Not exact matches
Rows of
white cottages sat before a glorious mountain backdrop that, alas, was obscured by a rain shower as we passed
through.
The little seaside village
through which we drove has little to recommend it, other than a couple of unexciting quick - stop cafés, a new modern,
white washed,
cottage - style beach
cottage development full of Pam Golding signs, and a complex called Slakkepas, where the units for hire are built in the shape of snails.
Perched above a bubbly stream that meanders
through a rush of oak and willow trees, Willow Brooke is a cute Cape - styled country
cottage with a green tin roof, rough
white - washed walls, wonky terracotta paving, rietdak ceilings and
cottage furniture.
Well Beach
Cottage ladies G'day, I am up to my ears in
white paint... literally... I have
white paint all
through my hair after finding myself head first in the top of this armoire.
Highlights include a circa - 1800 barn that was adaptively repurposed into a charming residence, the Eliphalet Sturges / George Hand Wright house, which was originally built in 1764 as a simple two - room farm house and extensively remodeled in the colonial revival style by the dean of Westport artists, George Hand Wright, in 1910; «Duck Haven,» a house and
cottage on the Saugatuck River adjacent to the historic low - tide crossing point; the David Judah House, circa 1760, which has gone
through a meticulous restoration by its owner, who preserved every nail, piece of timber and window; a circa 1840 Italianate house whose owners uncovered an original back staircase hidden by 20th century renovations; Westport's first one - room schoolhouse west of the Saugatuck River, which includes a large collection of signed prints by abstract artist Frank Stella; a reproduction saltbox circa 1966 designed and built by well - known architect George
White, which won a Historic Preservation Award this year.