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top right: the home’s open loor plan creates an 
airy feel throughout the home. bottom right: 

the trusleys’ favorite craftsman style encour- 
ages natural details such as stone and wood.



Nantucket look of shingles, the dark 

floors, and the tone-on-tone paint,” 
says Shelby.

The result is anything but complicated. 
“It’s a farmhouse,” says builder Chuck 

Atkins. “A wraparound front porch, 
cleaner lines, not overly ornate. It’s from 

an earlier time period—with a cozier, 
warmer feel. It’s a fun style to do. It’s 

easier to get people’s personalities. It’s 
not expected. So much of what is built 

today is cut and paste. When people step 
in, it’s refreshing. It’s different.”


THE MAIN FLOOR

This home weaves together the 
elements of this style that make it so 

accessible, warm, and inviting. The 
open floor plan, use of natural materi- 

als and colors, stone fireplaces, and 
handcrafted built-in cabinetry all work 

in a simple, elegant harmony.
The Trusley home is a beautiful 

example of why a porch is such an 
important element of the Craftsman 

style. The tapered columns, one of the 
most distinctive characteristics of this 

genre, support the porch roof and rest 
upon massive stone piers that extend to 

ground level, creating a sense of solidi- 
ty and permanence. The exposed rafter 

tails and beams under deep roof eaves 
reflect the influence of the Arts and 

Crafts movement on this style. “Chuck 
was a genius in mixing the elements of 

shingles and bricks,” says Shelby.
Looking at the front garden design, 

by David Montgomery of garden Walk, 
you can easily see the “bones” of what 

will be in a year or two. The hand-laid 
paver walkways, with set out places 

for stone benches and a rose arbor, the 
carefully planned shrubs which will 

one day form a hedge border, and the 
beds with seasonal color all comple- 

ment the rolling landscape that sur- 
rounds the house.

Entering the house, the eye is drawn 
to the dining room, which contains a 

Theodore Alexander Jupe table, an






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