

#Fairytale house windows
Windows are usually wood-framed with leaded or wavy glass installed figural insets of stained glass are not uncommon. Round-topped or batten, often with a speakeasy - doors are frequently set in an arched frame lined with stone when a turret is present, the building's front door typically opens into this. Roofs are commonly finished with wooden shingles, wooden shakes, or slate laid down in a seawave or other intentionally irregular pattern though the original materials have frequently been replaced over time, the irregular pattern is sometimes imitated in the more modern material. Rooflines are usually curved in some way-swaybacked, sagged, concave, undulating or sharply pointed gables are usually jerkinhead or very sharply pointed eaves are often rolled use of catslides is common.
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Turrets with conical roofs are a common feature, as are faux dovecotes. Tucker and Urlacher first came to McCall on a fishing trip, and the experience was so enchanting that the real estate duo decided to pull the trigger on their first short-term rental propertyan idea. Exteriors also feature rubble stone, crazed brick, or clinker brick all-stone, all-brick, and all-wood construction are sometimes used. The Fairytale House was originally built by the Brown Tie and Lumber Company in 1963, back when the mill was still humming with activity. The exterior finish is predominately stucco, often rough troweled, and frequently with half-timbering. The storybook style is a whimsical nod toward Hollywood design technically called Provincial Revivalism, and embodies much of what we see in fairy-tale storybooks, stage plays and in our favorite dreams.
