PLAYING AROUND with some ideas for what could be a formal gate, entry porch, garden pavilion, or the like. The process of trying to ‘freeze’ the essence of a freehand sketch into a measured drawing is always a challenge. Sometimes the essence is lost, sometimes you end up with something completely different. Here the proportions of the measured drawings have ended up squatter than the original sketch, and the curve of the arched entry is more regular, but somehow less ‘alive’.
MOULDINGS I - AN INTRODUCTION
TRADITIONAL BUILDINGS ARE articulate: composed according to an established grammar of parts and joints to form a coherent, hierarchical whole. One particular characteristic that sets traditional architecture apart from modern, and by which traditional buildings express their articulated nature, is the use of ornamental mouldings: profiles formed in timber, stone or plaster which, when applied according to well-established rules, function to relate the parts of the building to one another through effects of light and shadow.
From the early 20th century, modern architects, committed to the twin ideologies of social and technological progress, began to reject the ornamental tradition. After a century or more of this process of stripping away, buildings are now for the most part inarticulate, in both senses of the word: they don't have a grammar, and they don't have joints.
The art of ornamental moulding is no longer taught in architecture schools, but could easily be revived. There are only a handful of basic moulding profiles, and the rules of thumb governing their use can be found in old textbooks such as this one.
This post will be the first in an irregular series exploring the basic moulding profiles and how they are used, in the hope that it might be of some use to anyone interested in the topic or looking to use mouldings in their own work. Enjoy!
Example illustration from the book ”The Theory of Mouldings” by C. Howard Walker, 1926, linked above.
Hello
This blog will be a place to store and share my thoughts, opinions, ideas and inspirations relating mainly to traditional architecture and design, in particular vernacular architecture, but probably straying into other areas too. I will try to post at least once a week, on a more or less regular schedule…
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