Los Angeles Times

A Craftsman crawl

- By Lisa Boone

For devotees of the Arts and Crafts movement, the annual Craftsman Weekend in Pasadena is a welcome dive into Arts and Crafts architectu­re, design and theory.

This year, Pasadena Heritage teams with the South Pasadena Preservati­on Foundation in organizing a self-drive tour of six homes, including three by famed architects Charles and Henry Greene.

The tour includes the noted Duncan-Irwin House (1906-08), built along the Arroyo Seco and furnished with museum-quality items from Revival Antiques, a Pasadena antiques dealer specializi­ng in Arts and Crafts furniture & lighting.

Other Greene and Greene properties include the Howard Longley House (1897) in South Pasadena, and next door, an exterior tour of the Garfield House (1904), built for Lucretia Garfield, widow of former President James A. Garfield.

The tour also includes the Ide House, a Craftsman bungalow designed by D.M. Renton in 1913 in the Orange Heights Historic District, the Childs-Torrance House (1904), a three-story Tudor Revival home by Charles Wesley Buchanan in the Buena Vista Historic District, and a “Craftsman makeover” of a former carriage house.

Craftsman Weekend will also include walking tours of landmark neighborho­ods (as well as lesser known landmark districts), lectures and bus tours, and the Antiques and Contempora­ry Furnishing­s and Decorative Arts Sale at the Pasadena Convention Center.

Homes on the tour will be open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, with last entry at 4 p.m. The event is selfguided, so participan­ts can visit the houses in any order. Tickets are $45 and $55 in advance or $55 and $65 day of tour. Shuttle tickets are available for $30$35.

 ?? John Aaroe Group ?? THIS 1904 HOUSE was built by Charles and Henry Greene for President Garfield’s widow.
John Aaroe Group THIS 1904 HOUSE was built by Charles and Henry Greene for President Garfield’s widow.

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