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Tulsa Foundation for Architecture Store

Items sold by the Tulsa Foundation for Architecture allow us to further our mission of education and provide additional income to the organization. Items can currently be purchased through TFA by contacting Lee Anne Zeigler at 918.583.5550 or via e-mail.


Calendar, Note Cards, and DecoGuide



TFA Calendar 2009 "Eastern Oklahoma's Best Buildings"
$24.95 + $5.00 s/h ($1.50 s/h for each additional);

Select item: Quantity: TFA Calendar 2009 - "Eastern Oklahoma's Best Buildings"

The Eastern Oklahoma's Best Buildings calendar was designed to commemorate two significant events in Tulsa's arts and design community; the American institute of Architects' 150th anniversary in 2007 and the National Preservation Conference hosted in Tulsa in 2008. AIA Eastern Oklahoma, Tulsa Foundation for Architecture, and Arts & Humanities Council of Tulsa, developed an online survey voted upon by the public that identified Eastern Oklahoma's Best Buildings.

Experience the majesty of these historic buildings throughout the year with this magnificent calendar!


TFA archives inspired note cards
$9.95 + $5.00 s/h ($1.50 s/h each additional);

Select item: Quantity: Series One: Tulsa Warehouse Market
Select item: Quantity: Series Two: Tulsa Medical Arts Building

Inspired from the TFA archives these note cards combine nostalgia and history when you need to send that special note. Make the perfect statement while supporting the TFA with these classic note cards.

Shrink-wrapped packages of 8 cards & envelopes (2 each of 4 designs) with each series above.


Tulsa's Art DecoGuide™
$4.95 + $1.00 s/h ($.50 s/h each additional) (Discounts on quantities of 50 or more);

Select item: Quantity: Tulsa's Art DecoGuide™

Deco guide - This handy, laminated DecoGuide™ offers the latest information to introduce you to Tulsa’s Art Deco treasures.




Books



Tulsa Art Deco by Carol Newton Gambino and David Halpern
$44.95 + $10.00 s/h ($5.00 s/h each additional);

Select item: Quantity: Tulsa Art Deco

Tulsa, Oklahoma, Oil Capital of the World, came into its mineral inheritance in its youth, just as Art Deco came onto the scene, and the style and the city evolved together for nearly half a century. This book traces the current of Art Deco that flows through the city's built history. The present collaborates with the past in this volume. No lover of Tulsa, Art Deco, or of architecture will want to be without it.


One Hundred More Historic Tulsa Homes by John Brooks Walton
$29.95 + $10.00 s/h ($5.00 s/h each additional);

Select item: Quantity: One Hundred More Historic Tulsa Homes

With his trained architect's eye, John Walton sees a new spirit arising from the old in the city he loves so well. From the vantage point of the twenty-first century, Walton revisits the houses and stories of their owners who built homes as part of what Walton calls "Tulsa Beautiful."


Many More Historic Tulsa Homes by John Brooks Walton
$29.95 + $10.00 s/h ($5.00 s/h each additional);

Select item: Quantity: Many More Historic Tulsa Homes

In this, his third book on Tulsa's historic homes, architect and historian John Brooks Walton serves as a guide and companion on "Pleasant and leisurely rambles around our Tulsa Town." Some highlights include a portfolio of "Lost Tulsa" homes, sections on four Tulsa businesses, the families that founded them, and their mansions-Bama Pie, Oklahoma Tire & Supply, the Tulsa Tribune, and the Tulsa World, a section on Tulsa's Art Deco, and Walton's insight into the lives of the architects whose designs he celebrates.


The Architecture of John Duncan Forsyth by John Brooks Walton
$29.95 + $10 s/h ($5.00 s/h each additional);

Select item: Quantity: The Architecture of John Duncan Forsyth

John Duncan Forsyth arrived in the United States in 1908 from Edinburgh, Scotland, and worked for various architectural firms in New York City. In 1918, Forsyth was sent to Shanghai, China to supervise the construction of "Yale in China" sponsored by Yale University. In 1921, he returned to the United States and became associated with Tulsa architect John McDonnell. In 1925, Forsyth received the commission to design the Marland Mansion in Ponca City. Completed in 1928, Forsyth returned to Tulsa and during the next decade would design many fine homes and mansions in Tulsa. After working for the United States Navy SeaBees during World War II, he re-established his flourishing architecture firm in Tulsa until his death in 1963.


The Architecture of Charles Stevens Dilbeck by John Brooks Walton
$29.95 + $10.00 ($5.00 s/h each additional);

Select item: Quantity: The Architecture of Charles Stevens Dilbeck

From a very early age, Charles Stevens Dilbeck knew he wanted to be an architect. In his early teens, he began working for local Tulsa lumberyards designing and revising house plans. With only two years of formal study in architecture at Oklahoma State University, Dilbeck opened his architectural practice in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He designed hundreds of homes in the Tulsa area, including modest "builder's spec" houses and grand and beautiful custom homes. Charles Stevens Dilbeck relocated to Dallas, Texas in 1933. For the next twenty-five-plus-years, he created many wonderful houses in the Dallas area, each saying, "I am a Dilbeck house".




Posters



Oklahoma Natural Gas building
$19.95 + $5.00 s/h ($2.00 s/h each additional);

Select item: Quantity: Oklahoma Natural Gas building

Noble Drilling Building - Created by Tulsa artist Glenn Godsey in 1993. This poster of the iconic ONG Building measures 18.5 inches x 17 inches and is a print of the original watercolor.


Philtower building
$19.95 + $5.00 s/h ($2.00 s/h each additional);

Select item: Quantity: Philtower building

Philtower Buidling - Oil and gas industry tycoon Waite Phillips built the Philtower in 1928. Its colorful tile roof has been a prominent fixture on the Tulsa skyline and it enjoys new life as the Philtower Lofts, a luxury downtown residence. This poster measures 18 inches x 30 inches.


Tulsa Art Deco
$19.95 + $5.00 s/h ($2.00 s/h each additional);

Select item: Quantity: Tulsa Art Deco

Art Deco Alive in Tulsa, Oklahoma - Photographer David Halpern created this poster to commemorate the 6th World Art Deco Congress held in Tulsa in April 2001. Twenty images showcase Art Deco buildings, details, and stained glass images shown in this special 24 inch x 36 inch poster.


NOTE: We can ship your order anywhere in one or two days in the United States using US Postal Service Priority Mail.
Oklahoma sales tax will be applied to all Oklahoma residents.