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INTERWAR 1919 - 1942 (Tudor Revival, Spanish Mission, Californian Bungalows, Art Deco, Jazz and Moderne) The use of geometrics to form borders as ornament has its origins in Egyptian times 6000 BC. The use of such forms as squares, diamonds, triangles and zig zag have been used and reused in many variations. During the inter-war period following the 1925 "Exposition of Decorative Arts" in Paris the Art Deco/Jazz Moderne Style grew in popularity. Bathrooms in the 1920's made the transition from the back verandah to the inside of the house. Walls often had gleaming white ceramic wall tiles sometimes tilux for more modest bathrooms. Floors were often black and white checkerboard sometimes in ceramic tiles but often in linoleum, also there was common usage of vitreous black and mosaic tiles often with Greek key borders. Walls with ceramic tiles often had decorative strips and at times capping tiles (as in Edwardian times). |
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Sunrise (152 x 75 mm)
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