[2] She also published a compilation of plans for small houses by notable architects of the day.
[1] When in 1934 the magazine was sold and its editorial offices transferred to New York City, Power resigned because she did not choose to leave Boston.
[1] Her book The Smaller American Home (1927) is a compilation of 55 designs by notable architects of the 1910s and 1920s, with a focus on built-in features.
[4] Unlike some critics of the day who liked to position historicist and modernist architecture as antithetical to each other, Power stressed the features the two approaches shared, such as simple rectilinear plans and absence of ornamentation.
This group included her life partner, architect Eleanor Raymond (1887–1989), whom she had previously met through a suffragist organization.