two 1920s bungalows.

Guess which room both the Brauns and Martini/Kessler redid completely during their three years of homeownership? That’s right, the kitchen.

And another thing the couples have in common — they both love their old houses and the central Arlington Heights neighborhoods where they live.

Martini and Kessler added 150 square feet to what was once a galley kitchen, making it much more workable when 50 or more relatives gather for Christmas.

And while the couple has painted most rooms, sanded floors, added crown molding and other woodwork, vaulted the ceiling of a small family room off the kitchen that was once an enclosed porch, they still consider the home a work in progress.

Remaining on the to do list: Remodel the 2 bathrooms and find an appropriate mantel for the oversized living room fireplace, not to mention sconces for the wall above it.

The Brauns did not enlarge their kitchen, but one place where they are ahead of Martini and Kessler is the fireplace in the living room. The Brauns, whose home was built in 1910, could tell from the floor boards that a fireplace had been there, so they recreated one beautifully, all with pieces that Mike found online.

The antique cherry mantel matches the home’s incredible cherry woodwork, and it surrounds antique-looking tiles with wine-colored clouds on white. The fireplace does not work, so it was important to find the metal plate that Jessica hopes depicts a musician such as Mozart, and Mike says looks like Thomas Jefferson.

Martini and Kessler looked long and hard for an old house, then found this one after they had given up and remodeled the kitchen in their previous, much more contemporary house.

They did much of the work themselves and received considerable help from relatives, some of whom work in construction.

Visitors will note the many details that Kessler, who acted as general contractor, sweated over in the kitchen. The window in the pantry door features a sheaf of wheat, and a tree graces the one to the back stoop.

Kessler fell in love with the Silestone counter she bought at at Home Depot and put on the two-level island a few years ago, and that inspired features like the maple cabinets painted ivory. The island cabinets are an olive green, and that area holds one of the room’s upscale appliances, a two-drawer dishwasher, flexible for when the couple eats alone or entertains.

Three colors of brick-shaped glass tiles, including olive green, make up the backsplash, and Kessler not only loves the look of the kitchen, but finds all the materials easy to clean. Kessler took the colors from nature, including the Cypress Grass from Glidden, a soft yellow paint with green tones.

A corner table was made from a large wooden box or crate that once held boots, now held up with metal legs. It’s labeled Hamilton-Brown Shoe Co., a St. Louis store. In the 1870s one of its salesmen, a relative of an owner, started the company that eventually made Buster Brown shoes and sold the most children’s shoes in the world, according to an article on the website of the Clayton, Mo., History Society.

It’s obvious that Kessler loves oak, which she selected for the kitchen floor and the round table and chairs she found on Craig’s List, but Martini is so pleased the couple decided to keep the maple flooring in the dining room.

“I just love the wood in there,” he said. “You know by looking at it it’s original to the house.”

Martini and Kessler found they were spending a lot of time in the small room off the kitchen, even before they raised the ceiling, installed a skylight and added large travertine tiles to the floor.

Kessler doesn’t like to admit it, but she found the large painting of a Spanish woman, which sets the tone of the whole room, at La-Z-Boy where the couple bought their sofa. She loves how the colors go with the rug she had already selected for the floor.

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