All of these doors have recessed panels in a stile & rail door. The difference is that some have a "flat panel" and others have a "raised panel". Both can have different shapes of "sticking" around the panel.
The 5 panel door first shown has a raised panel with a round sticking of some kind. Its more Victorian that Craftsman. If it had 2, 4 or 6 raised panels it would be more Colonial.
A more appropriate choice would be a flat panel with some kind of sticking. The sticking can be a quarter round, ovolo, ogee or square (shaker) which is closer to the Craftsman style (what appears to be the absence of sticking is considered square sticking).
Reducing the number of panels would help too.
3 flat panels, square sticking
5 flat panels, quarter round or ovolo sticking
2 flat panels, square sticking
5 flat panels, square sticking
3 flat panels, ovolo sticking
4 flat panels, ovolo sticking
Using Craftsman style doors in a Craftsman style house is not necessarily being a purist; the use of lesser design elements to reinforce major design themes is one of the most effective principles of architectural design. People seem to intuitively understand this concept when buying clothing or furnishings but they often abandon it when designing their homes.
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Stained interior door and painted white trim
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