Maine Home+Design September 2017

Page 1

SEPTEMBER 2017

September $5.95

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PHOTOGRAPHY BY JANET BARRETT

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For nearly 45 years, we have built furniture of exceptional design and enduring quality in our Auburn, Maine shop. Each individual piece is meticulously handmade from sustainably harvested American hardwoods, is of simple, graceful lines and is crafted for more than

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You may just need a refresh. architecture ¡ renovations ¡ interior design

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Heidi Kirn

WE ARE

CRAFTSMEN. woodhullofmaine.com

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C O NTENTS

September 2017 72 On a High Note Perched on the side of a hill, a western Maine home mixes styles, eras, and influences for a look that’s truly one-of-a-kind by Jen DeRose Photography by Irvin Serrano

88 A Light Touch A contemporary, energy-efficient house on the Presumpscot River celebrates natural light and scenic views by Katy Kelleher Photography by Jeff Roberts

104 A Tale of Two Houses A beachside shingle-style with nautical flair by Debra Spark Photography by Jeff Roberts

ON THE COVER: The living room of a Pine Point Beach home designed by Kennebunk River Architects, built by Douston Construction, and decorated by Hurlbutt Designs features a navy and white palette. The ocean-view painting is by Craig Mooney, who is represented by Maine Art Paintings and Sculpture.

104

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Cover photography by Jeff Roberts A Tale of Two Houses, page 104

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September 2017

CONT ENTS

26 TRIBUTE

Remembering DeWitt Hardy

40 TURNOUT

Going out, giving back: Supporting nonprofits and local businesses in the vital work they do year-round Waterhouse Field Renovation; Greater Portland Landmarks Mid Mod; Junior Achievement 28th Annual Maine Business Hall of Fame South

46 STYLE ROOM

A bedroom with pattern—and lots of it

50 AIA DESIGN THEORY

Kevin Moquin on the relationship between space and mood

54 PROFILE

Larry Duell of Father and Son Builders hopes to preserve his business for the next generation

62 PORTRAIT OF PLACE The Cranberry Isles

120 SHOP TALK

The pieces at Freeport’s Chilton Furniture Co. are built to last a lifetime

54

127 ONES TO WATCH

Five standout artists to keep your eye on

135 SHOWCASE 120

Rockport’s Center for Furniture Craftsmanship exhibits wood lighting that transcends craft

EDITOR’S NOTE 20 STAFF NOTE 24 CONTRIBUTORS 30 NOTES FROM OUR READERS 33 DESIGN WIRE 35 BRIGHT-MINDED HOME 36 EVENTS 42 RESOURCES 140 REAL ESTATE 145 THE DRAWING BOARD 184

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WARM MODERN The Danish word hygge (pronounced ‘hoo-guh’) means “a sense of being cozy or comforted.” Chilton’s Hygge table is designed and built in Maine from solid ambrosia maple, known for its rich, distinctive wood grain. What could be cozier?

UTI

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ED IT OR’S NO TE PHOTOGRAPHY BY HEIDI KIRN

Western Maine Penobscot Bay

Falmouth Pine Point Beach

Wells

SEPTEMBER IN MH+D Stories from around the state

“DECORATING IS AUTOBIOGRAPHY,”

Gloria Vanderbilt is often quoted as saying. I came across this axiom as we were putting together the final touches on this issue, and it seems to speak to the three featured homes—a mountain house, a beach house, and a house on a river—in all their varied styles. But despite their differences in design, they share one important thing: they’re all beautiful reflections of the people who live inside them. The mountain house in western Maine (On a High Note, page 72) was decorated by its owners, with the wife clipping ideas from magazines for months, then asking their builder to help turn them into an eclectic, comfortable reality. On Pine Point Beach (A Tale of Two Houses, page 104), a couple builds a new, nautically inspired house—less formal but still

classic—next door to their former home in order to accommodate their grown children and grandchildren. And then in Falmouth, the third floor of a contemporary, cubic home with river views (A Light Touch, page 88) is renovated for glass artist Laura Fuller, whose own works, along with those of others, are on display throughout. What I like most about these projects is that, in addition to being appropriate for their settings, each tells the story of the homeowners who live there. It feels like them. What does that mean for you, dear reader? Take a cue from the homeowner in On a High Note. Tear out a page that catches your eye, or pin a picture of an idea you want to steal. And then— and this is key—make it your own.

Jen DeRose Managing Editor jderose@mainehomedesign.com Instagram @jenderose_mhd 20 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

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PUBLISHER & CEO Kevin Thomas

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER & COO Andrea King

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Rebecca Falzano

MANAGING EDITOR Jen DeRose

ART DIRECTOR Heidi Kirn

DIRECTOR OF SALES Jeffrey D’Amico

ADVERTISING ACCOUNT MANAGERS

Karen Bowe, Anna J. DeLuca, Jessica Goodwin, Ryan Hammond, Peter Heinz, Tom Urban

PRODUCTION MANAGER Joel Kuschke

DIRECTOR OF EVENTS & SPONSORSHIPS Terri Coakley

ONLINE EDITOR Shelbi Wassick

EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Brittany Cost

OFFICE ADMINISTRATOR Grace Skerritt

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT MANAGER Casey Lovejoy

SPECIAL PROJECTS Emily McConnell

COPY EDITOR Leah Whalen

PROOFREADER

Amy Chamberlain

WRITERS

Susan Axelrod, Melissa Coleman, Katy Kelleher, Debra Spark

PHOTOGRAPHERS

Trent Bell, Jane Berger, Sarah Beard Buckley, Liz Caron, Dave Dostie, François Gagné, Rob Karosis, Jonathan Reece, Jeff Roberts, Irvin Serrano, Christina Wnek

ART INTERN

Laura Douglas

ART COLLECTOR MAINE

Abby Belisle Haley, Laura A. Bryer, Jack Leonardi, Taylor McCafferty, Andrew Thomas, Emma Wilson

CIRCULATION MANAGER Sarah Lynn

THE BRAND COMPANY

Chris Kast, Melissa Pearson, Mali Welch

LOVE MAINE RADIO WITH DR. LISA BELISLE

Spencer Albee, Dr. Lisa Belisle, Brittany Cost, Casey Lovejoy, Shelbi Wassick

MAINE MAGAZINE

Paul Koenig, Kate Seremeth

OLD PORT MAGAZINE

KC

Susan Axelrod, Kate Seremeth PRESIDENT Kevin Thomas CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER Andrea King CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER Jack Leonardi

Maine Home+Design is published twelve times each year by Maine Media Collective, LLC, Kevin Thomas, President.

Editorial and subscription information: phone 207.772.3373 | fax 888.836.6715 75 Market Street | Suite 203 | Portland | ME | 04101 Opinions expressed in articles or advertisements, unless otherwise noted, do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the publisher, staff, or advisory board. Every effort has been made to ensure that all information presented in this issue is accurate, and neither Maine Home+Design nor any of its staff are responsible for omissions or information that has been misrepresented to the magazine. Copyright ©2017 Maine Media Collective, LLC All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission, in writing, from the publisher. Printed in the U.S.A.

K I T C H E N C OV E C A B I N E T RY & D E S I G N www.kitchencovecabinetry.com | 207.541.9125 330 Forest Avenue, Portland, Maine 04101

Employment inquiries can be directed to jobs@themainemag.com Subscribe: mainehomedesign.com

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reserved for

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STAFF NOTE PHOTOGRAPHY BY HEIDI KIRN

ALL OF YOUR IN TERIO R S OLUTION N EEDS

CERAMIC TILE-HARDWOOD RESILENT-CARPET GRANITE COUNTERTOPS CABINETRY PAULGWHITE.US

T

here is a fine line between adoring the things we own and placing so much significance on them that the responsibility of having and maintaining them becomes a burden. I learned this in a personal crash course last August when my mom sold the family home I grew up in to downsize to a more practical (and adorable) condo in South Portland’s Knightville neighborhood. The opportunity to relocate came quickly. We burned the midnight oil while packing, realizing that the amount a household can accumulate over the course of 20 years is astounding. Every time my mom was certain that it was her last Home Depot trip for more boxes, there would inevitably be another. There was so little time to decide what would be kept and what would be tossed that, at a certain point, we stopped thinking. Instead, I sat cross-legged on my childhood bedroom floor, surrounded by piles and sorting items based on my immediate, gut response. This lesson served me well this June, when I downsized into my partner’s West End apartment. Not only is there a clarity that comes with letting go of the things we think matter, it’s a necessity when sharing an 850-square-foot space with another person. It’s also a process. Similar to my editing the earlier drafts of this staff note, it’s an effort of trimming away what’s unnecessary and making sense of

things—among the daily overload of junk mail, emails, bills, appointments, texts, and clothes that no longer fit. It is determining the must-haves, such as the antique table I had transformed with a can of canary yellow paint, as well as the things worth letting go, such as a box of receipts and train stubs from when I lived in Madrid. In Absolutely Beautiful Things, a book written by one of my favorite interior designers, Anna Spiro, she applies the same philosophy to styling your home. “It’s important to collect things over time—and only the things you love or have meaning to you—and let your home gradually evolve; that way you come to notice common factors or special threads that bind everything together,” she writes. True to this advice, I don’t miss that box of receipts that I had a sentimental attachment to, even though it did nothing but sit in a closet and collect dust, while the yellow table I use every day makes me smile. The most important thing to remember when you’re trying to simplify? As Spiro says, “Know what you love and what you don’t love.”

Jessica Goodwin Advertising Account Manager

207-797-4657 24 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

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Photo by Trent Bell

WE LOVE MAINE. We fill our work days creating Maine-centric media products—publishing magazines and guides, producing radio shows, managing social media sites, developing websites, filming videos, producing events—because of this simple tenet. Our staff have stayed here, come back here, or moved here because we love Maine’s rich history, its unique character, and the people who live here, and most important, because we believe in Maine’s potential. We simultaneously love the Maine we grew up in and fully embrace the reality that things change and evolve. And we bear witness to that happening here. We are cheerleaders for Maine as a place for people to live, stay, and thrive—a place for people from away to move to, a place for second homeowners to buy into, a place to raise children, a place to start and operate a business—as well as a place to visit and explore, a place to escape and heal. And, a place to be inspired. We cover Maine in a positive light. We intentionally leave the negativity and snark to other media outlets. There is a place for everything, and we honor that. But that place is not here. So if you love Maine, please turn to us with your reading eyes, your listening ears, your follows and your likes, your attendance, and your advertising and sponsorships. Explore what we believe is the best Maine has to offer, on the pages of our magazines and guides, through the airwaves, at events, and via social media. Auburn | Augusta | Bailey Island | Bangor | Bar Harbor | Bass Harbor | Bath | Beaver Creek | Belfast | Bethel | Biddeford | Biddeford Pool | Blue Hill | Boothbay | Boothbay Harbor | Brewer | Bridgton | Bristol | Brooklin | Brownfield | Brunswick | Buxton | Camden | Cape Elizabeth | Cape Neddick | Cape Porpoise | Caribou | Carrabassett Valley | Castine | Chebeague Island | Chesterville | Cliff Island | Cornish | Cousins Island | Cumberland | Cushing | Damariscotta | Dayton | Dixfield | Eagle Lake | Eastport | Edgecomb | Ellsworth | Eustis | Fairfield | Falmouth | Fort Kent | Frankfurt | Freedom | Freeport | Frenchboro | Frenchville | Fryeburg | Gardiner | Gray | Great Cranberry Island | Greenville | Hallowell | Harpswell | Harrison | Hermit Island | Hope | Hurricane Island | Isle au Haut | Islesboro | Jewell Island | Kennebunk | Kennebunkport | Kezar Lake | Kingfield | Kittery | Lewiston | Liberty | Limerick | Lincoln | Lincolnville | Lovell | Lubec | Madawaska | Mars Hill | Matinicus Island | Millinocket | Monhegan Island | Monson | Moosehead Lake Region | Mount Desert Island | Newcastle | New Gloucester | Newry | North Haven | Northport | North Yarmouth | Norway | Oakland | Ogunquit | Old Orchard Beach | Oquossoc | Orland | Orono | Otter Creek | Owls Head | Oxford | Peaks Island | Phippsburg | Poland | Port Clyde | Porter | Portland | Pownal | Presque Isle | Prospect | Prospect Harbor | Rangeley | Rockland | Rockport | Rockwood | Rome | Roque Bluffs | Rumford | Saco | Scarborough | Seal Harbor | Searsport | Sebec | Sedgwick | Sinclair | Skowhegan | South Casco | South Freeport | South Portland | Southport | Southwest Harbor | Squirrel Island | St. George | Stockton Springs | Stonington | Stratton | Temple | Tenants Harbor | The Forks | Thomaston | Thorndike | Union | Unity | Veazie | Vinalhaven | Waterville | Wells | Westbrook | Westport Island | Wilton | Windsor | Winterport | Wiscasset | Woolwich | Yarmouth | York

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President | Kevin Thomas Chief Operating Officer | Andrea King Chief Financial Officer | Jack Leonardi

Maine Home+Design is published twelve times each year by Maine Media Collective LLC

Editorial and subscription information: phone 207.772.3373 | fax 888.836.6715 75 Market Street | Suite 203 | Portland | Maine | 04101 Opinions expressed in articles or advertisements, unless otherwise noted, do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the publisher, staff, or advisory board. Every effort has been made to ensure that all information presented in this issue is accurate, and neither Maine Home+Design nor any of its staff is responsible for omissions or information that has been misrepresented to the magazine. Copyright ©2017, Maine Media Collective LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission, in writing, from the publisher. Printed in the U.S.A. mainehomedesign.com

DESIGNERS

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PORTLAND

INTERIORS

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T RIBU T E|D E W ITT H AR D Y

copyright Dewitt Hardy

DEWITT HARDY by Andres A. Verzosa

Self in Winter, watercolor

D

eWitt Hardy is synonymous with art in Ogunquit, a force in the Maine arts, and a world-renowned master draftsman, printmaker, and watercolorist. Sadly, he died July 8 after leaving a gala reception for the 21st Open Regional Juried Show at the Barn Gallery. As juror, I had the pleasure of selecting his watercolor, White Floral, to be in the show. A week or so before the opening, Hardy observed his 77th birthday with little fanfare. But that night at the Barn Gallery, we witnessed a celebration that most notably included his being fully embraced by his colleagues, friends, and peers of the Ogunquit Art Association, who deeply admired and fully appreciated him. Earlier that evening, the Barn Gallery was electric with enthusiasm. Seated smack-dab in the middle of it all was a serene DeWitt, almost Buddha-like, wearing a wide smile that invited folks to sit beside him. Alongside him most of the evening was his longtime friend and former wife, artist Pat Hardy, both holding court on their respective thrones. Throughout the night they received and charmed 250 attendees. No one suspected that before the evening’s close that DeWitt would pass through the veil. As I watched the two of them, it occurred to me to capture this moment and take their picture, knowing that if I did not I would regret it. These are the last pictures of DeWitt to be taken. That night, too, DeWitt and I had agreed to meet the next day at his barn to show me paintings by the late Ogunquit artist Norman West. I asked him to preselect work that best represented West to consider for my personal collection. He had known West and his work for years. Besides, I knew that DeWitt had an incomparable eye for assessing the uniqueness and that certain je ne sais quoi quality an original work of art possesses. Last year, I served as interim director and curator of the Ogunquit Museum of American Art. I had known DeWitt for years, but got to know him on a much deeper level during my time there. He visited frequently both by invitation and to just drop by. He shared his knowledge and history of the museum, as he knew it, with an unmatched perspective and insight as its former curator and then associate director under its founder, Henry Strater, from 1965 to 1976.

DeWitt and Strater made frequent trips to New York City to buy art for the collection, and his knowledge of works in the collection and how it evolved was important in planning the next season’s exhibitions. It was an immense benefit to be able to draw upon his knowledge when I was organizing the Traditions and Excellence exhibition, primarily around works created during the years of WWI (1914-18). Throughout last year I connected with DeWitt about other museum business, soliciting his expertise on evaluating and appraising prospective gifts for acquisition. On his last visit to the museum, when I was wrapping up, I introduced him to Michael Mansfield, the museum’s newly hired executive director. DeWitt was confident, self-aware, affable, and warm. He was exclusively casual in appearance, dressed oft in dark, non-descript sweatshirts and pants, fingerless gloves, and comfortable shoes. He looked like he might have just stepped away from his easel or printing press. He had a presence that reminded me of both a king and a big brother. He was someone totally in charge and comfortable with their authority while congenial and generous with their knowledge and time. Of our visits in the museum, I mostly enjoyed walking with him while looking at the current exhibits on loan or from the collection. I had invited him to cocurate the Ernest Hemingway and Henry Strater exhibit as well as Traditions and Excellence. During those talks DeWitt shared much about his own art, how he got into abstract art, and his life in relation to the history and culture of the arts scene in Ogunquit. Ogunquit is imbued with an ethos embodied in the art and life of DeWitt Hardy. Ogunquit has been an artists’ colony for more than a century and has always been welcoming to artists and creatives. That spirit, his spirit, will live on at the Barn Gallery. Ogunquit has experienced other significant losses of late, such as the passing of art patron Mary-Leigh Smart in January and now, just as I write, the passing of DeWitt's longtime friend and fellow Maine painter George Burk on July 19, which in tandem with DeWitt’s death has stolen my breath away, leaving me with a huge aching knot in my chest. The morning that I got word about DeWitt’s death, I went over to the Barn Gallery and bought a small watercolor of his and another by his protégé, Russel Whitten. In a week, I’ll join Pat Hardy; George’s wife, Dadée Burk; and DeWitt’s wife, Deirdre Williams, with family and friends to honor DeWitt and George at a bonfire to raise a toast to two of Maine’s finest kind. A memorial show is planned at the Barn Gallery next year for DeWitt Hardy and George Burk. The Bates College Museum of Art will also host a retrospective of DeWitt Hardy’s work in 2019, curated by Robert Flynn Johnson. Andres A. Verzosa is an independent curator and writer whose heart is in Maine.

26 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

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WE GIVE BACK. At Maine Media Collective our mission is to make a substantial and unique contribution to supporting Maine’s nonprofit community statewide, regionally, and at the town level. We believe that the work Maine’s nonprofit organizations do, individually and collectively, makes our lives better and Maine a better place to live. With limited budgets, Maine’s nonprofits need help boosting awareness of their specific causes and raising the funds they need. We have established long-term relationships with over 120 nonprofits and community-based organizations. We give to these organizations by providing, free of charge, services ranging from advertising to graphic design, brand development, marketing advice, online announcements, and social media engagement. We often include nonprofit organizations in our editorial coverage through feature articles and/or recaps of their events. You’ll find the latter in our “There + Then,” “Turnout,” and “Gather” sections. Over the past year, MMC has made cash and in-kind donations and services of more than: $1,930,463 WE ARE PROUD OF OUR AFFILIATION WITH THE FOLLOWING ORGANIZATIONS:

317 Main Community Music Center | American Diabetes Association | AIA Maine | Alfond Youth Center of Waterville | American Lung Association | Barbara Bush Children's Hospital | Bicycle Coalition of Maine | Biddeford Ball | Biddeford/Saco Rotary Club | Boothbay Harbor Fest | Boothbay Region Chamber of Commerce | Boothbay Region Land Trus | Boys & Girls Club of Southern Maine | Bowdoin International Music Festival | Camden Garden Club | Camden International Film Festiva | Camden Opera House | Camp Sunshine | Camp Susan Curtis | Cape Elizabeth Education Foundation | Cape Elizabeth Land Trust | Casco Bay Islands SwimRun | Castine Arts Association | CEI | Center for Furniture Craftsmanship | Center for Grieving Children | Colby Museum of Art | Cross Insurance Center | Dempsey Challenge | Easter Seals MainevElias Cup | Bayside Bowl | Environmental Health Strategy Center | Faily Hope | Farnsworth Art Museum | Fort Williams Park Foundation | Frannie Peabody Center | Friends of Casco Bay | Friends of Windjammer Days | Full Plates Full Potential | Georges River Land Trust | Gulf of Maine Research Institute | Good Shepherd Food Bank | Goodwill of Northern New England | Greater Portland Land Marks | GrowSmart Maine | Harbor House | Immigrant Legal Advocacy Project | Institute for Family Owned Business | Junior Achievement of Maine | Junior League of Portland | Kennebunk Free Library | Kennebunkport Conservation Trust | Kennebunks Tour de Cure | Kittery Block Party | L/A Arts | Life Flight of Maine | Lift360 | Maine Academy of Modern Music | Maine Audubon | Maine Cancer Foundation | Maine Center for Creativity | Maine Children's Cancer Program | Maine College of Art | Maine Crafts Association | Maine Development Foundation | Maine Discovery Museum | Maine Flower Shower | Maine Interior Design Association | Maine Island Trail Association | Maine Jewish Film Festival | Maine Lobster Festival | Maine Preservation | Maine Restaurant Association | Maine Science Festival | Maine Start Up and Create Week | Maine State Ballet | Make-A-Wish Foundation of Maine | March of Dimes | Mercy/Gary's House | MEREDA | Mitchell institute | Museums of Old York | MyPlace Teen Center |Natural Resources Council of Maine | New England Craft Brew Summit | North Atlantic Blues festival | Ogunquit Museum of American Art | Ogunquit Playhouse | Osher Map Library | Passivhaus Maine | Portland Downtown | Portland Museum of Art | Portland Ovations | Portland Symphony Orchestra | Portland Trails | PORTopera | Portland Stage Education Programming | Ronald McDonald House Charities | Royal River Land Trust | SailMaine | Salt Bay Chamberfest | Scarborough Education Foundation | Share Our Strength | sheJAMS | Strive | Talking Art in Maine | TEDxDirigo/Treehouse | Teens to Trails | Travis Mills Foundation | The Strand Theatre | The Telling Room | University of Maine Gardens | United Way of Greater Portland | Viles Arboretum | Vinegar Hill Music Theater | Wayfinder Schools | Wells Reserve at Laudholm | Wendell Gilley Museum | WinterKids | Wolfe's Neck Farm | Woodlawn Museum | Yarmouth History Center

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President | Kevin Thomas Chief Operating Officer | Andrea King Chief Financial Officer | Jack Leonardi

YOUR SOURCE FOR FA S H I O NA B L E L I G H T I N G

Maine Home+Design is published twelve times each year by Maine Media Collective LLC

Editorial and subscription information: phone 207.772.3373 | fax 888.836.6715 75 Market Street | Suite 203 | Portland | Maine | 04101 Opinions expressed in articles or advertisements, unless otherwise noted, do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the publisher, staff, or advisory board. Every effort has been made to ensure that all information presented in this issue is accurate, and neither Maine Home+Design nor any of its staff is responsible for omissions or information that has been misrepresented to the magazine. Copyright ©2017, Maine Media Collective LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission, in writing, from the publisher. Printed in the U.S.A. mainehomedesign.com

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C ON T RI BU T O RS

Born in the small northern Maine town of Benedicta, SHAWN DOUSTON studied masonry and related construction at Northern Maine Vocational Technical Institute before moving to Portland, where he joined a residential building company. In 1985 he and his wife, Gail, established Douston Construction. The Arundelbased company is a full-service construction business with 25 employees who build beautifully crafted homes throughout southern Maine and along the coastline. A Tale of Two Houses, page 104

Kennebunk River Architects was founded in 2015 by architects MICHAEL BEDELL (left) and ROB FREEDMAN (right). Their collaborative and personalized approach ensures a close working relationship with clients and builders. Bedell’s career in architecture was born from his interest in how things work, while Freedman comes at it from the creative side. A Tale of Two Houses, page 104

COM E HOM E TO CREATIVITY

Hurlbutt Designs, a team of design professionals led by LOUISE HURLBUTT, boasts a 4,000-square-foot retail store to complement their designs and full range of interior design services. As the designers for the Kennebunkport Resort Collection, their work can be found at local hotels and restaurants, including Hidden Pond Resort, Tides Beach Club, Kennebunkport Inn, and the Grand Hotel. A Tale of Two Houses, page 104

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DAN KOLBERT has been working in the trades in Portland since 1988, including several years spent teaching building trades to at-risk youth. His company focuses on improving the comfort and efficiency of new and existing homes. He has also facilitated a monthly building science discussion group for industry professionals since 2009. A Light Touch, page 88

PHIL KAPLAN is a principal at Kaplan Thompson Architects, a prolific and award-winning firm located in Portland that specializes in high-performance buildings. In 2013 he cofounded BrightBuilt Home, which designs and facilitates the construction of affordable, net-zero modular homes. His firms have completed projects throughout the northeast and mid-Atlantic. He is also a cofounder of the Portland Society for Architecture, a community design advocacy group. A Light Touch, page 88

JARED DAMON is the founder of Damon Builders, a family-run custom home builder in the lakes region of western Maine. Focusing on the details of one major project at a time, he very much enjoys working closely with the designer, the owner, and the construction team to create homes that fulfill dreams. Damon is joined in business by his son, Jon, and daughter, Lauren. Together they manage a team of construction professionals and control the details that make the difference. Damon’s previous work has been featured in Fine Homebuilding. On a High Note, page 72 TWILIGHT ZONE 9’ x 12’

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NOTES FROM OUR READERS Love a home featured in our last issue? Steal a decorating idea that you saw in our pages? We welcome comments of any kind. Send your notes to letters@ mainehomedesign.com or message us on Facebook @MaineHomeDesign. My son is marrying a Maine girl from Southport in October. The wedding will be in Boothbay Harbor. My husband and I visited the town last month, and we plan to build a house there to get away from the summer Florida heat. I love everything about your magazine. I read all of my future daughter-in-law’s magazines from cover to cover when we visited them [where they live] in Denver.

DONE ONCE. DONE RIGHT. DONE AT THE RIGHT PRICE. Stylish Window Treatments Start Here.

KATHY BRENNAN GAINESVILLE, FL My husband and I love Maine Home+Design. We both grew up in Maine: I am from Presque Isle, and my husband is from Oakland. We have since moved to outside Raleigh, North Carolina, but we still come home to Oakland because we have a year-round home on the lake, and our families are still in Maine. We love the weather in North Carolina, but our hearts will always be in Maine. Your magazine brings back all the memories of Maine. The photography is just beautiful, and I am looking forward to upcoming issues. KATHY QUINN AYER KNIGHTDALE, NC

104 A Tale of Two Houses

Call to schedule your free in-home consultation Midcoast (207) 721-0404 Portland (207) 797-7651 | Southern Maine (207) 363-4900 Each franchise independently owned and operated MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 33

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D ESIGN W I R E BY BRITTANY COST

ROB BRAMHALL ARCHITECTS has designed the new DREAM MAKER LODGE at SUNDAY RIVER, a four-floor contemporary mountain residence of 29 condominiums situated along Dream Maker Trail on the resort’s North Peak. The rustic slopeside units cultivate a sense of community, as they share a lounge area with a fireplace, an exterior patio, and an outdoor hot tub. Kim Deetjen of TRUEXCULLINS ARCHITECTURE AND INTERIOR DESIGN recently led the renovation of the PORTLAND HARBOR HOTEL. Inspired by the concept of a sea captain’s home, the firm added a sitting area overlooking Fore Street to visually connect the lobby to its seaside location. The redesign also emphasizes local artisans, featuring custom nautical-flag wall hangings by ANGELA ADAMS, graphic pillows by ERIN FLETT, and windjammer photographs by JIM DUGAN. Shared lounges on guest room levels include THOS. MOSER furniture and COMPANY C carpets.

GO LOGIC has launched GO HOME, a new line of highly insulated prefabricated homes. Ranging from 600 to 2,500 square feet, the plans offer options for cabinetry and hardware, along with various exterior and interior custom finishes.

PHTOTS FROM TOP: Jim Westphalen, Josh Gerritsen, Laura Douglas

Angela Adams and Sherwood Hamill, the design team behind ANGELA ADAMS, recently launched a furniture and area rug collection called Inner Nature that celebrates individuality and authenticity. New furniture pieces include a sideboard, table, and barstool in a variety of finishes, such as the made-to-order Tula tasting table; eight new rug designs including the Spock area rug, which reinvents the traditional argyle pattern and comes in mossy green, scarlet, and gray-blue.

Twenty-five Chinese ink paintings by the late interior designer and artist CHRISTINE MACLIN will be on view at the Charles Thomas Gallery at MAINE COLLEGE OF ART (MECA) from September 20 through October 25. Maclin, who owned Portland’s Maclin Design, studied Chinese brush painting at MECA under the instruction of art history professor Dr. Gan Xu.

Murphy Beds, Tailored to the Way You Live.

HAYSTACK MOUNTAIN SCHOOL OF CRAFTS has refurbished its artist residences. New beds crafted from European birch as well as storage units and end tables were installed for the summer season, when visiting artists enrolled in one- or two-week sessions to refine their artistic practice. The school plans to dedicate $150,000 to further renovations over the next four years.

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BRI GH T - M I N DE D H O M E BY MELISSA COLEMAN

Q+A with Stew MacLehose and Dan Kolbert on the performance of a well-insulated roof

When we visited Stew MacLehose’s house in 2011, it was among the first LEED Platinum homes in Maine. Designed by Kaplan Thompson Architects and built by Dan Kolbert of Kolbert Building, it now includes a recently added attic studio (see page XX). The home's tight, double-thick wall construction, triple-glazed windows, and solar array set the standard for Kaplan Thompson’s BrightBuilt Home modular designs, and after six years it’s still a prime example of the benefits of a tight, well-insulated roof.

PHOTO: Jeff Roberts

Vision. Commitment. Results

CABINETRY ∏ CONSTRUCTION ∏ RENOVATIONS 207.846.5105 ∏ MAGUIRECONSTRUCTION.COM 36 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

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where color lives

Q. WHAT’S UNIQUE ABOUT THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE ROOF?

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KOLBERT With this house, we developed an insulation system we’ve used since on both new and old houses. We sized the rafters for what we needed structurally (twoby-eights) and added plywood nailed to a thin strip of two-by material to create a 4-inch space below the rafters. This helped us get 14 inches of insulation (dense-packed cellulose) with an R-value of over R-50. The insulation in the 4-inch space creates a “thermal break” so that no wood runs continuously from the interior to the cold underside of the roof. This significantly reduces heat loss and condensation.

Q. WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS OF THIS KIND OF CONSTRUCTION?

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KOLBERT Besides the low cost for heating and a very quiet house, a well-insulated and air-sealed roof also minimizes the stack effect, where hot air rising through the upper floors draws in cold air from the lower floors. Even though the only heat source in the house comes from radiant tubes running under the first-floor slab, the third-floor attic is typically within five degrees of the first-floor temperature. With the redesign to use the attic for a studio, we only needed to add a small amount of supplemental heat.

Q. WHAT ARE THE ANNUAL UTILITY COSTS?

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MACLEHOSE Average annual costs for the approximately 2,200-square-foot home are $780 for electricity (supplemented by a 5-kilowatt solar array) and $855 for propane, for the gas range and fireplace. The radiant floor heating and domestic hot water run off an 88-tube solar thermal collector, which is supplemented by an ondemand electric hot water heater.

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Innovative plumbing & heating services for Southern Maine ENERGY CONSERVATION SPECIALISTS

T U RN O U T PHOTOGRAPHY BY HEIDI KIRN

WATERHOUSE FIELD RENOVATION Jim Godbout of Jim Godbout Plumbing and Heating enlisted the help of 300 volunteers to remove the bleachers at Waterhouse Field in Biddeford. The field was closed recently after an inspection deemed the bleachers were unsafe. Volunteers included students as well as individuals from a variety of businesses, including Southern Maine Builders, Ruck Roofing, J. Korpaczewski and Son Asphalt, Petit Excavation, M. Welch and Sons Excavation Contractors, Nate Libby’s Masonry, Provencher Fuels, R.P. Lambert Construction, Maine Architectural Ironworks, Marc’s Equipment Service, Taylor Rental, Brady Screenprint and Embroidery, the Biddeford Fire Department, CIA Salvage, Dupuis Hardware, and PeoplesChoice Credit Union. MH+D

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2015 YMCA Biddeford project

1. Jim Godbout, owner of Jim Godbout Plumbing and Heating; Bill Godbout, facilities technician at ON Semiconductor; and Dan Godbout, director of marketing at Fiber Materials 2. Alan Casavant, mayor of Biddeford 3. Ricky Doyon, lieutenant at Biddeford Police Department, and Randall Medeiros, sergeant at Biddeford Police Department 4. Mike Brady, owner of Brady Screenprint and Embroidery, and Kevin Magnant, owner of Magnant’s Roof and House Soft Wash Cleaning 5. Bobby Janelle; Brian Curit, coach at Biddeford School Department; and Jeremy Ray, superintendent of Biddeford School Department 6. Volunteers clear away the bleachers at Waterhouse Field.

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T U RN O U T

oriental | contemporary | vintage

PHOTOGRAPHY BY LIZ CARON

GREATER PORTL AND L ANDMARKS MID MOD : BE THERE OR BE SQUARE Greater Portland Landmarks recently hosted its annual house gala, Mid Mod: Be There or Be Square, to celebrate midcentury modern architecture and culture. Held at the Edward and Patricia Golodetz House (1961), the evening included food, music, and dancing, along with tours of the home, a live auction, and a collection of classic automobiles on the lawn. Nearly 300 guests were in attendance. Funds raised at the event support education programs and activities that preserve and revitalize historic buildings, neighborhoods, landscapes, and parks. MH+D

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1. The gala’s location, a midcentury modern home on Baxter Boulevard in Portland 2. Honour Mack, professor at Maine College of Art, and David Marsden, real estate broker for Bean Group 3. Hilary Bassett, executive director of Greater Portland Landmarks; Jennifer Buchanan, landscape designer at Anderson Landscape; and James Buchanan, member of board of trustees at Hancock Lumber 4. Candice Lee, committee chair of Greater Portland Landmarks Gala and trustee at Greater Portland Landmarks, and Kaja Veilleux, founder and owner of Thomaston Place Auction Galleries 5. Gail Robinson; Erin Oldham, real estate agent at Benchmark Residential and Investment Real Estate; and Andres Llorente, teacher at Portland High School 6. Quincy Hentzel, CEO of Portland Regional Chamber of Commerce; Jane Batzell, president of board of trustees at Greater Portland Landmarks; Ed Gardner, broker and owner of Ocean Gate Realty and vice president of board of trustees at Greater Portland Landmarks; and Susan Young 7. Dan Kennedy, owner of Harmon’s Floral Company, and John Hatcher, realtor at Keller Williams Realty / The Hatcher Group

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ONE IN FOUR MAINE CHILDREN EXPERIENCE FOOD INSECURITY.

T U RN O U T PHOTOGRAPHY BY DAVE DOSTIE

JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT 28TH ANNUAL MAINE BUSINESS HALL OF FAME SOUTH More than 400 business professionals attended Junior Achievement of Maine’s celebration of southern Maine laureates at the Portland Marriott at Sable Oaks in South Portland. Sponsored by Dead River Company, the event honored Bill Burke, chairman of the Portland Sea Dogs; Melissa Smith, president and CEO of WEX; and Rob Tod, founder of Allagash Brewing Company. Over the past 28 years, 82 men and women have been inducted into the Junior Achievement of Maine Business Hall of Fame. MH+D

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“Dead River Company is proud to support Junior Achievement of Maine in recognizing Melissa Smith, Bill Burke, and Rob Tod for their contributions to Maine’s economy. These standout individuals are wonderful role models for our aspiring young entrepreneurs and the students of Maine.” —Guy Langevin, vice president at Dead River Company and board member of Junior Achievement of Maine 1. Casey Cramton, vice president of operations at Dead River Company, and Diana Wheelock, director of organizational development and training at Dead River Company 2. Melissa Smith, president and CEO of WEX; Rob Tod, founder of Allagash Brewing Company; and Bill Burke, chairman of the Portland Sea Dogs 3. Kathy Bennett, tax manager at BerryDunn, and Susan Barnicle, vice president and relationship manager at Key Bank 4. Cris Lane, director of total rewards at Idexx Laboratories, and Sara Knowles, senior director of people services at Idexx Laboratories 5. Justin Phillips, director of corporate sales at Portland Sea Dogs, and Jeff Wright, senior vice president of retail sales and operations manager at Northeast Bank 6. Michelle Anderson, president of Junior Achievement of Maine, and Cole Smith, associate at CBRE | The Boulos Company 7. Guy Loranger, attorney at Law Office of Guy D. Loranger, and Tom LaCasse, manager of Oceanside Grille at the Brunswick Oceanside Grille 40 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

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BUILT FOR LIVING.

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CREATE BIGGER

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COMMUNITY

9.1–9.10

BOOTHBAY REGION HARBOR FEST Various locations boothbayharborfest.com

9.2–9.28

CLAIRE BIGBEE Gallery at the Grand 1 Chase Hill Rd. | Kennebunk artcollectormaine.com

9.2–10.6

JANE DAHMEN Gallery at Bald Head Cliff Cliff House 591 Shore Rd. | Cape Neddick artcollectormaine.com

9.7

FIRST THURSDAY ART OPENING FEATURING ARTWORKS BY DAVID ALLEN 5 p.m.–7 p.m. Portland Art Gallery 154 Middle St. | Portland artcollectormaine.com

9.9

HENRYFEST 317 Main Skyline Farm 95 The Lane | North Yarmouth 317main.org

BRAND DEVELOPMENT ADVERTISING PRINT + WEB DESIGN SEARCH ENGINE MARKETING SOCIAL MEDIA STRATEGY MEDIA PLANNING

9.9–9.10

30TH ANNUAL LAUDHOLM NATURE CRAFTS FESTIVAL 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Wells Reserve at Laudholm 342 Laudholm Farm Rd. | Wells wellsreserve.org

9.14–9.17

CAMDEN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL Points North Institute Various locations pointsnorthinstitute.org/ciff

9.16

It’s about a new direction.

LOBSTERJAM TRIATHLON sheJAMS 8:15 a.m. Winslow Park | Freeport shejamstri.com

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9.17

TRAIL TO ALE 10K RACE/WALK Portland Trails 9 a.m. Eastern Promenade Cutter St. | Portland trails.org

9.17

TASTING EVENT WITH GATHER & FRONTIER 3 p.m.–6 p.m. Wolfe’s Neck Farm 184 Burnett Rd. | Freeport wolfesneckfarm.org

9.21

MAINE LIVE 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Hannaford Hall 88 Bedford St. | Portland maineliveevent.com

the chance to s u e iv g l il w ISE TEDxDirigo R each of us, to t n a rt o p im t is consider wha difference. a e k a m s n o cti and how our a

9.23

21ST ANNUAL HARVEST DANCE FEATURING RUSTIC OVERTONES 6 p.m.–10 p.m. Wolfe’s Neck Farm 184 Burnett Rd. | Freeport wolfesneckfarm.org

9.28

SIGNATURE CHEFS AUCTION March of Dimes 5.30 p.m. DiMillo’s on the Water 25 Long Wharf | Portland signaturechefs.marchofdimes.org

9.29–9.30

POLLINATION CELEBRATION 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Viles Arboretum 153 Hospital St. | Augusta vilesarboretum.org

9.30

15TH PUNKINFIDDLE FAMILY FESTIVAL 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Wells Reserve at Laudholm 342 Laudholm Farm Rd. | Wells wellsreserve.org

9.30

2017 HARVEST CELEBRATION & SILENT AUCTION Scarborough Education Foundation 6:30 p.m.–10 p.m. Camp Ketcha 336 Black Point Rd. | Scarborough sefmaine.org

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This Fall, RISE with us at the State Theatre on November 4th. Current speakers include: NAJMA ABDULAHI SAMANTHA APPLETON LINDSAY BALDWIN ALISON CHASE SHULING CHEN PETER COOKE ISRAA ENAN PETER HAAS

JOHN HOBART LAWRENCE LESSIG CHANEL LEWIS-JONES FLORENCE REED NICKIE SEKERA DAVID THETE SONYA TOMLINSON

Register today at TEDxDirigo.com

Thank you to our Inspiration Partner

8/1/17 1:18 PM


True stories of journey creativity & triumph.

Told by the people who are shaping Maine.

THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 21 University of Southern Maine’s Hannaford Hall Portland, Maine

Watch videos from past Maine Live events online: themainemag.com/maine-live Tickets:

maineliveevent.com 207 772 3373 events@themainemag.com

Presenting sponsors:

Participating sponsors:

CBRE The Boulos Company | Coffee by Design | Hurlbutt Designs | Jim Godbout Plumbing & Heating Mougalian Rugs | Pierce Atwood | Richard Moody & Sons | Thomas & Lord | Town & Country Federal Credit Union Brought to you by: Photo: Stuart Kestenbaum, Maine’s Poet Laureate, at Maine Live, March 2017.

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Get to know your neighbors. MELISSA SMITH

PODCAST

#294

Melissa Smith, president and CEO of WEX, was inducted into the Junior Achievement of Maine Business Hall of Fame and named a Mainebiz Business Leader of the Year in 2017. She also cofounded the Executive Women's Forum and sheJAMS, an all-women training club.

LUKE SHORTY

PODCAST

#302

Luke Shorty is the executive director of the Maine School of Science and Mathematics (MSSM) and a 1998 graduate from MSSM. U.S. News and World Report recently ranked the school as the 10th-best high school in the nation for science, technology, engineering, and math and 19th-best overall high school.

JEAN HOFFMAN

PODCAST

#304

Jean Hoffman is an executive and entrepreneur who has built successful companies in the global pharmaceutical, veterinary, and healthcare information technology industries, including Putney, a pet medicine company. She has been honored with numerous awards including a 2014 EY Entrepreneur Of The Year New England award in the life sciences category. SPONSORED BY

Love Maine Radio introduces you to our neighbors, one conversation at a time. Hear what they have to say. Welcome to our community.

lovemaineradio.com

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ST YLE RO O M BY JEN DEROSE

PILING ON THE PATTERN

T

he secret behind getting this bedroom look? Pattern—and lots of it. Featured in Hotel Chic at Home by Sara Bliss (The Monacelli Press, 2016), a room designed by Kit Kemp at London’s Ham Yard Hotel boldly mixes color and dazzling prints. A dark grasscloth wallcovering creates a neutral backdrop while adding texture, as does the bed’s ivory matelassé cotton throw. Pattern is injected by the upholstered headboard—both the focal point of the room and a comfortable place to lean while reading or relaxing in bed—as well as the orange and pink sheer window treatments. With or without flowers, a vase by Japanese potter Hanako Nakazato inser ts handmade warmth, and a hot pink pillow adds pop for a space that’s cozy but excites the eye, too. MH+D

PHOTO: Simon Brown; courtesy Firmdale Hotels

In a London hotel room, the headboard and pink pillow are in fabrics from designer Kit Kemp’s collection for Chelsea Textiles.

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AIA D ESIG N TH E O R Y EDITED BY JEN DEROSE | PHOTOGRAPHY BY JANE BERGER

THE ARCHITECTURE OF EXPERIENCE

KEVIN MOQUIN ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SPACE AND MOOD

“A

rchitects compose entry, living, dining, and sleeping spaces over and over again to create a home. What is it that makes this recurring combination unique every time? The answer lies in how architects shape a curated experience to the specific needs of an individual client,” says Kevin Moquin, who has an eponymous architecture firm in Portland. MH+D asks Moquin to tell us more.

IN MH+D’S CONTINUING COLLABORATION WITH AIA MAINE, WE PRESENT TO YOU EACH MONTH A DESIGN CONCEPT FROM AN ARCHITECT’S POINT OF VIEW. 50 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

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Q. A.

How does architecture affect one’s well-being?

Only part of the task of designing a home involves arranging elements that are measurable. Is there enough square feet for this living room, enough headroom for this stair, enough glass for this view? Architects consider these elements when discussing functionality, but there is another layer of thought that goes into how design decisions make us feel and also how we react to them on a subconscious level. Our perception of a space extends beyond its calculated boundaries. Our bodies and senses react to the spaces around us in ways that are indifferent to the tape measure and calculator. Either by intention or by accident, design has a subconscious affect on our mood, disposition, and comfort.

Q. A.

What about one’s perception of time?

Buildings can call to our attention the course of a year, the arc of the sun, and the passage of a day. I can arrange a bedroom so clients can wake with the sun if they are early risers, or be shielded from it if they prefer to sleep in. This offers a connection to unmechanized time, displayed not as the hands of a clock or the digits on a screen, but by the visible passage of changing light and shadow in our room. That relationship with a time frame beyond the current moment offers a comfort to the rigors of daily life. The materials architects choose to build with can also tell a story about the longer passage of time. Weathering shingles proudly display the effect of years, while clapboards painted to defy the elements hint at timelessness. The patina on a brass doorknob from the touch of a hand over the years and a worn layer of paint on a floor that exposes the former color beneath it are both enriching ways to experience time’s passage.

Q. A.

What other subconscious aspects are influenced by architecture? Windows that provide a view out to the landscape, and outdoor living spaces, which connect us to green surroundings, satisfy a deep-rooted desire to be connected to the natural world. Moving water or swaying branches passively engage our attention but do not demand it. Natural environments are calming and provide an opportunity to replenish our mental resources. Your home can actively contribute to your restfulness. The shapes we use in our spaces impact us subconsciously. Forms can be aggressive and push us away, or they can be receptive and draw us in. A hallway that is too narrow will make you want to pass through it quickly, while an alcove or window seat can be a welcoming eddy that offers the opportunity to pause. We feel less vulnerable if our bed is located in a protected space.

Q. A.

Can you give us an example of how this comes into play in your current work? These considerations of the subconscious are applicable beyond any notion of style. My own work is stylistically broad. I work in the manner that best fits my client’s tastes and lifestyle, making design decisions with the consideration of possible subconscious experiences. In a current project for a small island cottage, I designed a bathhouse a few steps away from the main cottage. There is a roof that provides shelter so the client won’t get drenched in the rain. This exterior passage could be seen as an inconvenience, but it is truly an experience that connects you to where you are in the world at that unique moment in time. You have the sounds and movement of the breeze in the trees, the smells of the sea, and the stars at night. It is an opportunity to draw the client’s attention back to the things that are unique to that specific place, which initially sparked the desire to create a piece of architecture there. MH+D

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PROF ILE| L AR R Y D U E L L BY SUSAN AXELROD | PHOTOGRAPHY BY CHRISTINA WNEK

Family Ties BY THINKING AHEAD, LARRY DUELL OF FATHER AND SON BUILDERS HOPES TO PRESERVE HIS BUSINESS FOR THE NEXT GENERATION

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All except one of the 17 home sites at Tidewater Landing will have a water view, which includes the Webhannet River, Wells Harbor, and the open Atlantic. Larry Duell (opposite), who owns Father and Son Builders with his father, Lyle Duell, on the second floor of a home they’re constructing at Tidewater Landing, a waterfront development in Wells.

F

rom the top of the gently sloping hill at Tidewater Landing in Wells, the view extends over the Webhannet River to Wells Harbor and beyond to the open Atlantic. It’s a classic southern Maine vista—marsh, water, beach, and sky—and until recently, it belonged to a single home. “Driving by all these years, I never knew this was back here,” says co-owner Larry Duell of Father and Son Builders, who bought the property in 2014 from the former owner’s family. “I saw the view and said, ‘Oh goodness.’ There’s no land like this left in Wells.” Tidewater Landing now has 17 home sites arranged around a curving road that ends in a cul-de-sac at the bottom of a hill. Beyond lies open space, which will eventually include a path offering access to the river for kayaks and canoes. All except one of the custom homes will have a water view. “As the builder and developer, I’m able to tell people where their house has to go so

I can protect the views for the people behind them,” says Duell. The project is the first development for Father and Son Builders, which was launched by Larry’s father, Lyle, in 1984. A Church of Christ minister, Lyle had moved his family from upstate New York to New Hampshire to serve at a church there. “I decided I’d put up a modular home to live in, and try to sell a few,” Lyle says, noting that his contract with the church allowed him to take on a part-time job. “In ’84 I sold eight homes—I had never built a house in my life before—and I think the next year we sold 26.” According to his son, the decision to go into business was largely financial. “He realized you can’t put two kids through college on a minister’s salary,” Larry says. The Duells established an office in Lebanon, just a few miles from the New Hampshire border yet close to the southern Maine communities of Sanford and

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PROF ILE| L AR R Y D U E L L

This home at Tidewater Landing was designed by Kennebunk River Architects, one of the local architects recommended by Larry for homes in the development. “With the elevation, the contours, and the views, they really have to be custom designed,” he says.

Berwick. The company soon moved from modular homes into custom building. “In ’87 or ’88 we built close to 50. On our original stationery, we had ‘From castles to caves,’” Lyle says, although most were modestly sized houses, he adds. Larry left New England for Tennessee, graduating from Lipscomb University in 1990 with a degree in finance and with a graduate degree in architecture from the University of Tennessee three years later. He returned to Maine and joined his father in the business, married, and had a son. Three years ago, Lyle retired from building while continuing to serve in the church. He wrote two religious books and started a blog. Then Larry’s wife, Stephanie, was diagnosed with triple negative breast cancer, a very aggressive form of the disease. She passed away in May of 2016 at 36 years old. “I took eight months off to be with my son, and my dad came out of retirement,” Larry says. “He’s never gone back.” Now Lyle works out of the Lebanon office while Larry is in Wells, overseeing Tidewater Landing and sites elsewhere on the coast. “My dad takes care of all of our inland homes, which are mostly entry level—small ranches, Capes, and colonials,” says Larry. For the homes at Tidewater Landing, Larry has a list of architects he recommends, including Kennebunk River Architects, Lindsey Architects, and William Ross Design. “Up until a year and a half ago—when we started building here—I did 95 percent of our house plans, but now I just don’t have time anymore,” he says. Tidewater Landing’s bylaws specify that homes have to be either shingle-style or Maine cottage–style, and Larry discourages potential buyers from building with stock plans. “With the elevation, the contours, and the views, they really have to be custom designed,” he says. “The subdivision requirements are pretty strict. We don’t allow any vinyl siding or vinyl windows. Every home here so far has gone with cedar shakes.” The company has recently hired a project manager, allowing Larry to concentrate on sales and marketing. “In summertime, on a weekend, I’ll talk to 100 people here; that’s what I like to do,” he says.

In the 1980s Father and Son Builders had as many as 30 employees, but when the recession hit at the end of that decade, they had to let most of them go. “We actually had our own foundation crew, our own foundation forms, and trucks—we did everything,” says Larry. “I could just see my dad getting grayer and grayer. Now, we sub everything out and it’s much easier.” Most of the subcontractors they use, however, have worked with the company for years, and the loyalty works both ways, he says. “I don’t shop bids. If a guy has been with me for 15 years and he gives me a price, I know that’s the best price he can give me, and I’m not going to go out and look for a better one.” Larry is active in local and national trade associations, having served as the state president of the Home Builders and Remodelers Association of Maine. “I’m very involved in housing advocacy, everything from codes to environmental policy,” he says. He sits on the board of directors of the National Association of Home Builders and the Home Builders and Remodelers Association of Maine, working with both groups to help launch an apprenticeship program for residential carpenters, which was approved by the Maine Department of Labor last spring. Designed to address the skilled labor shortage, the program will provide students who finish a mandated course of study at a technical high school with paid on-the-job training; some of the cost will be reimbursed by the state. Both avid outdoorsmen, Larry and Lyle have together climbed mountains around the world, including Mount Kilimanjaro in Africa and Pico de Orizaba in Mexico. For Larry, those activities are now on hold as he runs his business and raises his son, who he’s hoping will inherit his love of the outdoors. His construction industry activism is also tied to his future plans; just as he wants to preserve the views at Tidewater Landing for current and future residents, he’d like his son to carry on the family’s homebuilding legacy. “He’s a very good designer on Minecraft,” Larry says with a smile. Perhaps one day, Father and Son Builders will include the next generation of Duells. MH+D

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Classic Music of the 50s and 60s and More

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Alt-Country/Americana/ Rock Band from Maine

An Acoustic Evening with Country Legend

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25th Anniversary Tour

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PORT RAIT O F P L AC E

The Cranberry Isles by Susan Axelrod Photography by Heidi Kirn

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T

he Cranberry Isles are an archipelago of five islands off the southeastern shore of Mount Desert Island, named for the wild cranberries that grow there in the fall. Great Cranberry and Little Cranberry (also called Islesford) are the largest of the group and the only ones with year-round residents, most of whom make a living lobstering, boat building, or doing carpentry. Sutton, Baker, and Bear Islands are inhabited only in the summer, and most of Baker is part of Acadia National Park. “The whole place is one big family,” says Great Cranberry native Norman Sanborn. “I’ll go away for two or three days and leave my keys in my truck; if someone needs to borrow it, they can go ahead.” He and his wife, Kelly, are raising their two daughters, ages 11 and 9, on the island. “They’re free-range kids,” he says. “Everybody knows them, and they’ve got the entire island as their playground.”

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There are a few boats that offer transportation to the Cranberries, but the most popular, and the only year-round option, is the Beal and Bunker Mail Boat and Ferry, which makes the 30-minute crossing from Northeast Harbor to Great Cranberry and Islesford. There are no hotels or bed-andbreakfast accommodations on any of the islands, but the short boat ride allows for an easy daytrip. On Great Cranberry, visitors can wander along several public trails or take advantage of the Cranberry Explorer, a seven-passenger golf cart that offers free shuttle service to popular spots around the island. On Islesford, the Islesford Dock Restaurant and Gallery is a favorite seasonal restaurant of Seal Harbor summer resident Martha Stewart, who arrives on her Hinckley picnic boat.

Morning commuters (above) catch up on the news as they head for the mainland on the Beal and Bunker Mail Boat and Ferry, the only yearround ferry service between the mainland and the Cranberry Isles. David Bunker (below), is the friendly and knowledgeable captain of the mail boat and ferry, which has served the islands since 1952. The western side of Great Cranberry Island (opposite) offers spectacular views of Acadia National Park.

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Clockwise from top: The Whale’s Rib, a gift shop and gallery. Runner Michael Westphal, a carpenter on Great Cranberry, made national headlines when he found that continuing to compete in races such as the Boston Marathon lessened the symptoms of his Parkinson’s disease. A quiet morning on Great Cranberry. The Cranberry Explorer is a seven-passenger golf cart that offers free shuttle service around Great Cranberry. Opposite, clockwise from top left: Great Cranberry Island’s tiny post office sits on the town dock. A classic boat docked at Great Cranberry. Time seems to stand still in the Cranberry Isles.

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Great Cranberry native Norman Sanborn has captained the Cinchona for 25 years, transporting the private yacht’s owner between her summer homes in Northeast Harbor and Long Island. The Cranberry General Store (opposite, top) is the hub of the community on Great Cranberry. It’s easy to imagine spending a long afternoon on the porch of this classic summer cottage (opposite, bottom).

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After its longtime owners decided to retire, the iconic Islesford Dock Restaurant and Gallery (above) on Little Cranberry (also known as Islesford) was purchased earlier this year by Michael Boland, co-owner of Havana in Bar Harbor, and Northeast Harbor seasonal resident Mitchell Rales. “So many people from all over the world have enjoyed the Islesford Dock over the years that to let it close up seemed somehow just wrong,” says Boland. “We grow a good amount of our own food right behind the restaurant in our large greenhouse, source all of the lobsters from the coop next door, and otherwise follow a fairly strict local farm/sea-to-table program. Put that on top of one of the most amazing sunset spots on the coast of Maine—looking back over the mountains of Mount Desert Island— and you have a pretty special place to dine.”

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ON A

HIGH NOTE Perched on the side of a hill, a western Maine home mixes styles, eras, and influences for a look that’s truly one-of-a-kind by Jen DeRose >>> Photography by Irvin Serrano

A home in western Maine designed and built by Jared Damon of Damon Builders is located 24 miles from Mount Washington in New Hampshire, which has the highest sustained wind on record in the northern hemisphere. Despite that brutal weather, Damon built the energy-efficient home—thanks to spray-foam insulation, high-quality Marvin windows, and a geothermal system—over the course of two winters.

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D

own a dirt road and a short switchback driveway, a western Maine house is gently cradled in the picturesque notch of a large hill. Stones found on the property—not cut and laid, but rather rotated to a flat side and situated back into the earth—provide the hardscaping, while a trio of torches, their flames spiraling upward, herald one’s arrival. It’s a spot that’s both comfortable and inviting, yet that also possesses a sense of mystique and solitude: there’s a miles-long western view to New Hampshire’s White Mountains, including Mount Washington, Mount Kearsarge, and the Kancamagus—but there’s nary a house, turbine, or cell tower in sight. “Our design criteria was to make it fit the land,” says Jared Damon of Mechanic Falls’s Damon Builders, who did the design-build. Noting that the homeowners didn’t want to disturb the natural setting any more than necessary, there was no blasting; instead, the house was built slab on grade. That sensitivity to surroundings and thoughtful approach carried over to every design detail both large and small, with the wife mostly handling the furnishings, fabrics, and finishes and the husband overseeing the systems and structures.

Immediately upon entering the house, that personalized approach is apparent in the design of the custom wrought-iron doors, which have an oval intersecting dramatic squares and rectangles. “We call it ‘Frank Lloyd Wright meets Native American Thunderbird,’” says the husband. In the back of the space, above a door that leads to a patio, is a wine rack with a sliding wood ladder and, hanging above that, a triptych of the tree of life that the wife fashioned from leftover wires and scrap barn wood. In the center of the room, dozens of crystal LED lights cascade down an open spiral staircase. “It’s like walking up through an Aurora Borealis,” says the husband. Unique lighting also appears off the foyer in the home office, from which the couple works on their research and product development company. There, a pair of dome pendants, which are matte black on the exterior of the canopy but feature mathematical formulas and equations on the underside, hangs above a small island. But perhaps the home’s most spectacular lighting is found in the second-floor turret. La Estrella Room, as named by the couple’s bilingual twin grandsons, is outfitted with a window-height octagonal custom mattress that gives it a Moroccan vibe. Look up, and twinkling on the ceiling are 300 fiber-optic stars and four

While the wife had originally visited a big-box store for the design of the kitchen (above), she couldn’t seem to get across how she wanted the space. A visit to Kitchen Cove Cabinetry and Design changed that. “They revamped it, and I fell in love,” she says. The bistro-height tabletop is on pegs so that it can easily be removed to clean underneath. The tray ceiling has LED rope lighting. “At night, if you get up to get a snack or water, this room just glows,” says the husband. The ceiling in the living area (opposite) is 34 feet high. Spanish tile accents recessed into the face of the chimney visually break up its verticality. There are no skylights in the house; instead, upper picture windows provide ample sunshine to both the first and second floors. “It’s not unusual for us to be sitting on the living room sofa and watching birds soaring,” says the husband.

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In what is known as “the correction,” a pair of rockers looks out onto the western view of New Hampshire’s White Mountains. Nesting paneled doors inspired by shoji screens can be slid open to enjoy the view or closed to create privacy in the owners’ suite. The floor is from Fat Andy's Hardwoods. 76 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

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Damon assembles a pie near the pizza oven (above), which is covered in tile made to resemble brick. Pizza ovens are typically found on the exterior of a home because they require an 800-degree flue; locating it next to the chimney resolved the problem. The staircase (opposite) from York Spiral Stair is made of ash. The wavy wrought-iron balustrade is repeated on the second-floor balcony. .

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“I had a magazine clipping of the wine rack (opposite)—in fact, I had a book of ideas, by the time Jared and I sat down, of everything I’d ever wanted,” says the wife. “We were able to incorporate almost all of them.” The custom wroughtiron door leads to the back patio. “It’s a home (above) that’s designed to be used and celebrate the nature that it sits in,” says the wife.

constellations, including Orion. “That took some engineering,” notes the husband. Other creative feats that involved a bit of “design judo,” as the husband refers to Damon’s work, include incorporating several salvaged architectural elements. An antique window from a mining camp, picked up on a trip to Mexico, was outfitted with a custom Marvin window and now serves as a pass-through on a shelving unit between the porch and living area. In the powder room, a dresser that had been the wife’s changing table as a baby was refashioned as the vanity, and in the upstairs guest bathroom, a pair of matching end tables, originally intended for the guest bedroom, were transformed into dual sink vanities. While the upstairs guest suite feels private and tucked away, the central gathering space is the kitchen. The couple has four grown children, three of whom live locally. “We have a big family, so we wanted places that everybody could be,” says the wife. “And we have too many kids for a formal dining room.” Instead, Kitchen Cove Cabinetry and Design came up with the idea for a central, bistro-height table. “It gives you the ability to see the countertops but also the view out the windows,” the husband says. The kitchen layout is a testament to the couple’s focus on savvy

organization, with distinct coffee, baking, and pizza stations. (The latter has a cutout in the countertop for quickly sweeping off excess flour. “We do a lot of pizza nights,” says the wife. “Guilty as charged.”) While a lot of the kitchen design is functional, there are still plenty of flourishes. Perhaps the most unique is the decorative aspect of the speed oven. Not happy with the standard appliance finishes, the wife commissioned artist Jewel Clark to etch hot-air balloons and even a depiction of the couple’s dog into the metal surround. “We weren’t sure if it was going to work,” says the wife. “And we didn’t have anything to practice on, but we lucked out.” Indeed, the appliance now appears almost like a piece of artwork hung on the wall. Elsewhere in the house, artwork includes sentimental pieces, such as ceramics made by the children displayed on the living area shelving and the vintage ski paraphernalia that hangs in the pantry. The wife’s grandfather, an early member of the Dartmouth Outing Club, was one of the first to ski Tuckerman Ravine in New Hampshire, and a pair of his long, thin wooden skis, a 1914 map, and a handbell from the stage coach he rode in are all mounted on the wall. (The husband has a skiing background too: he’s a former member of the U.S. Ski MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 81

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The first-floor front turret has stained glass that replicates the view in the summertime, while the rear turret features the view in the fall. The wife grouped the hexagonal tables together to complement the geometric simplicity of the turret. Opposite, clockwise from top left: The upstairs guest suite has pops of bright orange; the home’s design was inspired by Victorian architecture; the owners’ bathroom has floor-to-ceiling tile from Distinctive Tile and Design; the kitchen tile is also from Distinctive Tile and Design, and the range hood is by Rusted Puffin Metal Works.

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Team and also coached at Gould Academy in Bethel.) From there in the pantry, you can look through the length of the entire home to see the very mountain the wife’s grandfather had once skied. “There’s nothing between us and the Mount Washington weather station 24 miles away in a straight line,” says the husband. That jaw-dropping view of the mountains, visible from nearly every room, is thanks to what is known as “the correction,” formerly a covered deck and now an interior seating area marked by a curved wall of windows that runs along the home’s western-facing side. As the living area has a soaring 34-foot ceiling, the space’s original, smaller footprint made it feel “like a racquetball court,” recalls the wife. Realizing the mistake during its construction, the wife and the husband called Damon at nine-thirty on a Sunday night to ask that the deck be incorporated into the space. “It was a major change,” says Damon. “I had to bring the HVAC, concrete, and roofing companies back, and I had to figure out how to reuse the windows that were already ordered—but it was absolutely necessary, and we all worked together.” Now the home’s layout seems to frame the panoramic view, drawing visitors further inside to fully immerse themselves in the mountain landscape. It is one of the couple’s favorite elements. Also open to the view is the owners’ suite, which can be partitioned off thanks to nesting paneled doors, a concept inspired by shoji screens after a trip to Japan. The owners’ bathroom, too, takes its cues from Japanese bathing culture in that the whole bathroom is a wet space. The entire room, from the ceiling to the floor, is covered in tile from Distinctive Tile and Design, and a shower with body sprays—and even lights—is in the center of the room. “The grandkids think they’re in seventh heaven when they’re in here,” the wife says. That sense of whimsy, personalization, and focus on family speaks to the house’s design as a whole. Damon acknowledges that, throughout the project, he received “the occasional raised eyebrow.” After all, who buys a new appliance only to scratch it up? But in the end, Damon’s ability to fulfill the homeowners’ dreams was clearly worth it. Once the couple had moved in, they held an open house for everyone who had been involved in the project as well as their families. “The entire team was so proud when they came to see it finished,” recalls Damon. “I remember telling people, more than once, ‘”It’s going to be beautiful.’ Seeing the finished house, they realized that vision.” MH+D

The rug in the upstairs guest bath (above) is from Mougalian Rugs, as are all the rugs throughout the home. Although the vanities were originally intended as nightstands, Damon was able to repurpose them by matching the wood. A salvaged window from a Mexican mining camp connects the living room to the covered porch (opposite). On the living room built-in, the wife displays family souvenirs, ceramics, and mementos, such as a glass from Air Force One that her dad used when he worked for the White House.

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A LIGHT

TOUCH A CONTEMPORARY, ENERGY-EFFICIENT HOUSE ON THE PRESUMPSCOT RIVER CELEBRATES NATURAL LIGHT AND SCENIC VIEWS BY Katy Kelleher PHOTOGRAPHY BY Jeff Roberts

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Designed by Phil Kaplan of Kaplan Thompson Architects and built by Dan Kolbert of Kolbert Building, this home in Falmouth is compact, eco-friendly, and cleverly sited to take advantage of the sweeping views of the Presumpscot River. The solar panels were installed by ReVision Energy of Portland.

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AT the top of a narrow staircase, in a sunny room with slanted ceilings overlooking the Presumpscot River, stained glass artist Laura Fuller is examining a piece of blue glass. She picks it up and lets it catch the light for a moment before placing it back down on a piece of white paper, where it joins with cutglass pieces and fragments of shell to form an intricate pattern of blossoms. Someday soon, Fuller will fuse these many angled objects, welding them into a glimmering, prismatic window inspired, as she explains, by the seven chakras. But for now, she places the cobalt glass back in place and slides the pieces out of sight into her custom-built cabinet. “I sometimes still can’t believe this is my studio,” she says as she looks out the window at the fields of marshy grasses that unfold to the west. “It’s perfect for me.” Before, the space served very different purposes. It was first a barebones office, then a rec room, complete with a Ping-Pong table and unassuming painted plywood floors. It wasn’t until 2015 that Fuller and her husband, Stew MacLehose, decided to renovate this space

and turn it into the utilitarian-yet-inspired studio that it is today. The story of this house on the river begins 12 years ago, when MacLehose and his then-wife Kathy Hayden approached their good friend, architect Phil Kaplan of Kaplan Thompson Architects in Portland, about a potential project. “They had this incredible piece of land in Falmouth, and they wanted to build a home there,” Kaplan recalls, remembering the one-acre lot and how it sloped gently down toward the yellow marshes and silver inlets of the coastal estuary. From their casual conversations, MacLehose knew quite a lot about Kaplan’s work. He knew about Kaplan’s quest to build highly functional, energy-efficient, eco-friendly homes, and MacLehose wanted his new house to perform on that level, too. “Stew and Kathy were also interested in making something that was clean and thoughtful—nothing showy at all,” Kaplan explains. “All of us involved wanted this house to stand the test of time, to be strong and modest, and to complement the simplicity and elegance of the land.”

Artist Laura Fuller and librarian Stew MacLehose have amassed a wide collection of art over the years. In the kitchen (opposite), they have pieces by local artists including Paul Brahms, Jean Pilk, Johanna Moore, Mary Harrington, Amy Ray, Carolyn Deininger, and Judy Glickman Lauder.

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The couple grow broccoli, cabbage, fennel, kale, chard, garlic, beets, and more in their vegetable garden (above). Calvin MacLehose, Stew’s son, sits on the porch with Fuller and Stew (opposite). Builder Dan Kolbert created this porch from screen door panels, which were fixed in place and turned upsidedown to reflect the square shapes of the house’s high muntin.

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Clockwise from top left: Fuller works on one of her stained glass pieces. The blue bottle design is a commission, while the larger piece is a passion project inspired by the chakras. Fuller works on an ocean-inspired chandelier that will soon be on display at K Colette in Portland. The owners’ bedroom features artwork by William Eric Brown (left), Amy Ray (center), and Carter Scattergood (above the bed). Fuller’s third-floor studio (opposite) features tile from Capozza Tile and Floor Covering Center designed to look like wood boards. “I tested every kind of surface I could think of, from cork to wood, and the only one that didn’t catch glass shards was tile,” explains Fuller. “I needed a surface I could clean easily, and this wood-like tile fit perfectly.”

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The home’s form was inspired by the shape of a cube (above), which helps make it efficient to heat. The living room is separated from the dining room by two-way shelving (opposite) that provides some privacy while offering ample space to display Fuller’s art. The painting on the wall is a MacLehose family heirloom. The rug in the hallway is by Angela Adams.

Fortunately, as far as floor plans and volume go, a home designed as a cube is extremely energy efficient to heat—and the shape also happened to suit MacLehose and Hayden’s aesthetic sense to a T. The house packs in a living room, dining room, and kitchen on the first floor; three bedrooms on the second floor; and an artist’s studio on the third floor, plus a rustic porch is attached to the dining room by a screened outdoor hallway. All these rooms (plus three and a half baths) come in at 2,200 square feet, thanks to the space- and energysaving design. “The ideal form for a high-performing home is a cube, and that’s essentially what we built—a cube with a pitched roof,” Kaplan explains. (Not only does the pitched roof help this contemporary-style house fit in better with its colonial-style neighbors, but it also allows snowfall to slide off during intense winters.) “With this design, we were looking at optimization on all counts, including affordability, buildability, energy efficiency, and—in the back of my mind—replicability. If we could pull it off here, it could be a precedent for moving forward,” Kaplan says. Builder Dan Kolbert of Kolbert Building in Portland was brought on early in the process to help navigate the tricky process of creating a high-performing, low-cost home in a particularly humid part of Maine. “We found that the basic idea of the double walls with the dense-packed cellulose insulation, as well as the way we did the insulated pitched roof,

turned out to be the best way to go about making a highperformance house,” Kolbert says. The roof was particularly tricky, since often homes lose heat through the rafters, which serve as conduits carrying warmth from the inside of the house to the outside world. “The technical term for that is ‘thermal bridge’—something that is bridging your insulation and thus short-circuiting it,” Kolbert explains. To get around this issue, Kolbert and Kaplan came up with a system that imposes a thermal break by creating a gap between the timbers that frame the house and the timbers that frame the roof. One of the benefits of this particular building technique is that it created a highly usable upstairs space. Since they decided to build the house on a concrete slab in order to provide radiant floor heating, the home lacks a basement, so fortunately the space they lost below ground could be gained back above. For a few years, this third-floor space went unused, save for the few occasions when the couple’s nephews came to visit and the teenagers would crash on the floor. But as the family shifted shape, the house changed, too. In 2015 MacLehose and Fuller decided to renovate the house, focusing mainly on the third floor. “We saw the opportunity to turn the space into a place where Laura could work,” says Kaplan. “Phil was really amazing at planning out views and making sure I got as much light as I need,” says Fuller. As an artist, Fuller is highly sensitive to the colors around her. “You won’t see much red

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The stair rails (above) built by Kolbert feature Baltic birch as trim detail. Above Fuller’s studio is a small loft space (opposite) with two daybeds and a collection of stones, shells, and glass bottles.

in the house for that reason,” she says. “Once a color permeates my brain, I become hyper-focused on it, and it comes out in my work. Having big windows is really perfect for me, because nature is my favorite palette.” In order to make the third floor into a work space, Kolbert extended the plumbing system, installed both a half bathroom and a work sink, and created a shelving system for Fuller’s many glass pieces. While the bathroom sink is a piece of art in itself—it’s a delicately painted ceramic oyster shell, created by Yarmouth-based artist Alison Evans of Ae Ceramics—the soapstone farmhouse work sink is sturdy enough to handle the many fragments of glass, metal, and stone that Fuller incorporates in her unique stained glass pieces. “I don’t use any lead in my pieces, but I needed a space to wash them off when they’re completed,” she explains. “You wouldn’t want the materials I use floating around in your bathtub.” Fuller’s art is visible throughout the house, making a particular impact downstairs. A large stained glass window hangs in the kitchen, and other pieces sit on the shelves that separate the living space from the dining area. The many spacious triple-glazed and doublepaned windows create natural frames for her art. “Phil chose the orientation of the house,” says MacLehose. “His primary concern was getting optimal solar gain, but he also did a fantastic job placing the windows so that we have views of the water and views of the garden.” In

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the dining area, Kaplan decided to extend the window all the way up to the ceiling. He notes that there is no head casing—the wide strip of trim that often appears on the top of a window under the crown moulding— which contributes to the streamlined feel. “The goal was to make that space feel as open as possible and larger than it actually is,” he says. All the windows in the house, as well as the countertops, are trimmed with layers of Baltic birch plywood, subtle stripes of lightly colored wood that provide a visual echo in each room, tying the overall aesthetic together. Fuller and MacLehose’s LEED Platinum–certified home has inspired many similar projects, all with that distinctive cubic shape, steep pitched roof, shadecreating overhangs, and open floor plans. While some homeowners may balk at having their space replicated across the country, MacLehose doesn’t mind at all. “This project was totally ego-free,” says Kaplan. “MacLehose wanted to build something elemental and universal— something that would appeal to many people. Although I hesitate to use the word timeless—I don’t know if there is such a thing—I do think the closer you get to simplicity, the closer you get to timelessness.” MH+D For more information, see Resources on page 140.

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A TALE OF TWO HOUSES A BEACHSIDE SHINGLE-STYLE WITH NAUTICAL FLAIR

by Debra Spark // Photography by Jeff Roberts

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In a Pine Point Beach home designed by Kennebunk River Architects, built by Douston Construction, and decorated by Hurlbutt Designs, the arch of a bowed ceiling that marks the transition from the living to dining room is repeated in the mullion of the far window. To the right, a wine refrigerator and pull-out refrigerator drawers are incorporated into the wall. Made of recycled plastic, the rug is from Sweden and can be taken outside for cleaning with a garden hose. To extend the number of people who can be entertained, the porch (which functions as an extension of the main level) has two sitting areas. The outdoor barbecue consists of custom stainless-steel cabinetry with a granite top.

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W

hen Louise Jean was growing up in Lewiston, summer weekends were all about getting to the water. Her family regularly went to lakes, but Old Orchard was the “real treat” of the season, she says, what with the amusement rides and the beach. Life took Louise far from the beach, however. Shortly before graduating from college, she married her high school sweetheart, Ray Jean, and the two traveled for his work. “Those were the days when they moved you around a lot,” Ray says of his career in a diversified industrial company. “Taking on varied assignments put me on the fast track and took us to cities such as Chicago, Detroit, Grand Rapids, and Philadelphia.” Eventually, the Jeans moved to Houston, where Ray was the CEO for Quanex Building Products. The Jeans didn’t mind moving so frequently—in fact, they liked it—though the coast was still in the back of their minds. With retirement on the horizon, Florida beckoned, but so did Maine, which still felt like home. In 2001, in Maine for Louise’s 40th high school reunion—“Saint Dominic’s, rah, rah,” says Louise—the couple saw a “teardown” on Pine Point, the northern end of the beach

that runs from Scarborough all the way to Old Orchard. With the help of Salmon Falls Architecture in Biddeford, Douston Construction in Arundel, and an interior designer friend from Atlanta, the Jeans built new. For ten years, they enjoyed their home, and then they moved. Next door. The adjacent lot had become available, and the Jeans again wanted to build a new house designed by Salmon Falls and built by Douston. Why do it all over in virtually the same location and with most of the same people, given they were so happy with the architect, builder, and interior designer in the first place? Largely because their family had grown over time. Their three children now had seven of their own, and the Jeans wanted a bigger, less formal house, “a beach house with refinement,” as Louise puts it. This time around, though, they brought in a local interior designer whom they greatly admired: Louise Hurlbutt of Hurlbutt Designs in Kennebunk, who collaborated with Annie Detterman—then of Hurlbutt Designs, now of Anniebells Interiors in Kennebunk—on the project. Douston was once again the builder, and the house was designed by Michael Bedell and Rob Freedman, working with Paul Gosselin and Salmon Falls Architecture. (Now Bedell

The blue palette throughout the house is echoed in the kitchen’s blue pearl granite countertop (above) from Blue Rock of Maine and the handmade nautical backsplash tiles and border. An opening to the right leads to an L-shaped pantry. The house (opposite) is filled with windows that maximize ocean views from the great room and dining room on the main floor, and the extended owners’ bedroom with sitting area and bath on the third. Piping plovers frequent the dune grass.

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Interior designer Louise Hurlbutt of Hurlbutt Designs used a navy and white palette for the living room. The custom rug is from Stark, and the lamp with the navy shade is from Bradburn Home and was designed by Barclay Butera. Hurlbutt found the antique ship’s wheel in her travels and repeated the shape on the sofa pillows. She also sourced a black Ming Dynasty-style coffee table and had it painted white and edged with navy.

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The colors of the barrel-ceilinged owners’ bedroom (above) are light and restful, and the room is designed for electric blinds with darkening shades that retreat into the trim above the window. (The lighting system is designed so the Jeans can turn off all the home’s lights from their bedroom.) The chairs can swivel to face the room or the ocean. The street side of the house (opposite, top) is detailed with two shades of paint (a darker color appears on the decorative shingles under the gables), partial copper roofs, an array of square windows that flood the staircase with light, and a bump-out bay that breaks up the building mass while forming a drip edge that helps shield the garage from sheeting rainwater. Grays and browns were used in the bunk room (opposite, bottom) with beadboard walls, recessed wall cubbies, and cherry-stained teak trim. A nautical scene is painted on the glass lamp, which Ray and Louise Jean brought from their previous house, and complements the room’s mounted oars and oceaninspired pillow and chair fabric.

and Freedman are partners in Kennebunk River Architects in Wells.) The new house is shingle-style with a nautically themed interior. The oceanside length of the house is filled, corner to corner, with windows, so upon entering, the view is across a bright, navy and white living room to “50 feet of glass to the Atlantic,” says builder Shawn Douston. “You feel like you are almost outdoors.” This first room establishes the ornamentation and palette used throughout the house. There are blues edged in whites or vice versa, such as a black Ming Dynasty–style coffee table that Hurlbutt had painted white then edged in blue, as well as sofas and pillows with contrasting piping and a blue custom Stark carpet with a white pattern and border. An antique ship’s wheel that Hurlbutt found in her travels hangs on a wall and is echoed in the pillow fabric’s motif. References to boats and the ocean are found on fabrics, wallpapers, paintings, and details throughout the house. The central staircase, for instance, has a lighthouse-shaped newel. The powder room’s wallpaper suggests a boatbuilder’s blueprints. A pair of three-tiered lamp bases are in the form of sea urchins. “If I feel strongly about something, Louise [Hurlbutt] will encourage me, as long as it works,” Louise [Jean] says. That guests are a big focus of the Jeans’ life is apparent from the house’s emphasis on feeding,

sleeping, and entertaining a crowd. The living room flows into a dining room with an adjacent kitchen and porch, so the Jeans can seat up to 22 for dinner or a cookout. Louise likes Ray “out of my way,” when she cooks, so the bar area— making drinks is Ray’s specialty—is located in the living room, while a wine refrigerator and pull-out refrigerater drawers are tucked into the paneled arched entry into the dining room. The kitchen itself, as well as an L-shaped pantry, is full of creative cabinetry from Dina Lennon of Sylco Cabinetry, who designed them with the Jeans’ entertaining habits, personal tastes, and cooking styles in mind. In addition to an oversized refrigerator and two dishwashers to handle big gatherings, all items, from utensils to appliances, have their own custom space, with wooden spoons fitted into cubbies in a drawer by the stove and an espresso machine mounted in the pantry. Overnight guests’ sleeping needs are met through a multilevel suite (located above the garage), a bunk room for children, and a guest room with a queen bed and two built-in daybeds. In these rooms, the palette changes. One bedroom is aqua and coral. Another is aqua and navy, colors pulled from its Legacy Home bedding. (Hurlbutt had Barrier Island Rugs make an area rug to match the linen colors.) Browns and grays dominate the bunk room,

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THE OCEANSIDE LENGTH OF THE HOUSE IS FILLED, CORNER TO CORNER, WITH WINDOWS, SO UPON ENTERING, THE VIEW IS ACROSS A BRIGHT, NAVY AND WHITE LIVING ROOM TO “50 FEET OF GLASS TO THE ATLANTIC,” SAYS BUILDER SHAWN DOUSTON. “YOU FEEL LIKE YOU ARE ALMOST OUTDOORS.”

The large owners’ bathroom (above) has a double sink separated by a chest that gives the room a vertical lift. Sylco Cabinetry is responsible for the cabinets, and Distinctive Tile and Design did the floor. The BainUltra Naos pedestal tub has Rohl’s Country Bath hardware. Four-inch-wide wooden shutters above the bath let light in while preserving privacy. Homeowner Louise Jean walks down a staircase (opposite, top left) with custom millwork by Ventura Staircase and Woodturning. The newel is painted blue. Hurlbutt likes to mix navy and aqua as she did in this guest room (opposite, top right), which has a porcelain gourd lamp and a Barrier Island Rugs cotton rug designed to complement the Legacy Home bedding. To accommodate a big family, this guest room’s window seats (opposite, bottom) function as daybeds for grandchildren. The blues throughout the house turn aqua here, while coral accents add variety to the house’s dominant palette. Hurlbutt had the lamp custom fabricated from tin ornamentation.

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An ocean-view painting (left) by Craig Mooney, who is represented by Maine Art Paintings and Sculpture, hangs over a fireplace with a Jet Mist granite surround. The powder room (opposite) has Ralph Lauren wallpaper. The vanity was made by Sylco Cabinetry, and the rustic alder top is from Eport Wood Products, who are also responsible for the wood countertops in the den and media room.

where beadboard walls, teak trim, a ladder, and a steamer trunk continue the nautical theme. As for the Jeans’ bedroom suite, it occupies the whole ocean side of the second floor, stretching from a barrel-ceilinged bedroom through a sitting room to an expansive bathroom with a glass shower, Calacatta Gold marble floor, and pedestal tub. As for entertainment options: proximity to the beach is the whole purpose of the house. The Jeans’ grandchildren “love the same things we do,” says Louise. They play cornhole and football on the beach. They plunge into the hot tub that nestles under the second-floor porch and by the dune grass that edges the property. Of course, sometimes it rains, and when it does, the house offers plenty of places to curl up with a book. The house also has numerous options for watching movies or the news, as there are televisions in the living room, the cherry-lined study upstairs, the kitchen, and even the second-floor laundry room and owners’ bathroom. (Ray likes to watch CNBC while he shaves.) For bigger groups, a media room mimics a movie theater with six big leather recliners arranged on two levels before a large flat-screen television. On the ocean side, the exterior is virtually all glass. As Bedell and Freedman note, people buy shore property for the view so, on all floors, the partners purposely filled the width of the buildable lot with windows. (Part of the design challenge

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of the house was fitting everything the Jeans wanted into the allowable envelope, which meant, at times, creative design solutions, such as hiding the HVAC and plumbing in the living room’s coffered ceiling.) Meanwhile, on the street side, playful detailing includes diamond-shaped shingles under the gables and partial copper roofs, while an attractive yet functional cluster of eight windows in one corner of the facade floods the stairwell with light. Above the garage doors, a bumpout bay with supporting corbels breaks up the mass of the house. The bay—as Dave Wagor, project manager at Douston Construction observes—also creates a drip edge that serves as the garage’s protection from sheeting rainwater. According to builder Shawn Douston, one of the running jokes during construction was that Ray could supervise the building of the house from the “Oval Office,” because an oval window in the owners’ initial house looked toward the construction site. As for whether the Jeans, in a presidential mood, are ever tempted to look out one of the two oval windows in their current house to supervise more building? “We are not,” Louise says, “building another house.” Because now they have exactly what they want: the beach and a house big enough to enjoy it with their loved ones. MH+D For more information, see Resources on page 140.

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A Garage B Entryway C Deck D Kitchen E Pantry F Dining Area G Living Area H Bathrooms I Bedrooms J Laundry K Owners’ Bedroom L Owners’ Bathroom M Terrace N Sitting Room O Study P Owners’ Closet MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 115

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Challenge Cancer: Know the Facts

1

Nearly 900 Maine men are diagnosed with prostate cancer every year.

2

Prostate cancer is the most common cancer among men in Maine.

3

Maintaining a healthy weight can reduce your risk of prostate cancer.

September is Prostate Cancer Awareness Month. Men should talk to their doctors about their risk and recommended screenings.

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WITH YOUR HELP WE CAN REDUCE CANCER IN MAINE.

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PHELPS ARCHITECTS INC Planning | Residential & Commercial Design | Interiors 278 Main Street • Damariscotta, Maine 04543 ha milt o nsno wb er.co m

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SHOP T AL K|C H I L TO N FU R N I T U RE C O. BY KATY KELLEHER | PHOTOGRAPHY BY SARAH BEARD BUCKLEY

SOLID CHOICES From the geometric adornments of the Arts and Crafts movement to the hand-turned simplicity of a Shaker table, the pieces at Chilton Furniture Co. are built to last a lifetime

J

1

en Levin believes in slow decor. “I think style should evolve over time,” she says. “The best way to design a space is through collecting pieces over the course of a lifetime and mixing them relentlessly.” Jen’s ethos is visible throughout the Chilton Furniture Co. store in Freeport, where cherry tables and ash chairs play with minimalist Japanese-designed ceramics, cozy Beni Ourain rugs, and abstract paintings by artist Scott Bowe. The visual language of the showroom may sound eclectic, but it’s grounded by Chilton’s primary product: Shaker-inspired and heirloom-quality solid wood furniture. Like Jen’s design style, this furniture is made slowly and thoughtfully. Since purchasing the company in 2014, Jen and her husband, Jared, have been working with craftspeople to produce more and more products in Maine. They do this in part to honor the company’s history— Chilton has been selling wood furniture since the mid-1970s—but also because the Levins firmly believe in buying local. “I think when you buy pieces that are crafted by regional artists, you root your house in the local economy and in the community,” Jen says. “I’m part of the Maine community, and that’s why I’m eating at a table that was made just down the road.” The tables, chairs, dressers, beds, end tables, and shelves on display at Chilton pay homage to the company’s history through simple, clean design principles. While Chilton does not manufacture furniture—the Levins work directly with craftspeople to design and sell pieces, rather than building them inhouse—their curated collection is unified by quality construction and a minimalist aesthetic. In short, Chilton pieces are built to last— and to weather both shifts in style and the temperamental Maine climate. As temperature and humidity changes, wood contracts and expands, “almost like a living thing,” says Jen.

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1. Jared and Jen Levin of Chilton Furniture Co. pose with the Hygge dining table in ambrosia maple. Jen sits on a maple Hygge-style Tappan chair with a taped back in butternut. The painting is by Scott Bowe. 2. At the Chilton showroom in Freeport, cherry Tappan three-slat chairs with hunter-colored tape are pulled up to the Abbotts Mill dining table, also in cherry. On the right is the Hygge dining table. 3. Every Acadia bed is one-of-a-kind, thanks to its liveedge headboard. On the Acadia nightstand are walnut Shaker boxes and a Monohanako vase. The lamp is from Hubbardton Forge, and the orange pillow is by Erin Flett. 4. The Farmington Cottage stools come in four colors: summer green, tangerine, summer blue, and white. 3

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SHOP T AL K|C H I L TO N FU R N I T U RE C O.

The maple Mysa sleigh bed and nightstand are made in the midcoast. The photograph above the dresser is by Christopher Lawrence, and the pair of paintings is by Charles Mooradian.

Chilton employs traditional techniques, like dovetail, bridle, mortise and tenon, and other types of wood joinery whenever possible, particularly in key structural locations. While many of their pieces use some metal fasteners, which makes them easier to assemble and reassemble, the Levins are slowly growing a collection of allwood furniture. “One of our woodworkers told me that when you have metal and wood together, over time, metal will always win. The joints will loosen, and where the metal rubs against the wood, it will degrade,” Jen explains. “With a properly constructed woodon-wood joint, there is no reason for that to ever weaken.” But Jen’s passion is for offering unique products that will last generations. She relays an anecdote from one of the craftspeople that Chilton works with: Years ago, Adam Nudd-Homeyer, owner and builder of the highly prized Tappan chair, was tasked with fixing one of the handcrafted ash and maple chairs that had been doubling as a ladder in an old house in Sandwich, New Hampshire. “But he couldn’t take it apart to repair it,” she says. “The joints were too solid.” The Levins say that these Tappan chairs are among the best quality chair of this style on the market, and they are actively working with Nudd-Homeyer to innovate new versions that reflect Chilton’s evolving aesthetic. While Chilton still sells chairs that are indistinguishable from their nineteenth-century counterparts, Jen and Jared are working

to bring a slightly more modern aesthetic into their showroom. “For many years, Chilton has been about the Shaker philosophy, which is about utility, quality, and simplicity,” Jen says. “We want to stay true to those principles while introducing some exciting, original designs.” To that end, the Levins are pursuing a collaborative partnership with Sea Bags to create unique beds featuring weathered sailcloth headboards. They have also hired Barrett Stowell, a Maine-born industrial and interior designer currently living in Boston, to help develop more complex pieces, including the geometric Lokie tables and bench, available in ash and oak, as well as the solid maple Mysa sleigh bed and its coordinating Mysa nightstand. “It will be interesting to see how the more modern items we’re making resonate with our more traditional customers,” Jen says. However, she feels that even shoppers with a classic design sense will be able to appreciate the clean lines of Chilton furniture— whether it comes in the form of a classic Shaker chest of drawers made of cherry or a midcentury-inspired wormy maple dining table. “We’re evolving,” Jen says. “And that’s a good thing.” MH+D

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4 STYLING TIPS FOR SLOW DECOR:

JOANNE PARENT LIGHT MEETS DARK | 30”X40” | OIL ON CANVAS

Invest in anchor pieces that will last a lifetime, then mix it up with seasonal accessories. “I prefer to work with neutrals, and add color in accessories,” Jen says. “I love changing the feel of my space as the temperature rises and falls.” Pillows, placemats, and flowers are all easy to swap out.

u

“Buy the best quality furniture you can afford,” says Jen. “You will enjoy a piece longer if it is built to last. I always tell people to examine a piece and look for certain quality cues, such as dovetails on the drawer boxes or split wedge mortise-and-tenon joints where spindles are visible through the top rail of a chair.” Look to see whether the wood in the furniture appears as though it all comes from the same tree. “This means more time was taken to select the wood that went into building the piece— it probably means more care was taken in the construction as well,” Jen says.

u

Don’t be afraid to mix and match wood types. Often, Jen says, customers will express trepidation about mixing various types of wood. “I think wood almost always goes with wood,” she says. However, there is one exception to this rule: don’t choose pieces that are too similar in shade. “I find a duochromatic palate is easier to decorate with. I love mixing walnut and maple, or walnut and birch. It makes the space feel crisp,” she says.

u

Finally, don’t be afraid to get up close and personal with the grain. Some of the most striking pieces in the Chilton showroom feature irregular grain patterns, such as the dark streaks of spalted maple or the distinctive trails of worm-gnawed maple. “I like to advocate for wood in its natural state,” explains Jen. “I think people are drawn easily to the grain of the wood—it’s what makes each piece unique, and that makes it even more beautiful.”

u

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Landscape Design inspired by Mother Nature

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DAVID ALLEN SEPT 7 – SEPT 29

OPENING RECEPTION THURSDAY, SEPT 7, 5-7PM 154 Middle Street, Portland, Maine TO REQUEST A SHOW CATALOG OR SCHEDULE A PRIVATE VIEWING PLEASE CONTACT EMMA WILSON OR ERICA GAMMON AT 207.956.7105

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ART SPOTLIGHT EDITED BY BRITTANY COST

O N E S T O WAT C H Five standout artists to keep your eye on

ISA AC JAEGERMAN Lights, 2017, white ink on black paper, 23” x 15”

“My work is representative, even in abstraction, of lived experience. I sometimes paint from photos of landscapes that I passed through months ago, but in my work, memories of place are both more vivid and less specific than I can capture with a camera. In making art, I enhance my source material, whether it’s photographic or imagined, to create something that is as compelling as real life, but doesn’t attempt to supersede reality. This featured work, Lights, takes its cues from optical art and geometric abstraction. Lines are mysterious,

disorienting, and charged with energy; they imbue a two-dimensional space with the qualities of something alive and dynamic. It’s a cliché, but when I’m making art, I feel like an alchemist. I take inert materials, alter them, combine them, and watch them transform into new and unforeseen forms. Lights conveys what it feels like to hold a pool of bioluminescent water in your cupped hands on a dark night in early autumn. To focus your eyes on any single glowing speck is impossible, so you take in the experience in its entirety.”

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ART SPOTLIGHT

PAUL BONNEAU

Three Dories, 2016, acrylic on canvas, 36” x 36”

“Working both en plein air and in the studio from sketches, I create pieces that seem to have been painted quickly. My narratives are not complicated. The simple and concrete shapes of barns, boats, and dramatic landscapes allow for strong contrasts of light and shadow, which justify the intensification of color. Through my paintings I am looking for universal values and trying to heighten the viewer’s visual experience. I want them to participate in the scenes that I develop. I start with a canvas toned in yellow ochre onto which I apply a thin layer of cadmium red to establish the values and large shapes. This process allows for a fresh application of complementary colors, giving the finished work energy and a warm glow. My goal is to capitalize on the joy even in a seemingly ordinary object or scene.”

MILENA BANKS

Beecher Stowe House, 2016, oil on canvas, 36” x 48” “I love inspirations that come unexpectedly, and I enjoy a new challenge, a new subject. I use thick oils and broad, rapid strokes to keep up with my imagination. It excites me when someone tells me, ‘That’s too hard to paint.’ If it’s difficult, I want to do it. This is a painting of the Harriet Beecher Stowe House in Brunswick. Driving by it, I always felt a presence inside, watching. I decided to paint the house as a battle of wills—an interplay of tree shadows like hands prying the house apart—representing my curiosity about what’s hiding inside, as the house fights to stay undisturbed by onlookers. I still pass by this house a lot, and it seems to remember me, saying, ‘Oh, you again.’”

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MARCIA CRUMLEY

Coastal Currents, 2017, acrylic on canvas, 36” x 36” “I never tire of the Maine landscape, from its changing seasons to its fast-moving weather. I can spend hours walking through the woods or sitting on the shore watching the clouds and light dance across the water, trees, and mountains. When I see a ray of light burst through the clouds and illuminate a distant mountain ridge or a tree with expressive markings on its unusually shaped limbs, the design of a future painting starts spinning through my head. I think, what dimensions would work best, which components of the scene are critical, which pieces can be eliminated, and what colors could I use to reinvent the moment and make it mine? I’m particularly drawn to trees, especially Maine pines and birches, as they have such expressive personalities. For me, a vital life force emanates from them. The painting technique I’ve developed makes this energy palpable by leaving flashes of the contrasting underpainting visible around the edges of trees. I usually do the underpaintings in saturated monotones—magenta is one of my favorites—creating a dynamic contrast to the foliage and drawing the eye to the tree’s energy and form.”

TOM CURRY

View from Great Spruce Head Island, 2016, oil on panel, 12” x 16” “As a plein air painter, I immerse myself in landscape to explore the relationships between stillness and flux. What we call a place is a paradox. It is not fixed but always changing; the light shifts from moment to moment, water is never still, and clouds come and go. I am drawn to paint both the raw, wild places and the small villages and harbors on the peninsula where I live—working outdoors where I can be in direct contact with the clear, searing light or the dense fog, the heat of the sun or a frigid wind, the sounds of crickets or the distant drone of a fishing boat, the smell of salt. I seek to create a powerful and intimate sense and experience of these places using layers of saturated color and compositions distilled to bold, elemental forms. In my work I seek to express that we are not mere observers of landscape but also participants in it. I want to encourage the viewer to engage with landscape not as a passive backdrop of scenery, but as alive, wild, muscular, and ultimately unknowable—layered with history, but also breathing, ever-changing, and seamless.” MH+D For more information, see Resources on page 140.

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20 17 B E R N A R D O S H E R L E C T U R E

T HER E S A SECO R D Keeping Tradition Alive: Native American Art Ecology in Maine and the Nation

Tuesday, September 12, 6:30 p.m. Hannaford Hall, Abromson Center, University of Southern Maine $15 general public, $10 PMA members, $5 students It wasn’t long ago that one of Maine’s oldest art forms—ash and sweetgrass basketry—was in danger of disappearing entirely. Activists and advocates from the Passamaquoddy, Penobscot, Maliseet, and Micmac tribes saved the tradition through a long, hard-fought struggle, preserving a crucial piece of the region’s cultural heritage. In this special lecture, Theresa Secord, the founding director of the Maine Indian Basketmakers Alliance, shares this story as well as insights from her decades of experience advocating for artists and the arts from Maine to Hawaii.

Tickets available by calling (207) 775-6148 or at PortlandMuseum.org/Secord

re serve your ticke t s today!

The annual Bernard Osher Lecture Series is made possible by the Peggy and Harold Osher Endowment at the Portland Museum of Art. Media Sponsor: Top to bottom: Jeremy Frey (Passamaquoddy, born 1978), Urchin Basket, 2007, brown ash, sweetgrass, dyes, 4 inches high. Abbe Museum, Bar Harbor, Maine. Museum purchase, Diane Kopec Collection Fund, #2007-03001. © Jeremy Frey; Sarah Sockbeson (Penobscot, born 1983), Basket, 2011, brown ash, sweetgrass, antler, 4 x 31/2 inches. Hudson Museum, University of Maine, HM8622. © Sarah Sockbeson; Theresa Secord (Penobscot, born 1958), Barrel Basket, 2015, ash, sweetgrass, and cedar bark, 8 1/2 x 4 inches. Museum purchase with support from the Friends of the Collection, 2016.5; George Neptune (Passamaquoddy, born 1988), GMO Indian Corn, 2013, brown ash, sweetgrass, dyes. Abbe Museum, Bar Harbor, Maine. Museum purchase, Diane Kopec Collection Fund, #2013-06. © George Neptune

(207) 775-6148 | Por tlandMuseum.org

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Photograph by amazingdjmusic.com

WIND SCULPTURES ™ BY LYMAN WHITAKER

Proudly displaying hundreds of handmade Wind Sculptures™ by Lyman Whitaker, with creations ranging from five feet tall to nearly thirty feet tall. Visit us in Kennebunkport or online at www.maine-art.com

14 Western Avenue | Kennebunk, Maine | 207.967.2803 | maine-art.com

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Marguerite Zorach Nude, 1922 Oil on canvas Worcester Art Museum, Worcester, Massachusetts, Eliza S. Paine Fund and a partial gift of Dr. and Mrs. Robert A. Johnson, 1977.130

J U N E 1 7 , 2 0 17

– J A N U A R Y 7 , 2 018

MARGUERITE ZORACH An Art-Filled Life Farnsworth Art Museum 16 Museum Street, Rockland, Maine 207-596-6457 farnsworthmuseum.org

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The exclusive media sponsor of this exhibition is

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Overlooking Port Clyde harbor, my summer art gallery features the Wyeths, living and painting in this island-dotted midcoast region since 1920. Original art, rare signed & limited edition collector prints and books, a frame shop, raven sculpture, Wyeth illustrated children’s books, cards, gifts, and ticketing for Wyeths by Water excursions, all combine to make this a unique destination in Maine, not to be found anywhere else.

Open daily from 10am-6pm Memorial Day thru Columbus Day. 207.372.6543 ext. 3 Jamie Wyeth, Red Tailed Hawk, mixed media, 15” x 15,” original, signed lower left

wyethgallery@lindabeansperfectmaine.com

Andrew Wyeth, Jamie Wyeth, and N.C. Wyeth famous painting locations can be seen on your choice of three art tours aboard the Maine lobsterboat “Linderin Losh.” A Coast Guard licensed captain and tour guide will also tell you about local lobstering during each 2.5-hour excursion. 2.5 Hours - $42 per person Departs Port Clyde General Store Dock 2pm, Monday–Friday Book online, get tickets at the dock, or in the Wyeth Gallery! wyethtours@lindabeansperfectmaine.com

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high resolution scanning large format giclĂŠe printing photo printing signage & banner printing art card printing custom framing

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P H OTO BY EMI LI E I NC.

P R E S E RV I N G Y O U R A R T F O R O V E R 3 0 Y E A R S B AC K C O V E - H A N N A F O R D P L A Z A - P O R T L A N D | 2 0 7 . 7 7 4 . 1 2 6 0 | W W W. C A S C O B AY F R A M E S . C O M

Red Roses, W. K. Gilbert

digitaliteracy.com

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SHOWCASE

LIGHTING THE WAY

The Center for Furniture Craftsmanship exhibits wood lighting that transcends craft BY BRITTANY COST

PHOTO: Ian D. Edquist

On the following pages, Maine Home+Design presents a preview of Contemporary Wood Lighting at the Center for Furniture Craftsmanship’s Messler Gallery. Max Kaplan, Standing Lamp #3, beech, LEDs, and plexiglass, 60” x 24” x 24” MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 135

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PHOTO: Jan Dallas Photography

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onoring the often under-represented relationship between woodworking and lighting design, furniture and lighting designer Christopher Poehlmann of CP Lighting in Philadelphia has curated an exhibition at Rockport’s Center for Furniture Craftsmanship called Contemporary Wood Lighting. Running September 22 through January 3, the show features the work of 23 international makers whose techniques range from delicate marquetry to CNC laser cutting, as well as coopering, veneering, bending, and turning. The pieces range from practical to conceptual, resulting in a multifaceted exhibition in which objects

demonstrate the medium’s capacity to imitate nature and yet deviate from it—for example, Duncan Meerding’s standing lamps are shaped like tree stumps and emit light from cracks along their sides, and Cameron Mathieson transforms Japanese tissue paper into lifelike but unidentifiable animal figures. All works share wood as the primary material that their creators have chosen to light their artistic vision. “In the hands of makers, wood can be incredibly diverse,” says Poehlmann. “New lighting ideas are popping up all the time, but there has yet to be a proper showcase for lighting design specifically in wood.” MH+D

1. Cameron Mathieson, from the series Life Forms, driftwood, basket reed, Japanese tissue paper, and resin, 16” x 54” x 38” 2. Laura Mays, Flare, walnut and electrical fittings, 16” x 6” x 8” 3. Katie Hudnall, Spider Leg Lamp, found wood, brass, hardware, and lamp parts, 60” x 40” x 24” 4. Klara Varosy, Bloom, oak and oak veneer, plexiglass, leather, brass hardware, and magnetic feet, 9¼” x 12¼” x 15” 5. Christopher Poehlmann, newGROWTH (single wire floating chandelier), brushed aluminum with black patina, 40” x 40” x 20” 6. Christy Oates, Walnut Duo 2208, walnut, wenge, mahogany, Douglas fir, and purpleheart, 11” diameter 7. Duncan Meerding, Cracked Log Lamp, salvaged radiata pine, 9” x 7” x 7” each 8. Obe & Co. Design, The Weave Lamp, 114/5” x 67 /10” and 67 /10” x 47 /10” 9. Susan Casey, Echo Lamp, maple, wax, aluminum, and paint, 12” x 10” x 6” MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 137

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Ma

N in am 20 e m ed 17 ag to “A a z i ” L ne i s t ’s

NEW SHIPMENT IN FROM EUROPE

CURATED BY MICHELLE GRABNER

ON VIEW JULY 20-SEPTEMBER 15

We invite you to join us for a one-day symposium with a panel discussion moderated by Barry Schwabsky on September 15, 2017. Space is limited, please RSVP to ica@meca.edu. For more information contact ica@meca.edu or 207.699.5025 Hours: Wednesday–Sunday, 11AM–5PM, Thursday, 11AM–7PM 4 B AC K S H O R E R D. R O U N D P O N D 2 0 7. 5 2 9. 5 3 0 0 • T H E A R TO FA N T I Q U I N G . C O M

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Artwork By: Dan Attoe, Cedar Tree with Creep, 2017

522 CONGRESS STREET | PORTLAND ME, 04101 meca.edu/ica | 800.699.1509

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JOHANNA MOORE FR AME MAKER , GILDER

lonepineprojects.com johannamoore207@gmail.com 207.828.0028 available by appointment at Running with Scissors Ar tist Studios 250 Anderson St. • Por tland, Maine

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0

RE S O U RC E S ROCKPORT POST & BEAM

ON A HIGH NOTE Page 72

Builder: Damon Builders damonbuilders.com Appliances: Agren Appliance agrenappliance.com

ROCKPORTPOSTANDBE AM.COM

207.236.8562

Building Supplies: Hammond Lumber Company hammondlumber.com Countertops: Surface Creations of Maine surfacecreationsme.com Custom Paint & Oven Artwork: Jewel Clark jewelwhatever.com Draperies & Seamstress: Design Solutions designsolutionsofmaine.com

Join the Farnsworth [Collective]! A dynamic group of art lovers and makers in the heart of Rockland, Maine. farnsworthmuseum.org/collective

Drywall: Kiesman Drywall mainelyfoam.com Electrical: Bedell’s Electric 207.627.3247 Exterior Rock Walls: Roberts Excavation 207.527.2396

THE GREAT POLLINATION CELEBRATION A CELEBRATION featuring everything about honey bees & native bees!

SEPTEMBER 30TH

SATURDAY 8 AM – 3 PM A perfect opportunity for young and old to learn all about bees. The entire day is focused on fun, education & conservation. There will be live music, food, movies, workshops, bee related items for sale, activities for children including kite flying, an introduction to beekeeping, medicinal uses of bee products, mead tasting and much more. A honey barbeque lunch will be available!

From botanical marvels to the ageless beauty of art, more and more people are discovering this beautiful landscape with its trails, hidden gardens and adventure. The Great Pollination Celebration is just one more facet to your journey and we hope to see you soon.

Fixtures: House of Lights houseoflights.com Flooring: Fat Andy’s Hardwood fatandys.com Foundation & Concrete: Henry’s Concrete Construction henrysconcrete.com Furniture: Youngs Furniture youngsfurniture.com HVAC: Thayer Corporation thayercorp.com Insulation: Maine-ly Foam mainelyfoam.com Kitchen Designer: Kitchen Cove Cabinetry & Design kitchencovecabinetry.com Painting: G.B. Carrier Corp 603.356.5168

Plumbing: Doherty & Sons 207.795.0654 Propane: Charlie Reed 207.240.6068 Range Hood: Rusted Puffin Metal Works rustedpuffinmetalworks. simdif.com Rockers, Chests & Ottomans: Davis Bros. Furniture davisbrosfurniture.com Roofing: Custom Metal Roofs of Maine metalroofingme.com Rugs: Mougalian Rugs mougalian.com Septic: Shelley Engineering 207.657.8031 Stained Glass: Phoenix Studio phoenixstudio.com Stairs: York Spiral Stair yorkspiralstair.com Stone Work: Kevin Kilgore Masonry 207.650.5199 Tile Design & Supplier: Distinctive Tile & Design distinctivetileanddesign.com Tile Installation: Sticks & Stones Custom Tile & Hardwood 207.650.9481 Well Drilling: Bob Temple Well Drilling 207.666.3224 Well & Septic Placement: Sustainable Soils sustainablesoils.net Windows: Marvin Windows & Doors marvin.com

A LIGHT TOUCH Page 88

Architect: Kaplan Thompson Architects kaplanthompson.com Builder: Kolbert Building kolbertbuilding.com

SEPTEMBER 30: OPEN 8:00 -3 PM | 153 HOSPITAL STREET, AUGUSTA, ME

Vilesarboretum.org | 207-626-7989 140 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

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Cabinetry: Coastal Design Group coastalcustomdesign.com Dishwasher & Stove: Bosch bosch-home.com Excavation & Site Work: GLB Construction 207.232.8405 HVAC & Solar Panels: ReVision Energy revisionenergy.com Insulation: Ace Insulation acecelluloseinsulation.com Interior Doors: Brosco brosco.com Light Fixtures: Fogg Lighting fogglighting.com George Kovacs minkagroup.net Paint: C.H. Rosengren Painting & Repair chrosengrenpainting.com Plumbing: Sheldon’s Plumbing & Heating sheldonsplumbingandheating. com Plumbing Fixtures: Kohler Co. us.kohler.com Refrigerator: Amana amana.com Roof: Maine Roof Solutions maineroofsolutions.com Rug: Angela Adams angelaadams.com Select Artwork: Paul Brahms 207.939.8056 Carolyn Deininger MiCA 12/v shopmica.com

Marden Builders

Mary Harrington marybharrington.com Jim Merrill 207.883.8459

Fine homebuilders providing quality craftsmanship

Johanna Moore lonepineprojects.com Jean Pilk 207.846.6626 Amy Ray 207.512.0879

Boothbay Harbor, ME • 207.633.5148 • MardenBuilders.com

Michael Waterman mwaterman.com Stairs: Cleary Millwork clearymillwork.com

ARCHITECTURE PLANNING

Studio Sink: Kolbert Building kolbertbuilding.com

INTERIOR DESIGN

Third-Floor Bathroom Sink: Ae Ceramics aeceramics.com Tile: Capozza Tile & Floor Covering Center capozzaflooring.com Window Supplier: Thermotech thermotech.com Woodstove: Yankee Fireplace Grill & Patio yankeefireplace.com

A TALE OF TWO HOUSES

207·326·9339 EACarchitecture.com

ERIC A CHASE ARCHITECTURE D a v i d Ma t e ro ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■

Architecture

Page 104

Bath, Maine davidmatero.com 207.389.4278

Architect: Kennebunk River Architects kennebunkriverarchitects.com Builder: Douston Construction douston.com

Designing Buil dings

Buil ding Rel ations hips

Interior Designer: Hurlbutt Designs hurlbuttdesigns.com Air Handler & AirConditioning Units: American Standard americanstandardair.com

C U STO M I Z A B L E & N O N -TOX I C

Artwork in Living Room:

Rachael Eastman rachaeleastman.com

Craig Mooney craigmooneystudio.com

Judy Glickman Lauder judyglickmanlauder.com

Maine Art Paintings & Sculpture maine-art.com

William Eric Brown williamericbrown.com

Piper 72” Condo Sofa

FO R S M A L L E R S PA C E S condofurniture.com

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RE S O U RC E S Audiovisual: WirePro wirepro.net

Marty Braun

Aug 15 Sept 10

Boilers: Viessmann viessmann-us.com Cabinetry: Sylco Cabinetry sylcocabinets.com Drywall: Pelletier Drywall 207.294.2937 Electrical: Plamondon Electric 207.985.9744 Exterior Paint: Benjamin Moore benjaminmoore.com

Originally Conceived, Directed & Choreographed by Fran Charnas BUY TickeTs: 207.774.0465 www.portlandstage.org 25A Forest Ave, Portland, Me

HVAC: The Unico System unicosystem.com Insulation: Builders Installed Products buildersinstalledproducts.net Landscape Architect: Woodburn & Company Landscape Architecture woodburnandcompany.com Landscape & Hardscape Designer: New England Landscapes newenglandlandscapesinc. com Lighting: Visual Comfort & Co. visualcomfortlightinglights. com

THIS IS SO MAINE.

Living Room Carpet: Stark starkcarpet.com Living Room Lamp with Blue Base: Bradburn Home bradburnhome.com Owners’ Bathtub: BainUltra bainultra.com Owners’ Bathtub Hardware: Rohl rohlhome.com Owners’ Bathroom Mirrors: Restoration Hardware restorationhardware.com

WE DELIVER. Subscribe 207 772 3373 themainemag.com/subscribe

Painting: Painting by Northeast paintingbynortheast.com

Plumbing & Heating: Jim Godbout Plumbing & Heating jimgodbout.com Rugs: Barrier Island Rugs barrierislandrugs.com Sea Urchin Lamp: Currey & Company curreycodealers.com Select Bedding: Legacy Home legacylinens.com Select Fabrics & Furniture: Thibaut thibautdesign.com Select Wallpaper: Ralph Lauren Home ralphlaurenhome.com Shingles: Maibec maibec.com Stair Millwork: Ventura Staircase & Woodturning 207.286.3549 Tile: Distinctive Tile & Design distinctivetileanddesign.com Tile Installer: Rick Sekiya 207.468.4506 Wood Countertops: Eport Wood Products eportwoodproducts.com

ONES TO WATCH Page 127

Milena Banks paintingsbymilena.com Art Collector Maine artcollectormaine.com Paul Bonneau paulvbonneau.com Art Collector Maine artcollectormaine.com Marcia Crumley marciacrumleyart.com Art Collector Maine artcollectormaine.com Tom Curry tomcurrymaineartist.com Isaac Jaegerman isaacjaegerman.com

Pavers: Techo-Bloc techo-bloc.com 142 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

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July 8–November 12, 2017 Colby College Museum of Art Waterville, Maine

#MarsdenHartley colby.edu/museum

Marsden Hartley’s Maine is organized by the Colby College Museum of Art and The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Marsden Hartley, Canuck Yankee Lumberjack at Old Orchard Beach, Maine, 1940–41. Oil on Masonite-type hardboard, 40 1/8 x 30 in. (101.9 x 76.2 cm). Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution

7TH ANNUAL GALA | FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 8TH | THOMPSON’S POINT MAINEPRESERVATION.ORG/GALA | 207.847.3577

DEVELOPERS COLLABORATIVE | JACOBS GLASS | KNICKERBOCKER GROUP, LLC | MORONG FALMOUTH THE PRESS HOTEL, LLC | OLD PORT ADVISORS | OTIS ATWELL | VERRILL DANA, LLP | BECKER STRUCTURAL ENGINEERS, INC. AURORA PROVISIONS | BLACK POINT INN | BUENO LOCO | DEAN’S SWEETS | DOCKSIDE GRILL | GELATO FIASCO | LINDA BEAN’S PERFECT MAINE OLD PORT SEA GRILL & RAW BAR | 43NORTH | PORTLAND PIE CO. | ROYAL RIVER GRILL HOUSE | TIQA | TUSCAN BRICK OVEN BISTRO CUMBERLAND CLUB | SHIPYARD | PINE STATE TRADING | ICE PIK VODKA | STROUDWATER DISTILLERY

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B RUNSWICK WATERFRONT Architect Designed Contemporary blend offers remarkable energy efficiency with lots of glass to let the outside in. 3052 sq ft of well planned living area offering enchanting water views throughout the house. Fabulous center island kitchen with white Shaker style cabinets & polished concrete counter tops. Large living room with high efficiency gas fireplace, stone surround and custom built-ins. Private first floor master bedroom suite with nicely appointed master bath. Sun drenched second floor bedrooms and baths. Partially finished daylight basement. Private studio or guest suite above the attached three car garage. Fitting into the surroundings with style and color to compliment this wonderful five acre waterfront site. 424’ of lightly tidal shore frontage on Middle Bay with a private dock, ramp & float for warm water swimming & boating from your doorstep. Extreme care given to site orientation, extensive patio, decking and landscape details. Remarkable privacy– yet, only minutes to Bowdoin College and all things Brunswick. Featured in the December, 2016 Architecture Issue of Maine Home + Design. $1,495,000. Rick Baribeau Re/Max Riverside Off: 207-319-7828 Cell: 207-751-6103 Email: rickbaribeau@remax.net

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REAL ESTATE

REINVENTING HISTORY

PHOTO: Great Moose Aerial

A seaside estate in Cumberland Foreside

Legacy Properties | Sotheby’s International Realty legacysir.com/57beachdr 207.632.0557 (Tim Kennedy) 207.251.2169 (Skanlon Sittig)

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riginally built in 1938 as a summer getaway, a Georgian colonial estate sprawls across nearly nine and a half acres in Cumberland Foreside. The 7,888-square-foot home includes 9 bedrooms, 6 full baths, and 2 partial baths, creating ample space for family gatherings. Horse paddocks, a carriage house and stables, original clay tennis courts, and a barn provide opportunities for outdoor entertainment and reference the property’s past as an early-twentieth-century country estate. Adjacent to the property is a sandy beach, and the property includes deeded mooring rights at the town pier. Bay windows offer expansive views of Casco Bay, while five fireplaces supply warmth and a cozy ambience on colder nights. “The property has a great history to it,” says developer Nathan Bateman of Bateman Partners. Louise Payson, one of the state’s eminent landscape architects, designed the pièce de résistance of the property—its original garden—that is still intact today. Rather than renovating, Bateman and his collaborator, builder Peter Anastos of Anastos and Nadeau, opted to preserve the home’s rich legacy, including its original wallpaper, light fixtures,

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PHOTOS: Meggie Booth

and structural elements, such as a curved concave door off the spiral stairs, which opens to a small room where the estate’s former residents would arrange freshly cut fresh flowers. The pair were careful to refrain from superfluous modernization, allowing the future owners to either maintain the historical property or transform it to fit their own dreams. Thanks to a conservation easement managed by the Chebeague and Cumberland Land Trust, owners can alter the property and landscape while still preserving the wildlife and fauna that define the Casco Bay region. “It’s a thoughtful development,” Bateman adds of his purchase. “We got to preserve a landmark estate in a desirous location.” Although the secluded property may seem to belong to another era, its location along the Route 88 Foreside corridor positions it within a bike ride of the Portland Country Club and only a ten-minute drive from Portland’s cultural offerings, including James Beard Award–winning restaurants, the historic Old Port, and the Portland Museum of Art. Bateman says that much of the land from the original property is still in common, including the waterfront and surrounding forest, giving it the feeling of a classic hundred-acre estate. “From the aerials, you can see the enormity of it. It’s really special.” MH+D

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H I L L S b e aC H o C e a n f Ro n t e S tat e

S to n e H a m Wat e R f Ro n t

k e n n e b e C R I V e R f Ro n t

P H I P P S b u R G o C e a n f Ro n t

Contemporary Home with Views of Perkins Cove Ginny o R CWhitney H a R d207.451.3093 S H o R e S - W o o LW I C H

a u b u R n C o n t e m P o R a Ry

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Camden - meGunItCook Lake

ISLeSboRo - daRk HaRboR VILLaGe

L I n C o L n V I L L e C o n t e m P o R a Ry

Oceanfront estate, with 2000’ of water frontage, deep water dock, boat slip and a boat house. 4+ acres of privacy, a main house and a guest house. Located on the southern tip of a peninsula you are surrounded by water on three sides. 55 x 25 boathouse with marine rail. Two hours from Boston. Shorter by Helicopter. MLS 1315882 Chris Stone 207.590.3425 | $5,800,000

Charming oceanfront home sited on the edge of a rare sandy beach! 3BR home with spectacular views into Fish House Cove & out to open ocean. Ideal location with Sebasco Harbor Resort right around the corner and just a short ride to Popham Beach. Add’l very well appointed 900sf 1BR apartment with separate entrance. MLS 1267124 John Collins 207.607.2442 | $689,000

Custom designed Contemporary efficiency home. Wild flower landscaping with formal garden accents. Deck looking over Bay. Bright, open first floor with southern exposure. Master bedroom and bath first floor. 2BR/2BA in main house. Charming studio guest quarters above garage for in-laws, “overflow”. MLS 1279439 Peter van der Kieft 207.592.9366 | $564,000

2006 Contemporary provides exposure to all year round lake recreational activities just minutes from Camden Village. Nestled on a 1.45 acre wooded hillside there’s end of the road privacy, an over sized deck providing ample space for out door entertaining for family and friends. ROW to lake. MLS 1306263 Peter van der Kieft 207.592.9366 | $450,000

KENNEBUNK

MHD NEW 150 SEPT 17_FINAL_2.indd 148 Port Road | 207.967.0934

Award-winning architectural gem with views across Horseshoe Pond to the eastern-most boundary of the White Mtn Nat Forest. Nestled on 2.8 acres with living room, dining rm, sitting rm, library, kitchen, master & guest suites, drawing studio, dog run & fenced yard, sleeping porch & 2 screened porches, dock & separate artist’s studio. MLS 1307729 Liam McCoy 207.712.6860 | $2,000,000

High quality Contemporary-style Cape. The property consists of a 4,200 s.f. residence on 1.9 acres with 254’ of waterfront that is navigable to open ocean. Easily accessible common dock area. Separate outbuilding with garage/studio/guest cottage space. Beautifully landscaped & in truly move-in condition. MLS 1309118 Dennis Duggan 207.522.3747 | $995,000

Nearly new contemporary 3500+ s.f. Dutch Colonial home on 4 private acres with a water view of East Penobscot Bay. Wrap-around porch, 2 decks, 3BR, 3BAs, stone fireplace, viking stove, soapstone sink. Lots of windows to enjoy the water & woods views. MLS 1306492 Don Pendleton 207.462.9000 or Jackie Wheelwright 207.449.9442 | $595,000

Historic building renovated in 1998 including mechanical and electrical systems, windows and baseboard heating. 1st floor commercial space with ample parking; 2nd floor has full kitchen, living, dining & 2BRs & full bath. 3rd floor master BR. MLS 1299931 Don Pendleton 207.462.9000 or Jackie Wheelwright 207.449.9442 | $395,000

PORTLAND

Two City Center | 207.780.8900

BRUNSWICK

141 Maine Street | 207.729.2820

Dramatic in design and impressive in execution, this custom home sits privately on over 5 acres. The natural setting is resplendent and teeming with wildlife. Only 12 minutes to Popham Beach and even less to Sebasco Harbor Resort where you can find harbor-side dining, boating and golf. MLS 1276042 John Collins 207.607.2442 | $859,000

Beautiful custom post & beam home offers something for everyone: first floor master suite with fireplace, spacious upper level bedrooms with hardwood floors, plenty of sunlight throughout, a beautifully finished walk-out basement with fireplace and full bath. MLS 1309548 Anne Bosworth 207.233.3175 or Andrea Pellechia 207.831.0447 | $565,000

238' feet of frontage, inspiring 500sf wrap-around porch, mooring and deepwater dock on 8-mile Toddy Pond. Immaculately maintained 3BR, 2BA home. Completely furnished and decorated and includes a 2-car garage with heated studio/guest space above, wood/tool shed, and generator hookup. MLS 1315409 Lewis Wheelwright 207.232.3951 | $459,000

Adorable three-story home, built in 1985, nestled in the woods off the road in Lincolnville. Living room with woodstove, dining area & galley kitchen. Spiral stairs to a 3rd fl BR with a built-in bed and small office area. Ground level atrium/ studio area with doors leading into another potential bedroom, den, laundry area and ¾ bath. MLS 1303474 Jackie Wheelwright 207.449.9442 | $185,000

CAMDEN

46 Bay View Street | 207.230.1003

D A M A R I S C O T TA 8/1/17 170 Main Street | 207.512.5989

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34 REEF ROAD

CAPE ELIZABETH

Town & Shore Associates $2,390,000 Mark Fortier 207.831.1257 townandshore.com

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GINNY WHITNEY

Featured

207.451.3093 | ginny@ginnywhitney.com

Southern Maine Luxur y Oceanfront, Riverfront

ogunquit | Oceanfront | Private Beach | PulpitRock.info 4 BR | 2.5 BA | 4+ Acres | 2 BR guest Cottage | $5,000,000

cape neddick | Oceanfront | YorkOceanfront.info 2 BR | 2.5 BA | 1st Floor Master | Dramatic Views | $1,650,000

LIStIngS

& Exceptional Proper ties

ogunquit | Contemporary | GreatOgunquitHome.com 3 BR | 3 BA | Deeded Access to Private Beach | $799,000

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cape neddick | OceanViews | Single-Floor Living | OceanHome.info 3 BR | 2 BA |Year-Round | Walk to Beaches | garage | $679,000

York Beach | the Ocean House | OceanViews | 2-Story Condo 2BR | 2 BA | Pool | Fitness Center | Walk to Beach | $564,900

York | 27+ Acre Lot | Salt Water Farm | YorkRiverfront.com 1300’ York River Frontage | Private Cove | $429,000

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207.266.1540 cfernald@legacysir.com

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Exceptional properties, exceptional service.

Reach Road, Deer Isle | MLS 1232459 | $1,800,000 Reach Haven is a waterfront dream; an expansive home both inside & out. Situated on 7 acres with 350’ of deepwater shorefront overlooking Eggemoggin Reach, the house has 5BRs, 4.5BAs, 5 wood burning fireplaces, wine cellar, laundry upstairs & down, 3-car garage & more.

25 Stone turtle Road, Sedgwick | MLS 1239385 | $1,350,000 the main house has 5BRs, 4BAs, library with wet bar, pool with cabana alongside, gourmet kitchen & amenities for every need. 2BR carriage house and 3BR rustic cabin each have their own full kitchen, dining and living spaces as well, and a finished 3-car garage. Dock & 18 acres.

Harbor Drive, northeast Harbor | MLS 1286404 | $599,000 Across from the marina and village green, walking distance to anything in town; 1st floor master BR, high ceilings, a bonus room that could be a bedroom or study, completely remodeled and immaculate, hardwood floors, private brick patio, 1-car garage, 2BR, 2BA.

55 Main Street, Southwest Harbor | MLS 1311643 | $175,000 All uses are permitted in this 5.5+/- acres of prime land in Southwest Harbor. A short distance to downtown and a high visibility spot for your business.

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900 Shore Road, Cape Elizabeth

Offered at $3,975,000

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MARY LIBBY 207.712.5594

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450 Lawrence Road, Pownal Offered at $875,000

m a ry libby 207.712.5594 mlibby@legacysir.com

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Alexa Oestreicher Artfully uniting extraordinary properties with extraordinary lives

14 2 R oY A L L P o i n t

Exceptional home with outstanding attention to detail! Located in Yarmouth’s highly desirable Royall Point neighborhood, this sunny home boasts: a large front yard, private back yard with water views, 2 sun rooms, 4 bedrooms/4.5 bathrooms, gourmet kitchen, 2 fireplaces, cathedral ceilings, pantry with wet bar, generator, sound system and more! Accented by extensive landscape and hardscape, this is truly an enchanting property! Offered at $1,275,000

Susan desgrosseilliers 207.975.4304 | susand@legacysir.com

CONTRACT PENDING

102 Vaughn Street

21 Atlantic Street

poRtLand

RoCkLand

A historic West End John Calvin Stevens home has lovingly and meticulously been renovated into the Philip J Deering two unit Condominium Association and is now being offered to the market for the first time. There are incredible period features restored throughout the unit while incorporating high end features. Large, light filled rooms with high ceilings, beautifully refinished hardwood floor, original molding and hardware were retained throughout the home.

Brick warehouse conversion with 16’ ceilings with multi-levels, exposed brick, roof-top deck & outstanding ocean views from every room! Incredible location take a stroll on the waterfront board walk to Rockland’s historic down town area and visit the Farnsworth Art Museum, the Center for Maine Contemporary Art, numerous galleries, outstanding restaurants and quaint shops or collect sea glass and shells on the intown beach located diagonally across the street!

MLS 1314575 | $1,275,000

MLS 1316852 | $940,000

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207.838.1050 elise@elisekiely.com Featured Listing - Drinkwater Point,Yarmouth | Offered at $1,025,000

This gracious antique has been lovingly renovated with updated systems, a stunning gourmet kitchen, lovely baths, and 1st and 2nd floor master suites. The home’s historical integrity was painstakingly maintained. Offering water views and access to an association deepwater dock, pool, lodge, and adjacent to town trails. This home encourages an active coastal Maine lifestyle.

K at e J ac K s o n

44 High Street CamDen

207.691.3684 kjackson@legacysir.com

Ledge Island, Stevens Pond LIbeRtY

44 High rests on Camden’s most beautiful street, in the “Historic District”, exquisitely sited to provide privacy, yet three blocks from the center of town. Skilled craftsmanship and attention to detail are evident throughout this impeccable proper ty.

Two acre private island on Stevens Pond in the beautiful Village of Liber ty, Maine. A mainland boat house with parking provides easy access to Ledge Island, and 3-bedroom log cabin with a wood stove awaits your arrival. A 13’ aluminum outboard with engine conveys and completes the dream.

MLS 1311976 | $1,649,000

MLS 1310620 | $280,000

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sand ra we ndland

207.233.7788 | swendland@legacysir.com

Featured

LIStIngS

280 Sea meadows Lane,yarmouth | mLS 1258832 | $1,965,000 Water surrounds this 4BR’s & 4.5BA home that’s filled with character. Gourmet kitchen, custom woodwork, reclaimed wood floors, and exceptional entertaining spaces inside & out. Come enjoy Casco bay!

17 Fernald Street.,wilton | mLS 127036 | $545,000 John Calvin Stevens estate includes main home with 4bRs, 4+bas and lots of living space. Cottage with 2bRs, 3bas, Carriage house, and an additional .82 acre buildable lot. walk to lake and village.

one unIt R emaInIng In PhaS e I, aLmoSt 50% SoLd In PhaS e II wI th oCCuPanCy SeP tembeR 2017.

Bath RiverWalk Residences are committed to the art and the ease of living well. Feel relaxed with a property that is professionally managed, energy efficient, and offers fine craftmanship inside and out. Located just a stones throw to historic downtown Bath, residents experience gracious single floor living and comfort as well as the convenient location offering easy access to cafes, fine dining, farmers market, art galleries, exceptional beaches, and maritime pursuits. Custom layouts with 2 or 3 bedrooms, 2-car heated garage, and fabulous water views. Priced between the low $500’s to the mid $600’s.

Bathriverwalk.com

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207.632.0557 tkennedy@legacysir.com

Tim Kennedy

Repres enting buye r s a n d se l l e r s i n G re a te r Cu m b e r l a n d Co u n ty a n d b eyo n d . Specializing in waterfront proper ties that are often complex by nature . Tim has a keen knowledge of shoreland regulations, and maintains a real pulse on the luxur y mar ket.

F E aT u R E D L i S T i n g S Cape Elizabeth | 15 Running Tide Road

Cumberland | 57 Beach Drive

$2,995,000

$1,750,000

C A R R I E m A Rt I n 207.415.2504 cmar tin@legacysir.com

Cumberland Foreside | Lot 7 Spears Hill Lane $695,000

p e t e r t h o r n to n

207.329.2310 pthornton@legacysir.com

Custom Built Home - Post & Beam Barn with Studio - Extra Lot North Yarmouth Exceptional custom built 3,830sf home on 2.67 acres with superior craftsmanship, high-quality materials, energy efficiency, substantial construction details, extensive landscaping and hardscaping! The layout includes 3BR’s with a master suite and home office, a stunning master bathroom with limestone tile and double shower and a great room with smooth concrete floors with radiant heat. The newly built 30’ x 48’ Maine Mountain Timber Frames Post & Beam barn has a heated studio on the 2nd floor. MLS 1307581 | $795,000

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6 Wiley Way Scarborough, Maine $769,000 | MLS 1317010

more than 60 years of industry experience

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DISTINCTIVE REAL ESTATE local expertise coastal living international exposure recognized leaders

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William Davisson & Lucy Foster Flight 207.523.8116 | List Price: $3,900,000 Prouts Neck - Bold ocean environs on offer with this rare opportunity in coveted Prouts. Lot A is 0.46 acres & Lot B is 0.48 acres. Sited on a high promontory & “inside the gate”, & enjoy expansive southerly views to Bluff & Stratton Islands. The lots are surveyed & are conforming buildable lots. MLS 1315605

Brenda Cerino-Galli 207.671.3164 | List Price: $464,900

home in the desirable Sea Ridge Neighborhood. Offering open concept, single level living and just a mile from 7 mile beach! 3 bedrooms including a master suite, 2 full baths, open kitchen/dining/living room with a gas fplc, screen porch, a perfectly landscaped lot and more! MLS 1293941

Sue Lessard 207.899.9567 | $769,000 Spurwink River - Launch canoes, kayaks & paddle/surfboards from your backyard and drift to Higgins Beach. The magnificent, sunkissed, 1.8 acre lot will captivate those who want to be surrounded by nature & its inhabitants. The 4 BR, 3 BA, 2500+/- sq ft home overlooks the Spurwink’s sparkling tidal water and the tree-lined Sprague land. MLS 1317010

Susan Lamb 207.233.1115| $1,275,000 Cape Elizabeth - Picture perfect setting overlooks crashing surf at Trundy Point & enhances the pleasure of living at the seashore. This innovative coastal home is tucked into an elevated setting, just steps to a sandy beach. Comfortable, one-level living. Extensive decking for outdoor dining and entertaining. MLS 1314459

Joi Kressbach 207.838.1865 | $1,475,000 Falmouth - 6 bdrm, 6 full & 3 1/2 bth, 7503 sq ft colonial w/3 car garage in the prime Woodlands location near walking path to Falmouth’s award winning schools. Amenities include: 5 gas fireplaces, central air & vac, custom theater, home gym, sauna, tap room & Harry Potter suite. MLS 1317126

Scarborough - Beautifully built custom

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Mark Fortier 207.831.1257| $2,490,000 Cape Elizabeth - Trundy Point. Dramatic waterfront living at its best! Custom built shingle style Ranch directly on the ocean. One floor living with all the amenities. Open kitchen, dining, & living room combination. Built-ins and oak floors. Tons of glass capturing all the sun with views from every room. MLS 1308499

Town & Shore ASSociATeS, LLc

One Union Wharf | Portland | Maine 04101 Tel. 207.773.0262 | Fax. 207.773.7926

www.townandshore.com

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Phippsburg • $645,000 Come home to Maine to this light-filled yearround timber frame at the water’s edge. MLS – 1315304

Westport • $1,195,000 Custom waterfront home & carriage house

Wiscasset • $775,000 Le Garage, iconic landmark located on the

Georgetown • $1,395,000 Wake with the sun. Watch the tides turn throughout the day. Close to State Park, town and nature. MLS – 1304773

Phippsburg • $1,125,000 Come home to the Kennebec River with all it has to offer! Looking east and south down the river, this home offers space for everyone! MLS – 1301352

Edgecomb • $624,000 The perfect spot to rewind and refresh! Contemporary home offering a wall of glass looking south to 700+ ft of deep waterfrontage on the Cross River. MLS - 1301079

Sheepscot River in the mid-coast for the last 40 years. Perhaps a new life as a fabulous waterside home. MLS – 1308567

featuring the elegance of yesteryear with today’s finest finishes, systems and appliances MLS – 1309130

04530

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Georgetown • $1,495,000 Bold ocean views, crashing surf, native stone fireplace. Expansive living areas with oversized windows. 2 car garage and private guest apartment. MLS-1305895

Georgestown • $389,000 Golden opportunity to spend your summers in the heart of the Five Islands Community, a quaint fishing village with captivating ocean & island views. This year round, quintessential 3-bedroom, Maine cottage provides stunning water views and 51’ of water frontage. The home includes a separate outbuilding space for summer guests or art studio. Great rental history. MLS - 1304869

Manchester • $1,395,000 This exceptional estate offers 72 sprawling acres, A 36x72 Carriage House, and an absolutely stunning 7,300 SF main house. This property’s is location is ideal and has endless possibilities. MLS-1309508

Wiscasset • $1,150,000 Impeccable Georgian Colonial situated on 8.3 lush acres overlooking the vineyard and 650’ of Sheepscot River frontage. Perfect for entertaining, guests will be impressed by the wine cellar complete with a tasting room. MLS-1309933

Bristol • $730,000 Unique opportunity to acquire this residential/commercial property located on the coast of Maine. The 1.25 acres of tidal waterfront land is surrounded by conservation land. The waterfront is equipped with a paved ramp, and a float and dock system . The light filled boat building shed, with a workshop/storage shed maybe easily adapted for other business opportunities. MLS-1311879

Harpswell • $789,500 Unique bowed roof Cape situated on a private and protected cove with 188’ of shore front and dock. This home features a first floor master suite, large bonus entertainment room, new windows, charming built-ins, ample outdoor living space, new deck and updated kitchen with custom cabinets. MLS-1305985

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37 MARY LANE, CUMBERLAND LISTED BY MATT DIBIASE $1,270,500 MLS #1311138 5 BED - 4.5 BATH - 5,638 SQ FT VISIT 37MARYLANE.INFO FOR 3D TOUR AND FLOOR PLANS LISA DIBIASE 207.653.0823 LISA@L ANDINGHOMESMAINE.COM

MATT DIBIASE 207.775-SOLD MATT@L ANDINGHOMESMAINE.COM

76 LAKE SPRINGS GROVE RD, GRAY LISTED BY LISA DIBIASE $609,000 MLS #1313429 3 BED - 2 BATH 2,568 SQ FT 160 FEET OF FRONTAGE ON LITTLE SEBAGO LAKE! VISIT 76LAKEGROVESPRINGSROAD.INFO FOR 3D TOUR AND FLOOR PLANS LISA DIBIASE 207.653.0823 LISA@L ANDINGHOMESMAINE.COM

BE SEEN. BE DISTINCT. BE MORE. 44 EXCHANGE STREET, SUITE 200 PORTL AND | 79 TANDBERG TRAIL, WINDHAM, ME 207-775-7653 | L ANDINGHOMESMAINE.COM

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K E N N E B U N K B E A C H R E A LT Y

Salt Meadow Landing, Kennebunk Salt Meadow Landing is a new neighborhood located very close to Kennebunk Beach, golf, tennis, and the village of Kennebunkport. Building lots available from $262,000 and house/lot packages from $895,000

8 Arlington Ave Unit C3, Kennebunkport Located in a much sought-after location in the Cape Arundel neighborhood is this beautifully appointed 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath condo. Walk to Colony Beach, marinas and restaurants. $399,000

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42 South Maine Street Unit 4, Kennebunkport Offering a blend of comfort and charm, the much coveted “Tarkington Estate� on 4 lush acres exemplifies the grandeur of a timeless era. This 3BR, 3 BA condo is ONE OF A KIND. Just a short walk to the water. $799,000

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8 Railroad Drive, Kennebunk Charming year round

28 Skipper Joes Point Road, Kennebunkport View

245 Kings Highway, Kennebunkport Charming 4 Bedroom ocean front cottage steps from the white sand of Goose Rocks. $2,300,000

3 Titcomb Lane, Kennebunk This 2,400SF custom built Arts & Crafts Home, currently under construction, offers 3BRs and 2.5 baths and is near beach and Dock Square. $675,000

0 Ocean and Seaview, Kennebunkport 1.32 Acre building

8 Lords Point Road, Kennebunk Stunning 4 bedroom

duplex featuring 3 bedrooms/1 bath on each side, short walk to beach. $679,000

lot in prestigious Cape Arundel. Deeded rights to the water, ready for your dream home. $750,000

spectacular sunrises & sunsets from this ocean front retreat which borders Rachel Carson Wildlife Preserve. $2,180,000

Oceanfront Cottage with striking water views from every window. $2,995,000

Sales and Rentals

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181 WESTERN PROMENADE, PORTLAND - $2,500,000

207.773.2345 | DavidBanksTeam.com MHD NEW SEPT 17_FINAL_2.indd 166

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C

$1,895,000

Spectacular English Tudor

149 Foreside Road, Falmouth Foreside

C

OFFICES IN DAVA DAVIN, Designated Broker/Owner dava@portsidereg.com // 207.619.7571

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PORTLAND + FALMOUTH www.portsiderealestategroup.com

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CAMDEN - 5+ Acres, Overlooking the Bay $1,395,000

CAMDEN - Stunning Arts & Crafts Estate $7,900,000

ST GEORGE - Designed 3-BR Oceanfront $1,090,000

ISLESBORO - 20 Acres, Peaceful Retreat $1,300,000

ROCKPORT - Sunny 3-BRs, Pool & Tennis $650,000

Taking Real Estate to a Higher Level camdenre.com 43 Elm Street, Camden 800.236.1920 ROCKPORT - Reconstructed Village Home $1,295,000

STOCKTON SPRINGS - 3-BR Oceanfront Cape $695,000

CAMDEN - Sunny, Chestnut St. $595,000 CAMDEN - Historic, High St. $525,000 HOPE - Post & Beam, Farmhouse $495,000 ROCKLAND - Oceanfront Unit $465,000

WARREN - Renovated, Sauna $395,000

ROCKPORT - Route 1 Frontage $360,000 NORTHPORT - 3-BR Waterfront $365,000

CAMDEN - Belmont Avenue $315,000

BELFAST - Multi-Use Building $295,000 LINCOLNVILLE - Condo w/Views $235,000 NORTHPORT - Waterview Cottage $215,000

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ROCKLAND - Quiet & Sunny $329,000

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MH&D9

Listed by Mia Thompson and Lili Pew

2

The Ledges

Distinctive properties. Legendary service.

Northeast Harbor Step ashore from your private deep-water dock to enjoy The Ledges, a stunning 9-bedroom luxury cottage in Northeast Harbor. Completely renovated with top quality craftsmanship and fully modernized with state-of-the art conveniences throughout, this spacious waterfront home has been reimagined from the original 1901 Fred Savage design.

1 Summit Road Northeast Harbor, ME 207-276-3322

www.KnowlesCo.com

offered for $5,700,000

1 m

3

RINGING POINT

The Estate of David & Peggy Rockefeller Seal Harbor, Maine

Ringing Point encompasses nearly a half-mile of Maine coastline on 14.5 +/- acres. The Seal Harbor estate of the late David & Peggy Rockefeller evokes Acadia National Park with diverse natural settings and lofty vistas; the graceful 7-bedroom house, waterside Study and a Guest House complete this unique legacy property. exclusively offered for $19,000,000

The Knowles Company 1 Summit Road , Northeast Harbor, ME 207-276-3322 • www.KnowlesCo.com

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Listed by Mia Thompson and Lili Pew

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MH&D9-2017 7/24/17 11:20 AM Page 1

BIDDEFORD POOL 18 Yates Street 207.282.1732

KENNEBUNKPORT CAPE PORPOISE 165 Main Street 207.967.5444

www.oceanviewproperties.net

www.oceanviewproperties.net

JAMES MONTGOMERY FLAGG HOME

OCEAN AVENUE, BIDDEFORD POOL

$7,200,000

$1,150,000

Classic beach bungalow on large lot, updated kitchen/baths, Biddeford Pool on very private lane, 1.5+acres and stone fireplace. Great front porch with panoramic views. 200’+private beach frontage. 4500+sf, 5 bedroom suites.

BIDDEFORD POOL OCEANFRONT

BEACH ROSE WAY, KENNEBUNKPORT

$1,595,000

$1,290,000

BIDDEFORD POOL

BIDDEFORD POOL COTTAGE

$599,000

$1,000,000

105’ of sandy beach frontage on a large .72 ac lot. 1st floor Exquisite beauty, magnificent views. Rare cottage commaster suite, spectacular views, front/back, great condition. pound. 195’ waterfront 3BR/2.5BA home, guest cottage.

3BR ranch close to golf club & beach on large corner lot. 4BR 2500SF summer/year round home, ocean views. New kitchen, baths, interior & exterior finishes/turnkey home! Central to everything Biddeford Pool has to offer.

FORTUNES ROCKS COTTAGE

Nice cottage w/ROW to beautiful Fortunes Rocks Beach across the street, Snake River Marsh beyond back yard.

$459,000

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BIDDEFORD POOL BEACH

Spectacular compound with 80’ of beachfront, 4BDR, 3BA, 4500SF home with pool, garages, 3/4 acre.

$2,100,000

RARE BEACH FRONT OPPORTUNITY

Double lot w/200’ frontage on .9 acres. 3BDR guest home on site, plans available for new home. Great Views!

$3,750,000

FORTUNES ROCKS OASIS

Sun filled, timeless 2001 home with 5BR, 4BA, 5000’SF - lovely ocean and pond views, stroll to beach.

$1,150,000

BIDDEFORD POOL COTTAGE

STEPS TO BEACH IN SACO

$599,000

$484,900

Year round Biddeford Pool home steps to beach, rocky Bright & sunny open concept. 2007 3-4BR/2.5BA colonial shore, golf course. Spacious, great yard, expand potential. near beaches/wharf. Great vacation or year round living.

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Honesty, Integrity, and Loyalty are key ingredients for a successful relationship.

JASIE COSTIGAN As a lifestyle designer, I understand and prioritize the importance of space, and the essence of the relationship you have with your environment. Whether you have outgrown your current space, wanting to downsize, looking to purchase your first home, or find the perfect investment piece; I am hear to help you with your specific and unique real estate journey.

Jasie Costigan • REALTOR® jasie@jasiecostigan.com c: 207-930-5014 | o: 207-548-2280 x121 Berkshire Hathaway Home Services Northeast Real Estate 185 West Main St, Searsport, ME 04974

PAT BISHOP,

BROOKLIN | 134 CENTER HARBOR, MAINE | Classic waterfront home, known a “Whereaway”, is located in beautiful Brooklin, Maine. This lovely Cape Cod style home proudly sits on the shore of Center Harbor, enjoying views of Chatto Island and Eggemoggin Reach. For the “Boater” this property is a perfect homeport, because of its protected location and it’s proximity to Eggemoggin Reach, which is heralded as one of the premiere sailing locations in the world | $895,000

48 MAIN STREET, BLUE HILL, MAINE

207 374 5010 | SALTMEADOWPROPERTIES.COM

JAMES AND BONNIE PAULAS, SANDY DOUVARJO

CASTINE | $760,000 Totally renovated antique cape with 4 bedrooms, 3. 5 baths, 3 fireplaces, large family room above barn, in ground heated pool with changing hut,deeded access to Bagaduce River.

7 MAIN STREET , CASTINE, MAINE 207 326 9116 | SALTMEADOWPROPERTIES.COM KAREN KOOS, MARCIA KROPP, SUSAN MACNAIR, LISA HAUGEN, LYNN EVANS BROOKSVILLE, MAINE | Located a short boat ride to Historic Castine Village and Penobscot Bay, this beautiful 5± acre Bagaduce River property offers 352 feet of deep water frontage and includes a permanent, dock system, with a mooring on Lord’s Cove. You will enjoy spectacular westerly sunsets from this stylish, custom built, 3-bedroom, 2 bath shingled cottage. The grounds are beautifully landscaped, with perennial gardens, stone walls and numerous outbuildings including a hansom, post and beam barn. | $845,000

SURRY 756 NEWBURY NECK | $539,000.00 Beautiful spot on Union River Bay with 126+/- ‘ deepwater frontage and 3 +/- acres. 3 seasonal cottage, studio, 2 bay garage and has recently been beautifully landscaped with perennial garden, stone walls and granite walk ways. Turn key condition move right in! $539,000.00

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BROOKSVILLE | $379,000 Prime property on Walker Pond w/530’ of frontage. Classic off the grid camp at the southern tip of a peninsula overlooking the length of the pristine pond. Huge granite fireplace, tons of rustic charm, small dock and secondary small cabin included.

ORLAND 49 EAST TODDY POND | $425,000.00 Lovely property for a large family w/ a main cottage and 2 one bedroom cabins w/ kitchen, bath & living This property has a good rental history, if you wish to stay in the main and rent the 2 cabins. 155+/-’ of pond frontage with dock on 1+/- acre. Enjoy the beautiful view of 1st Toddy Pond, swim off the dock, moor your boat, sit on the deck and enjoy the sunsets ! This is a wonderful spot to spend your summers! Centrally located between Bangor and Bar Harbor where the mountains of Acadia are located.

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ANDREA GALUZA

JOAN CHRANE

c: 207.751.9701 AGaluza@Remax.net GaluzaHomes.com

o: 207.319.7826 | c: 207.837.3866 JoanChrane@Mac.com MainePremier.com SOLD!

On experience, intelligence and integrity.

1 Bowdoin Mill Island, Suite 101, Topsham, ME

“Award Winning Broker”

PHIPPSBURG | $549,000 Long Views to Open ocean. Contemporary home with a lower level one bedroom apt. Water Access. Close to beaches, hiking trails and historical sites.

BATH | This Custom Cape Style Home was built by Morse and Doak Builders and borders Mill PARKER HEAD VILLAGE - PHIPPSBURG | $355,00 Beautiful setting looking over tidal waters and magnificent bird life! two tiered deck with hot tub, kayak from you back door. Excellent striper fishing!

Pond. Canoe or Kayak from your own park like setting on nearly 3 private acres close to town. Formal and informal living spaces with 2 wood burning fireplaces including the large master bedroom suite. Large deck and gazebo for outdoor entertaining and large open kitchen with newer appliances and tiled floor. Full basement has great storage, workshop and playroom. A must see home with many custom features. $379,000.

LOW MORTGAGE RATES. HIGH LOCAL SERVICE. WIDE ARRAY OF PROGRAMS.

Check Rates at: firstportland.com • Purchase • Zero Down Payment • Refinance • Construction • FHA/VA • Jumbo Mortgages

Check out BLINK at firstportland.com/blink Call about our lender assisted down payment program-only 1% down!

Check out BLINK at firstportland.com/blink Your local alternative to Rocket Mortgage but with better rates!

Your local alternative to Rocket Mortgage but with better rates!

Serving all of Maine

NMLS ID#60473 Licensed by ME Bureau of Consumer Credit Protection

207-878-7770 • 1-800-370-5222 • 1321 Washington Ave., Portland, ME 04103

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THE BEST WAY TO BUY YOUR NEW HOME

¥ Maine’s First & Only Agency Representing Buyers Exclusively ¥ ¥ 100% Loyalty ¥ ¥ No Conflicts of Interest ¥ Knowledge. Experience. Trust. Search All Maine Listings: mainehome.com

8/1/17 1:22 PM


32 WILLIAMS AVE | KITTERY | $525,000 Antique Cape on the banks of the Piscataqua

River. You will be entranced by the tranquility!

48 PINE MOUNTAIN ROAD | CAPE NEDDICK | $675,000 Beautiful cape in a magical woods setting on the shores of Lake Carolyn! Enjoy peace & quiet in this quaint home with fully appointed in-law apartment.

155 PEPPERRELL ROAD | KITTERY POINT | $579,000 Very rare duplex opportunity in Kittery Point! Straight across from Pepperrell Cove, and steps form the town dock, this cape has it all!

33 AXHOLME ROAD| YORK VILLAGE | $375,000 Classic New Englander located in

the heart of York Village! For outdoor living, enjoy a large deck & great backyard!

Williams Realty Partners 4 MARKET PLACE DRIVE, #2 | YORK, MAINE

207.351.8188

C A S C O B AY I S L A N D S H O R E F R O N T HO

CLIFF ISL AND, MAINE

On this very special island known as Cliff Island, a year-round island reached by regular ferry service from Portland’s waterfront, sits this beautiful parcel of land with about 120’ of deepwater frontage. on Luckse Sound. The views stretch to Long Island to the west and to Chebeague Island to the Northeast and Hope Island is front and center and the 3 bedroom, 1 bath cottage takes full advantage of the site and views. It’s a cozy cottage that is the essence of Cliff Island – simple, comfortable, not fancy but sure of itself. $389,000.00 for the chance of a lifetime.

PORT ISLAND REALTY | 14 WELCH STREET, PEAKS ISLAND | 207-766-5966

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MAINE WATERFRONT SPECIALIST Steven Chicoine R e a l E s t a t e Te a m

124 Oceanward Drive, Friendship - $615,000

Stunning Cape overlooking the Meduncook River! Property has 350 feet of private water frontage and a pebble beach at mid tide! Spacious home with a custom kitchen, dining area and living space that are all able to enjoy the beautiful wood burning fireplace. Main living area has walls of windows showcasing the views! First floor Master with bath, attached 2 car garage, spacious deck for entertaining, large yard with gorgeous flower gardens and stone walls. Great summer rental opportunity or year round living! Private setting!

Top 5 in Keller Williams Maine in 2015 Top 5 in Keller Williams Maine in 2016

~ Steven’s Statistics ~

Realtor Magazine’s “30 Under 30” 2012 Current Magazine’s “Best of Best” 2015

Sold the highest priced home in Maine by a Keller Williams Agent in both 2015 ($3,995,000) and 2016 ($3,948,250) 2016 - Sold over 135 proper ties and sold over 35 Million in total volume! 2017 - Already sold over 26 Million in total volume!

700 Broadway, South Portland - 50 Sewall Street, 2nd floor, Portland - StevenChicoine@kw.com - 207-446-8060 - www.StevenChicoine.com

“Based on information on dollar volumn data and on units sold from the Maine Real Estate Information System, Inc. for period of 1/1/15 to 7/21/17. Provided by an individual user of MREIS. MREIS has not reviewed the contents and does not make any representations, warranties or guarrantees regarding the accuracy, timeliness or completeness of any statistical information and data provided”

25 HIGH STREET ELLSWORTH, ME 04605 207.667.2144 | BUYMAINE@SARGENTRE.COM

182 Mud Creek Road, Hancock

Spacious 3 bedroom / 2.5 bath colonial home. Prime location close to the Mount Desert Island / Acadia National Park area as well as a short drive to the Schoodic Peninsula / Downeast Region. Four season activities abound just outside your door coupled with 430 feet of your own shorefront on Kilkenny Cove. Large 15.6 acre lot for privacy and with the ability to add additional homes on the property to create a family compound. Price: $599,000.00

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Morgan Bay, Surry

SUNSETS, SEALS & THE SEA await you… Well maintained waterfront home with 2 bedrooms and 1.5 baths in Main House and a 2-car Garage w/partially finished 1 Bedroom 1 Bath Guest Apartment. Home has new kitchen, windows, shingles, skylight & more. Beautifully landscaped & private! Excellent location on Newbury Neck with lovely sunsets over Morgan Bay. Come and experience life as it should be.... on the beautiful coast of Maine! Price: $389,000.00

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Specializing in Prouts Neck & Portland Properties

Lucy Flight Associate Broker/Owner

c. 912.223.1500 | o. 207.773.0262 lflight@townandshore.com www.townandshore.com

Global Reach. Local Expertise.

YORK WATERFRONT – Set on 1.66+/- acres, this secluded 3+ bedroom single level ranch features 410 feet on the York River and offers a year round 1,100 sq. ft. guest house, 2 docks and mooring. $1,399,000

SOUTH BERWICK – Historically important & masterfully maintained, the Major General Ichabod Goodwin house includes exceptional modern additions with 18th century architectural details. $799,000

YORK – On 3.4 acres, this 4 BR home offers an openconcept 1st floor featuring a two-story living room, eat-in kitchen, formal dining room & en-suite master. Also includes a cozy fireplaced outbuilding. $849,000

CAPE NEDDICK OCEANFRONT – On 1.36+/acres, this home was designed to capture brilliant sunrises over the rocky coast. The 4 bedroom estate is complete with 1,430 sq ft barn with loft. $1,799,000

YORK OCEAN VIEW – Sitting across from Long Sands Beach, this furnished two-family property offers a spacious 5 bdrm New England style home & a completely remodeled 3 bdrm lower level. $895,000

YORK HARBOR OCEANFRONT – Build your dream home on this ideal site residing on the rocky coast offering over 200’ of ocean frontage on 1.14 acres surrounded by stately homes. $1,595,000

31 Long Sands Road, York, Maine | 207.363.6640

AnneErwin.com

19 Beach Street, Ogunquit, Maine | 207.646.8802

Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated

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76 Morning Street, Portland: Peninsula Living, Perfected. Perched on the crest of Portland’s Munjoy Hill is a true oasis of beauty and modern amenities: 76 Morning Street. This luxurious contemporary Victorian condo is a stone’s throw to the water. Take a tour and you will be dazzled by the impeccable quality of both the build and the design. Fabulous natural light highlights incredible finishes including red birch floors, a true chef’s kitchen (with granite and stainless steel appliances), 2 gas fireplaces, leading edge electronics, a private entrance, highly sought after 2-car driveway, two decks with water views, master suite with wet bar, spa tub and large walk in closet. If you have been waiting for an East End property to ‘wow’ you, this will be the one. Offered at $1,195,000

KAREN J. THOMPSON Mobile: 207-650-7471 For more information on this property visit: www.76morningstreet.info The Flaherty Group | 386 Bridgton Road, Westbrook, ME 04092 | 207-221-8585

When you see Karen out and about tell your server, “I’ll have what she’s having.”

Maine magazine food editor Karen Watterson and a shot of one of the dishes she sampled at The Burleigh in Kennebunkport.

Join Karen’s dining adventures. Subscribe, read, like, follow.

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themainemag.com + @eatmaine

8/1/17 1:23 PM


Visit CoastalHomesOnTheGo.com to download the Keller Williams Coastal Realty app and instantly access over 4 million homes from the palm of your hand.

Portsmouth, NH | 750 Lafayette Road, Suite 201 | 603.610.8500 | NewEnglandCoastalRealty.com York, ME | 4 Market Place Drive, Suite 1-2 | 207.475.0999 With offices in Dover, Durham, Exeter, Meredith, North Conway, and Wolfeboro

CAPTAIN’S WAY, SOUTHPORT

Captain’s Way is an age qualified neighborhood. This new cottage style 2BR/2BA home is masterly perfected to balance easy care, with admirable finish details throughout. Open deck & front porch. Ready for occupancy. $350,000

BOOTHBAY HARBOR WATER VIEW

This spacious 5+BR home has a right of way to a small beach, great room with stone fireplace, formal dining room, eat in kitchen & porch with harbor views. Additional 1BR/1BA guest apartment with kitchenette & sitting room. $695,000

STAY CONNECTED

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PARADISE POINT WATERFRONT HOME & BOATHOUSE

Classic Maine home in East Boothbay with spacious kitchen, fireplace & 3BR suites. Expansive porch with views of Linekin Bay. 2BR/1BA boathouse with kitchen, living/dining room with fireplace & deep water dock. $1,395,000

SOUTHPORT SHOREFRONT

Enjoy panoramic views of the Atlantic Ocean & outer islands from this 4-5BR/3.5BA year-round cottage, with guest house & barn. Main cottage offers wood-burning fireplace, 1st floor master suite, and a shorefront deck. $1,395,000

DAMARISCOTTA RIVER WATERFRONT

3BR/2BA home located close to East Boothbay Village. The warmth of wood is prevalent in the open kitchen, dining & living areas. Enjoy 1-floor living with views of the river, waterside deck & association deep water dock. $495,000

LITTLE RIVER WATERFRONT

Nestled on a wooded hillside is this spacious 2-level, 3BR/2.5BA home with hard pine floors, cathedral ceiling in kitchen, dining & living room with woodstove & access to deck facing the water. 2-car garage & in-law apartment. $465,000

32 Oak Street, Boothbay Harbor, ME • 207-633-6711 • www.tindalandcallahan.com

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COME ON DOWN TO BOCA RATON

KATIE WILLIAMS The East BOCA expert REALTOR ASSOCIATE 561.909.7012 KATIE.WILLIAMS@ELLIMAN.COM @EASTBOCARATON

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BOOTHBAY HARBOR ∏ Historic home c. 1805. Bring ideas

and energy to this three bedroom, two bath Colonial! Guest cottage and close to downtown Boothbay Harbor! $319,000 MLS#1296952

DAMARISCOTTA RIVER ∏ Modern Cape with three bedrooms and two baths on a private 3 acre lot with 465’ of water frontage. Close to downtown. $357,500 MLS#1316326

87 M AINE S TREET D AMARISCOTTA, M AINE 207-563-1003

SOUTH BRISTOL ∏ Quintessential 19th century farmstead!

Located in the heart of the Pemaquid peninsula, this c. 1800 (+/-) cape sits on a private 2.8 acres. Make history here! $249,500 MLS#1316542

TISPAQUIN TRAIL ∏ Listen to the surf crashing, watch

BREMEN ∏ Nestled on the shores of Greenland Cove, the light change on the water, and smell the salt air. One floor this 3,400 sq. ft. Contemporary has water views from every living in this unique home. window. Enjoy deepwater dock and guest house! MLS#1309931 $375,000 MLS#1285009 $1,399,000

S pecialized B uyer and S eller r epreSentation ∏ e xcluSive H ome S taging S ervicS Π r eal e State a uctionS l uxury H omeS p rogram Π S earcH for m aine r eal e State at m y n ewcaStle . com

Own a piece of quintessential oceanfront real estate on Penobscot Bay.

Just steps to the ocean

64 Kelley Dr, Stockton Springs, ME This stately cottage-style home is sequestered on 6.8± acres with 400± feet of picturesque Maine ocean frontage. Within the 5,000± SF of main living space, you’ll find 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, and a

Attached garage

Bright, spacious interior

stone fireplace with Deer Isle Granite hearth. The Kennebec Kitchen, at the center of the home, includes top-of-the-line appliances and opens to an expansive dining space.

entrance and a patio. An attached 2-car garage, plus large barn with guest apartment provide ample storage and accommodations for family and friends.

Ocean views throughout including from the 2,347± SF of finished space in the 2-bedroom walk-out basement apartment with private

Steps to the ocean, and a haven of wildlife, this home is perfectly suited for a life of adventure, reflection, and balance.

Large barn with guest apartment

Buy it at your price!

PuBlic AuctiOn On-SitE: Wednesday, September 20 Tranzon Auction Properties is a member company of Tranzon, LLC. All Tranzon companies are independently owned and operated.

TRANZON.COM 866-503-1212

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C R Y S TA L T R O P E A N O C R Y S TA L T R O P E A N O C RYSTAL

OFFERS

30

YEARS OF REAL RESULTS . WITH

100%

DEDICATION TO YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS .

WHETHER YOU ARE LOOKING TO BUY OR SELL , THE ADVANTAGE IS “ CRYSTAL ” CLEAR ! C RYSTAL offers OFFERS30 30 YEARS REAL RESULTS . WITH 100% DEDICATION TO YOUR REAL ESTATE Crystal years of OF real results, with 100% dedication to your real estate needs.NEEDS . WHETHER BUY OR SELL ,THE THE ADVANTAGE ADVANTAGE IS Whether YOU youARE are LOOKING looking TO to buy or sell,

SOLD 35 DAYS SOLD 35 DAYS

HILLS BEACH

4th house up from the beach! Come experience this hidden gem on the Maine Coast. Enjoy the stunning views of nearby islands, Saco Bay, & the Ocean. Unbelievable price for this three-bedroom, three-story contempt/colonial home. The first floor has a private guest area, while the second floor has an open-concept living and dining area that opens to a large deck with lovely ocean views. This is a great rental potential for University of New England students and summer guests, and you can’t beat the great location that is close to Kennebunkport and Portland. Apply your own decorative touches and with just a little TLC you’ll have anLANE amazing where return! Year SACO FERRY life is simple & round or vacation home. Asking $458,000 lifestyle is important! Gorgeous 180 degree SACO FERRY LANE where life is simple & waterfront views of the Saco River from the lifestyle is important! Gorgeous 180 degree CRYSTAL TROPEANO open concept living. A dock for boating & waterfront views of the Saco River from the 207.400.1767 fishing w/easy access to the open Atlantic open concept living. A dock for boating & CTROPEANO@HOMESINMAINE.COM Ocean. fishing w/easy access to the open Atlantic CRYSTALSELLSMAINE.COM Ocean.

“ CRYSTAL ” CLEAR ! IS “CRYSTAL” CLEAR

SOLD IN 52 DAYS SOLD IN 52 DAYS

SOLD IN 8 DAYS SOLD IN 8 DAYS

LONG ISLAND OFF CASCO BAY An KENNEBUNKPORT You’ll fall in love with extraordinary 4 acres w/breathtaking 180 degrees this open concept, bright & airy, contemporary ISLAND CASCO KENNEBUNKPORT You’ll fall in love with ofLONG panoramic viewsOFF of open ocean.BAY ThisAn 1910 cape with walls of glass. French doors, transom extraordinary 4 acres degrees this open concept, bright & airy, contemporary Maine vintage home hasw/breathtaking a family rm w/ 180 a massive windows, & beautiful hardwoods. Enjoy sitting on of panoramic views of been openconstructed ocean. This 1910 stone fireplace that has stone by cape with walls of glass. French doors, transom front porch for morning coffee or dining on Maine vintage home has atreasure family rm w/proudly a massive the stone w/love. This seasonal sits windows, & beautiful hardwoods. Enjoy sitting on 12x26 deck. A wonderful year rnd or summer replace that has beenfor constructed stone onstone 700+fift oceanfront. Ready new owners or by the the front porch for morning coffee or dining on awaits you w/ a flexible floor plan. stone w/love. This your seasonal treasure bring plans to build dream home.sits proudly home the 12x26 deck. A wonderful year rnd or summer on 700+ ft oceanfront. Ready for new owners or home awaits you w/ a flexible floor plan. bring plans to build your dream home.

207.370.7338 | CTROPEANO@HOMESINMAINE.COM | WWW.CRYSTALSELLSMAINE.COM

207.370.7338 | CTROPEANO@HOMESINMAINE.COM | WWW.CRYSTALSELLSMAINE.COM

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"""""""""""""""""""""""" * +, We make moving easy. Moving is stressful. Owners Jim and Kathleen Frati have designed their company to help smooth the edges of your moving experience by providing a damage-free transition for your fine furniture, valuables, and estate.

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Contact us today for a free estimate

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Local & Long Distance Moves • Heated Long & Short Term Storage (207) 233-5545 Packing & Unpacking Services • Consignment Delivery estimate@integritymovers.com -./01".22!3343"5"678&9$86:&;86<=&8>9?%6=7)@?9"5"AAA)&;86<=&8>9?%6=7 Professional Piano Movers • Family Owned Business integritymovers.com

presents

A Pink Tie Party VINEGAR HILL MUSIC THEATER

2nd annual community of caring event to benefit breast cancer awareness. all proceeds benefit the maine cancer foundation.

LIVE MUSIC • FOOD & BEVERAGES • SILENT AUCTION

O C T 5 , 2 0 1 7 5 : 0 0 P M • P I N K T I E PA R T Y. E V E N T B R I T E .CO M

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THE COTTAGE! “AGE CANNOT WITHER HER, NOR CUSTOM STALE HER INFINITE VARIETY” Not exactly Cleopatra, but every Maine sumer cottage has her own story. Most of them are seductresses, luring their owners back time after time, year after year, generation after generation. Here we have just such a seductress. She was built C. 1918, on the rocky shore of Juniper Pt., in a one hundred year old, well established summer colony. Shingle style with four bedrooms, two baths, large living room with glass sliding doors all across the front, fireplace, sun room and diing room. A large covered porch on the water is wonderful for sitting and watching, panoramic southerly views of ocean activity. The lot consists of .38A and 48 feet of deep water. With association membership there’s access to two deep water docs, one within feet of the cottage, clay tennis courts with tennis pro, private sandy beach and a large vitnage community house. Many activities for adults and children and just a mile from the yacht club and two miles from town. New survey with great possibilities for expansion. New to the market. $775,000

Contact Carol today to schedule a tour! carolbuxton1@gmail.com

207-633-3515

For more information on this property visit my website, www.CarolBuxtonRealEstate.com To see my listings please go to: www.duPontRegistry.com, Trulia, and Home Away

Superior rental management services for our homeowners and guests Kennebunk | Kennebunkport | Biddeford Pool 207-221-3436 • KPTLUXURYPROPERTIES.COM

Vacation Rental Management • Concierge Services

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T HE D RAWI NG B O AR D

Island Eyrie

T

he site for this island residence is a rocky knoll overlooking Penobscot Bay with views to the open ocean, where the white lines of birch trunks punctuate a backdrop of twisted spruce trees. Because the site slopes away in several directions from the top of the knoll, the building forms modulate and shift to engage with the topography. The design’s cedar-clad, gabled forms extend into the landscape, creating a variety of intimately scaled outdoor spaces. Rather than establish a foundation plinth, the design takes a more plastic approach, wrapping the shingled wall surfaces down to the natural grade. Woven shingle corners minimize breaks in

the surface pattern. Cedar decks contribute to a palette of weathered materials. The three main volumes—living areas, guest accommodations, and an owner's suite— gather around a central kitchen, which is topped with a green roof. There is also an office with access to a deck perched in the green roof. Like all GO Logic projects, this design incorporates a Passive House−level building shell to deliver the highest levels of energy efficiency and indoor air quality. The building is oriented to engage with the site’s remarkable views but also to maximize passive solar gain, further reducing its demand for supplemental heat. MH+D

Location: A Penobscot Bay Island Architect & Builder: GO Logic Construction start: Fall 2017 Construction complete: Summer 2018

184 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

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Grand plans and great lengths.

Cottage at the Beach, Kennebunk, Maine bowleybuilders.com

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| custom builders of finely crafted homes and commercial properties | 207.536.0235 | SYLVAINSEVIGNY.COM

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Fine home builders, general contractors, and developers

899 Post Road • Wells, ME 04090 • 207.646.6194 • Rmoodyconstruction.com

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