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e've
got a penchant for beautiful things. You'll find some of our
favourite beautiful things at the sites listed below. Just
click on the title and a new browser window will open and
take you to the site. Be sure to share a link with us if you
have some of your own favourites.
Click on the titles to go to the site.

This site has been around now for a long time. It's not hard
to understand why. You'll find lots of Arts and Crafts information
here, as well as links and information related to Arts and
Crafts artisans, retailers, and consultants.

On our old site we said they were an "Architectural
firm with an Arts and Crafts affinity." Well, take a
tour of their site. They're much more than that. They have
a links section that's worth the visit all on its own (they
were nice enough to include our old site on their links page).

We strive to achieve what Green and Green accomplished in
this archetypical Arts and Crafts home. By all means visit
this website but if you ever find yourself within 500 miles
(about 600 kilometres for us Canadians) of Pasedena, stop
and go there. It's an absolute wonder to behold.

This website is dedicated to the works of Elbert Hubbard
and the Roycrofters. Mr. Hubbard was one of the leading lights
of the Arts and Crafts movement.

This is a site associated with David Rago's website. You
may have seen Mr. Rago on the Antiques Road Show from time
to time. We're a little partial to this magazine. A customer
of ours was taken with our work to the point that he wrote
an article for the magazine. Click here if you'd like to read
the article.

This site is dedicated to the man many people credit with
starting the Arts and Crafts movement in the mid to late 1800's.

While this website could use some aesthetic upgrades, it
contains some great information about Frank Lloyd Wright.
For example, did you know there's actually a Frank Lloyd Wright
designed gas station? No, really. Check it out.

Who'd have thought anyone would have to organize to save
a Frank Lloyd Wright building? Well, apparently there are
losers out there who make necessary the preservation of his
work. Visit this site, its a great source for Lloyd Wright
information.

This is the official Frank Lloyd Wright site. If you want
to know the official story on just about anything Frank Lloyd
Wright, this is the place to go. There's even a chronology
of Frank Lloyd Wright's life from birth (1867) to his death
(1959).
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