Goldie
Senior Member
Wilkie, Daniel R., house, 432 Sherbourne St., w. side, between Carlton & Wellesley Sts. 1908 TPL
Interior
Interior
Wilkie, Daniel R., house, 432 Sherbourne St., w. side, between Carlton & Wellesley Sts. 1908 TPL
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Interior
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IMO it was a fashion to paint brick. The house next door had their yellow brick corners painted white. My father did that to our house back in the day...1960’s.Wonder if the bricks were painted because they had deteriorated so much that they couldn't find replacement bricks to match the old bricks?
IMO it was a fashion to paint brick. The house next door had their yellow brick corners painted white. My father did that to our house back in the day...1960’s.
I well remember the soot. Paint doesn’t stick to soot. The “cure” for soot then was unbridled sandblasting, which degraded the brick.Most likely it was because of the soot covering the bricks. Painting the bricks was the cheapest "remedy". The soot came from coal furnaces and boilers, which generally were replaced by oil or natural gas burners by the 1950's or so.
Bank of British North America, Weston Road, north east corner John St. 1906 TPL
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Just as the older building looks like a typical bank of 1906! Le plus ca change!The "new" building looks like a typical 1950/1960's single-story, single-use building of the time.
Another pic from the TPL about 432 Sherbourne:Wilkie, Daniel R., house, 432 Sherbourne St., w. side, between Carlton & Wellesley Sts. 1908 TPL
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Interior
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The "new" building looks like a typical 1950/1960's single-story, single-use building of the time.