Wrighte, W. (1790). Grotesque architecture, or rural amusement: Consisting of plans, elevations, and sections, for huts, retreats, summer and winter hermitages, terminaries, Chinese, Gothic, and natural grottos, cascades, baths, mosques, Moresque pavilions, grotesque and rustic seats, green houses, &c. Many of which may be executed with flints, irregular stones, rude branches, and roots of trees. The whole containing twenty-eight new designs, with scales to each. To which is added, an explanation, with the method of executing them. By William Wrighte, architect (A new edition.). printed for I. and J. Taylor, at the Architectural Library, nearly opposite Great Turnstile, Holborn.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationWrighte, William. Grotesque Architecture, or Rural Amusement: Consisting of Plans, Elevations, and Sections, for Huts, Retreats, Summer and Winter Hermitages, Terminaries, Chinese, Gothic, and Natural Grottos, Cascades, Baths, Mosques, Moresque Pavilions, Grotesque and Rustic Seats, Green Houses, &c. Many of Which May Be Executed with Flints, Irregular Stones, Rude Branches, and Roots of Trees. The Whole Containing Twenty-eight New Designs, with Scales to Each. To Which Is Added, an Explanation, with the Method of Executing Them. By William Wrighte, Architect. A new edition. London: printed for I. and J. Taylor, at the Architectural Library, nearly opposite Great Turnstile, Holborn, 1790.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationWrighte, William. Grotesque Architecture, or Rural Amusement: Consisting of Plans, Elevations, and Sections, for Huts, Retreats, Summer and Winter Hermitages, Terminaries, Chinese, Gothic, and Natural Grottos, Cascades, Baths, Mosques, Moresque Pavilions, Grotesque and Rustic Seats, Green Houses, &c. Many of Which May Be Executed with Flints, Irregular Stones, Rude Branches, and Roots of Trees. The Whole Containing Twenty-eight New Designs, with Scales to Each. To Which Is Added, an Explanation, with the Method of Executing Them. By William Wrighte, Architect. A new edition. printed for I. and J. Taylor, at the Architectural Library, nearly opposite Great Turnstile, Holborn, 1790.