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Village Squire, 1975-07, Page 17Just a cosy country cottage full of arts and crafts BY KEITH ROULSTON In the old days, the summer kitchen on our farm was a place where we stored the things we didn't use anymore but we just didn't have the heart to throw out. The old woodshed was an even more unglamorous setting for "junk". One wouldn't consider the articles on display in the old summer kitchen of Stonecroft or in the old woodshed behind it as junk by any means. Orme and Dorene Kilburn put a lot of love into the articles in those areas. They turned the old summer kitchen and woodshed of their 120 -year old stone cottage near St. Paul's, six miles southwest of Stratford into a studio for art, crafts and antiques last year and now the studio is open for the second season. Those who like to "discover" interesting little shops will have fun discovering this one. You drive through a good deal of countryside before you come to the little cottage up a laneway off a concession just off Perth County road 17. The Stonecroft is unique in that nearly everything in it is the product of the hands of the two owners. Yet the variety is impressive. Orme is responsible for the painting and sculpture in the shop. He's a teacher of art and other subjects to elementary school pupils and admits he'd like to be able to devote full-time to art and still be able to make a living. He gave it a try several years ago when he took a year off teaching to paint professionally. His large paintings dominate the shop, particularly a huge one depicting a girl passing a poster for the movie West Side Story and called Reach Out for Happiness. The paintings draw a good deal of attention, and admiration, Dorene says. Recently he has devoted more and more of Dorene Kilburn works away at crafts while visitors browze in her shop. his time to a new interest, sculpture. He does his sculpting in wood, and the warm smooth lines of basswood and teak create interesting pieces in the shop. The sculpture grew out of his painting, oddly enough. He was working with the palate knife technique where the painting is virtually carved in the hard backing of the painting. He took the next step and began carving wood. Dorene meanwhile looks after many of the other beautiful items in the shop. She grew up in Toronto and received a diploma in commercial art from Western Tech in that city. She worked for some time in commercial art but found it too tough a life, particularly for a girl at the time, so she went on to a variety of other jobs. But she always kept her interest in things artistic. Unlike her husband, however, she hasn't touched painting for years. The two were married only five years ago after each had waited for several years to meet the kind of person who could share their interests in things artistic. They've shared more than things artistic though, like a lot of sweat and blood when they decided to buy and restore the old stone house that now provides both home and studio. They first discovered the house four years ago this summer when Orme was in Stratford taking a university credit course at the old Stratford Teacher's College (they lived in Port Burwell at the time). He'd taken a course in Canadian art and architecture and they became interested in driving through the countryside around Stratford and looking at the old farm houses. That's when they discovered the old house and saw the for sale sign out front. They bought it. But they had a problem: they were still living in Port Burwell. But then that was just as well. They had a lot to do in the house before they were ready to call it home. They began work at Christmas time of the first year and from February on came up every weekend. They gutted the inside of the house, right down to the stone They got rid of the giant octopus of a furnace which didn't throw any heat anyway. They insulated the walls. They worked for days, with the help of Dorene's father to level the sagging floor where it had dipped because someone cut a notch out of the main beam to accommodate the old furnace. They knocked down walls that made the little house look more like a maze. The next fall they moved in to live, but the fun wasn't over. The main part of the house was to be heated by electricity and that fall VILLAGE SQUIRE/JULY 1975, 15