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    Nail Your Curb Appeal

    9 design tips to add rustic charm to your home

    Laura Gaskill/Houzz
    Aug 1, 2016 | 9:00 am
    Houzz rustic beach house
    The key to make your in-town rustic home look its best is to find a balanced approach.
    Photo courtesy of Domain Design Architects, Houzz

    From log cabins and renovated barns to new builds with loads of country charm, rustic style draws its inspiration from the woods and lakes of the great outdoors. Here are some tips to make the most of a rustic home’s natural good looks with design ideas for porches, paint colors, pathways, and more.

    Rustic color and texture. Pull your color palette inspiration from the countryside scenery: smooth logs, rough stone, weathered wood, a pop of barn red or pine green. Natural materials should be the star of the show, so choose a clear finish for exterior woodwork and always choose the real deal (wood, stone) when possible over a synthetic alternative.

    A porch for sitting. No rustic home worth its salt should be without a porch, and the bigger, the better. An open, wraparound porch is ideal, as it provides ample outdoor living space and doesn’t block any views. Complete the picture with a pair (or two) of chunky wooden rockers.

    Complete Your Rustic Porch With Rocking Chairs

    Get the details right. Choose a handsome door (either left natural or painted to match the trim) with hefty hardware, and a mailbox and house numbers in a matching medium-to-dark metal with a matte or weathered finish. Rustic porch lanterns and a few simple pots or bark-covered planters of flowers are all you need to pull the entry together.

    How rustic can you go? When choosing the details, take a cue from the rest of your home’s architecture: If it’s a log home, weathered wood cabin, or stone structure, you can go with very rough, rustic hardware and accessories. If your rustic home is shingled, choose more classic pieces with a matte or weathered finish.

    Chat With a Local Exterior Pro About Rustic Design

    Natural plantings. A rustic home is not the place for fussy plantings. Think native, natural, and slightly wild. Check out a local nursery or plant sale that features local plants to find varieties that will thrive in your climate, and plant beds to attract bees, birds, and butterflies. Curved planting beds filled with flowers, rocks, and natural mulch provide a welcome softness to a rustic structure.

    Winding paths. As with planting beds, when it comes to walkways, choose curved over straight. Natural stone with irregular shapes look right at home with a rustic house.

    Rustic fencing. A picket fence would look out of place in front of a rustic home. Instead, enhance the natural character of your home with a “wattle” or woven twig fence, a split-rail fence, or any other rustic wooden fence. Extra credit for including wood with the bark still attached.

    Bringing rustic into town. New rustic-style homes are being built in towns and suburbs all the time. The key to make your in-town rustic home look its best is to find a balanced approach — it is possible to overdose on willow branch furniture and rusted wheelbarrows! Combine natural elements like a stone path, window box, and weather vane with crisp and clean elements such as a paved driveway and neat grass.

    12 Rustic Touches That Add Warmth to a Kitchen

    A place to unwind. Most of all, when you spy your rustic home from across the street, you should immediately think, now that looks relaxing. A good way to mark your home as an R&R hot spot is with an icon of relaxation: Hang up a hammock, install a porch swing, or set out a rocker or Adirondack chair.

    This Texas cabin's porch is ideal.

    Houzz rustic Texas cabin
    Photo courtesy of Trestlewood, Houzz
    This Texas cabin's porch is ideal.
    houzztrends
    news/home-design

    a walk to remember

    Walking tours offer insights into historic Houston neighborhoods

    Emily Cotton
    May 22, 2026 | 10:30 am
    Preservation Houston Avondale home walking tour
    Photo by Emily Cotton
    Some stops on the tour have helpful QR codes for those who enjoy a deep dive into history.

    A lot has happened since the Allen brothers founded Houston in 1836, and there is no one who loves telling her story more than the folks at Preservation Houston. Their perpetually-sold-out architecture walks delve into the city’s oldest and most interesting neighborhoods and landmarks, giving participants lessons in history, architecture, culture, and even highlighting a scandal or two.

    “Preservation Houston has been offering walking tours since 1979. The tours were one of the first programs we launched, because we’ve always believed that it is important to give Houstonians a way to learn more about and connect with the history and architecture around them,” Jim Parsons, director of programming and communications, tells CultureMap. “When we understand the city’s past, we appreciate how important it is to remember it.”

    Recently, this author attended a tour of Avondale, one of the city’s oldest residential neighborhoods. While we won’t be giving away too much from this highly-recommended tour, one neat fact is that one of Avondale’s original residential east-west streets, Hathaway Avenue, is what Houstonians now know as the very commercial Westheimer. In the 1870s and 1880s, most of lower Midtown was the Texas State Fairgrounds (it moved to Dallas in 1879) and ballpark — who knew?!

    Tour sizes tend to vary, depending on the location and terrain, but they stay fairly quaint. The Avondale tour had approximately a dozen people and one very adorable longhaired dachshund named Alfie, which made a perfect little party. Questions are encouraged, which helps with any initial awkwardness.

    “Come as strangers, leave as friends,” is most decidedly applicable here. Several stops along the tour — 29 stops in total — are recipients of Preservation Houston’s esteemed Good Brick Awards, including The Marlene Inn, which readily hosted half of the tour group for impromptu, post-walk refreshments. “Leave as friends,” remember!

    It’s important to note that these are all exterior architecture tours — there is no interior access to any of the homes or buildings. It’s best to think of the architecture walks as just that, a walk through a neighborhood. Only, on these particular walks there, it’s led by someone who knows just about everything there is to know about the neighborhood and points out fun and interesting things that people may not usually notice on their own — like remaining hitching posts outside some of the homes. Many of the stops are clustered together — think two or more neighboring houses and one across the street. So, while 29 stops may seem like a lot, it’s a very relaxed walk that covers five short blocks.

    “What I like most about the walking tours is getting to tell the stories behind the neighborhoods — how architectural styles developed and adapted to Houston, who the people were who built the houses and buildings we talk about,” says Parsons. “We focus on history and architecture, but we also add in social context and some offbeat stories to keep things engaging. Our docents are all great storytellers, so they do a fantastic job of interpreting a lot of information and making it accessible.”

    From June to September, architecture walks move to the much more summer-appropriate time of 6 pm. Otherwise, they are usually at 2 pm (save, one or two), and no tours are offered in December. The tours often sell out, so buying tickets early is highly recommended.

    If architecture and Houston history is something of a continuous interest, get on board with a Preservation Houston membership. The benefits are fantastic, and it’s a great way to meet likeminded folks.

    “Annual memberships in Preservation Houston start at $60 for individuals and $100 for couples,” explains Parsons. “All our memberships include free or discounted admission to PH events, including walking tours, as well as news and updates on preservation-related issues and invitations to members-only events (which are almost always in interesting historic places!). One of the biggest benefits of membership, though, is joining a community of people who love Houston.”

    Join an upcoming tour:

    • Saturday, May 23, 10 am: Glenwood Cemetery Part I: Houston Before Oil
    • Sunday, June 14, 6 pm: Market Square
    • Sunday, July 12, 6 pm: Rice University

    General tickets $15; PH members & student tickets $10; children 11 & under may attend for free.

    Private tours are also available for groups of almost any size — just ask!

    Preservation Houston Avondale home walking tour

    Photo by Emily Cotton

    Some stops on the tour have helpful QR codes for those who enjoy a deep dive into history.

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