Craftsman · Est. Homes 1900–1940

Every home
has a maker.
Let's find yours.

A specialist who reads a house the way a carpenter reads grain — matching preservation-minded buyers with homes that still carry the weight of the hands that built them.

Original Craftsman bungalow with wide porch, tapered columns, and overhanging eaves
01/
Origin Story

These homes weren't designed.
They were reasoned.

Close-up of original craftsman door with hand-carved mortise and tenon joinery details

1905

The year the Arts & Crafts movement reached American front porches

The Craftsman movement was a rebuke. A generation of builders looked at the industrial age and said: not in our houses.

Every tapered column, every exposed rafter tail, every mortise-and-tenon joint visible at the porch bracket — these weren't decorative choices. They were arguments. Arguments for honesty in materials. For the dignity of the craftsman's hand. For a house that shows you how it was made.

A century later, those arguments still hold. The question is whether the house in front of you still makes them — or whether three rounds of renovation have covered the bones in drywall and the windows in vinyl.


"I'm not selling houses. I'm helping people find the ones that were built to outlast the people who built them."

Margaret Holloway — Principal, Craftsman Realty

200+

Craftsman homes sold

18 yrs

Preservation focus

94%

Clients refer again

02/
What to Look For

The vocabulary of
a well-made house.

Most buyers can feel when a house has it. Knowing the words means you can protect it — and spot when it's been stripped away.

Wooden mortise and tenon joint detail on craftsman porch bracket showing hand-cut woodworking

Mortise & Tenon

Visible joinery at porch brackets and exposed beams. No screws. No shortcuts. The joint tells you how serious the builder was.

Original craftsman interior millwork with built-in bookshelves and picture rail molding in warm wood tones

Original Millwork

Picture rails, built-in bookcases, coffered ceilings. When it's original, the wood has a patina no stain can replicate.

Craftsman style leaded glass transom window with geometric pattern casting colored light

Leaded Glass

Transom windows and sidelights with geometric leading. Each pane slightly different — evidence of a glazier, not a factory.

Craftsman bungalow brick fireplace with inglenook seating and original tile surround

Inglenook & Hearth

The fireplace as social architecture. Brick laid in common bond, a hearth wide enough to gather around, flanking built-in benches.

Craftsman bungalow front porch with tapered square columns on stone piers and overhanging eaves

Tapered Columns

Square at top, wider at the base — the Craftsman signature. Sitting on a porch pier of clinker brick or river stone.

Mortise & TenonOriginal MillworkLeaded GlassInglenookTapered ColumnsClinker BrickBox Beam CeilingsBuilt-in CabinetryWide-Plank FirCraftsman HardwareArts & Crafts TileMortise & TenonOriginal MillworkLeaded GlassInglenookTapered ColumnsClinker BrickBox Beam CeilingsBuilt-in CabinetryWide-Plank FirCraftsman HardwareArts & Crafts Tile
03/
From the Clients

Pinned to the
drafting board.

Exterior of 1912 four-square craftsman home with original porch columns and period-correct landscaping
"

Margaret walked into the first house and immediately pointed to a patch of drywall and said 'there's a built-in behind that.' She was right. We bought the house.


Theo & Priya Ramirez

Bought a 1912 four-square, Portland Heights

Craftsman bungalow front view with original tapered columns, covered porch and mature garden
"

We'd been looking for two years. Other agents kept showing us renovated houses with 'character.' Margaret showed us what character actually looks like — and we stopped looking.


Constance Whitfield

Downsized into a 1924 bungalow, Laurelhurst

Craftsman home with restored original windows and freshly refinished wood porch floor
"

She found a leaded glass transom that had been painted over. Negotiated $18,000 off the price to restore it. That's not a realtor — that's an advocate.


James Okafor

Preservation investor, acquired 3 properties

4.9/ 5

Average client rating

312days

Days avg. time to close on desired home

$0

Homes sold that later failed preservation review

04/
Current Listings

Homes that still
make the argument.

See All Listings
Original 1911 leaded glass transom window with geometric craftsman pattern and aged leading
Active

Leaded glass transom — original glazier, c.1911

2847 Sycamore Ave

Irvington, Portland · 1911 California Bungalow

$785,000

3 bed2 bath
Hand-turned quarter-sawn oak newel post on craftsman staircase with original wood patina
Active

Staircase newel post — hand-turned quarter-sawn oak

514 NE Prescott St

Sabin, Portland · 1924 American Four-Square

$649,000

4 bed1.5 bath
Craftsman porch bracket with visible mortise and tenon joinery showing hand-cut woodwork
Under Contract

Porch bracket — mortise-and-tenon, no fasteners

1703 SE Oak

Buckman, Portland · 1918 Craftsman Cottage

$524,000

2 bed1 bath

Not ready to buy?
Still worth knowing.

The Restoration Red Flags Checklist — 12 things to check before you make an offer on any pre-1940 home. What's salvageable, what's been ruined, and what to negotiate.