I'm marking this one because it has a "swoopy" roof flare (as we do) and uses tapered columns with stone bases. But I really don't like the fact that the entryway is darkened. I really want to avoid our new overhang being so large that it obscures the front door. That doesn't feel welcoming to me.
While this is obviously part of the same property as the two previous images, I can't distinguish if this is a guest house or a separate wing of the house above. There is a much more obvious Shingle style influences here in this view though, resulting in a wonderful mixing of styles. If you look back through history, a careful blending of details is how a lot of new styles came into existence in the first place. The Tudor Revival movement in America is a great example of this: despite its name, very little of the style is derived from the actual Tudor period of England.