Archive for April, 2009

Petaluma Antique Faire: Looki What I Got!

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Birdhouse - Petaluma Antique Faire: Looki What I Got!

The Petaluma Antique Faire seems like such along time ago. I had such a great time. We started the day off with a pancake breakfast hosted by the Mason’s. All proceeds will go towards putting on future antique shows. Pancakes, eggs, sausage, juice and coffee! And in a beautiful building. What a way to start the day. There was so much to see. We walked up and down the main strip searching for treasures.

Now, I had a list of what I was looking for — a list of three things, green milk glass, hand railings used to go up stairways and iron chaise loungers. There were a few milk glass pieces but nothing that I had to have. The lounges and the railings were a total bust, but I did find the sweetest birdhouse. I have it on my front porch. I love it there. Now, if my 3 cats wouldn’t “hang-out” on the chairs, I might get to see a bird!

I’ll have an update on my curb appeal enhancement coming in the next few days. So there will be more photos of the porch and the rest of my front yard.

Desiree - lookiloos.com

Fabulous Beach House for Your Next Staycation

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Fabulous Beach House for Your Next Staycation

The downturn of the economy has a lot of people re-thinking, well just about everything. While the luxury vacation is being put on hold, staycations are gaining in popularity. This week we’re giving you a peek at a beach house rental that was featured on the 2005 Santa Cruz Architect’s Tour.

Bedroom - Fabulous Beach House for Your Next Staycation

This home has 4 bedrooms and 3 full baths. Entering on the ground floor you will find a large family room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms and a full bath. Upstairs has a great room, another kitchen, dining room, 2 bedrooms and 2 full baths. The balcony off the great room and dining area has the most amazing white water views. The amenities are abundant.

  • Outdoor Fire-Pit
  • Outdoor Shower for surfers
  • Large Gas Grill
  • Hot Tub
  • Wireless Internet
  • 2 Fireplaces
  • TV/DVD in every bedroom
  • Large Library of book, board games, puzzles and poker chips
  • Crib Available
  • Handicap Accessible

Fire Pit - Fabulous Beach House for Your Next Staycation

And one of the best amenities is the location — just steps to the West Cliff ocean-edge promenade. Imagine strolling down to the pier or The Boardwalk with the ocean breeze bringing you the all important negative ions!

To rent this fabulous beach house check out rates and availability here.

Warning: Sunscreen Advised

Desiree - lookiloos.com

Related stories:
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Manderley Revisited in La Selva Beach

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Bathroom Remodel: Aging in Place

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

Bathroom Remodel: Aging in Place

Jane Iki loves her home in Palo Alto and she wants to stay there as long as she can. “I like to call it aging in place,” said Jane. The problem was her bathroom. It wasn’t exactly friendly to someone wanting to stay in her home as long as possible. So, Jane called Case Handyman and Remodeling . Mike Brennan was the designer/planner on the project.

Vanity - Bathroom Remodel: Aging in Place

“This isn’t your Grandmother’s bathroom,” Brennan said. The design has an Asian flair and it functions with ease. The faucets from Grohe are sleeker.

“I can turn them on with one finger,” Jane demonstrated. “Look how easy it is.”

The drawers on the cabinet are self-closing. The low-profile shower is easier to step in and out of and the grab bars don’t look like the ones you find in medical facilities. The bathroom door was switched to a pocket door that allows a little more space with out a traditional door jam. It also resembles a Shoji screen, with a frosted glass center. The bathroom’s layout was changed to make for better use of the space and the project took a total of six months to complete.

“Everyone I show says ‘Wow!’” Iki said. “This turned out so well. I had Case Construction do my other bath”. Jane’s second bath is well under way.

Desiree - lookiloos.com

Jane’s Resource List:
Wall tile:  Bambu Blanco 8X13
Floor tile:  Marmi Cemento Manhaton 12×12
Deco tile:  Mosaico Acero 1×1
Stainless Steel edging:  Pro-Mate 2 Inox 1/2×96
All from Porcelanosa

Paint color: Wild Oats from Benjamin Moore

Vanity/sink/countertop: Red Oak – Fairmont
Plumbing fixtures: Grohe
Grab bars / towel ring / tissue holder: Ginger
Toilet: Toto
All from Splashworks

Light fixture: Titanium-Access Lighting
From Galaxy Lighting

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Guadalupe Gardens: A Rose for Mom

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Purple Rose - Guadalupe Gardens: A Rose for Mom

It’s that time of year…NO not taxes! (that was earlier this month and if you forgot that, you’ve got bigger relative problems than I can help with). Mother’s Day. What to do, what to do? She only spent 29 and a half hours in labor with you. How do you thank her? Tell her, show her that you appreciate all she’s done, and let’s not forget those teenage years.

The San Jose Heritage Rose Garden has the perfect solution, adopt a rose. Not only will your Mom get a rose in her honor (including a plaque), she will get a wonderful gift package. Peach Rose - Guadalupe Gardens: A Rose for Mom This ensemble includes potpourri made from Heritage Rose Garden rose petals, a chocolate truffle from Schurra’s Fine Confections, and a handmade bar of bee’s wax soap from the Sacred Bee, all in a decorative gift box. If you order your rose before May 1st, a plaque will be up in front of your rose choice, with her name and a message from you on Mother’s Day. You can surprise her with a picnic and a visit to the Heritage Gardens to view the special rose you picked out just for her. But, if you miss the May 1st deadline, don’t fret, you can still get a rose for Mom and make arrangements to visit the park at a later date.

Desiree - lookiloos.com

Try these sweet smelling stories:
Gardening on a Budget
McBrides Nursery in Tahoe City
Plalaenopsis, Cattleya, Onicidium-Oh My

Big Sur Nepenthe – 60th Birthday and Readers Want more Photos!

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Big Sur Nepenthe - 60th Birthday and Readers Want more Photos!

Lookiloos received so much reaction to our story about the 60th anniversary of Big Sur’s Nepenthe restaurant that we decided to give you more! More photos that is. If you haven’t heard of Nepenthe, it’s a fabulous example of mid-century modern architecture in 1949, perched on the cliffs of California’s coast. Lookiloos also took readers to the lesser known, but fascinating log cabin just above the restaurant — a cabin that Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth bought for a love nest away from Hollywood in 1944, a cabin that is still home to the granchildren of the couple who founded Nepenthe in 1949.

So, here, please enjoy a whole slideshow of photos from Nepenthe as well as more shots of the log cabin inside and out. And if you ever find yourself heading down Highway One, make sure to stop. It’s just south of Ventana Inn and the Post Ranch. (On the coast side, of course.)

Nepenthe
48510 Highway #1
Big Sur, California 93920
(831) 667-2345

(Historic photos are courtesy of Nepenthe. Cabin photos by Julia Prodis Sulek for www.lookiloos.com.)

Julia - lookiloos.com

Big Sur’s Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

For 60 years at Big Sur’s famed Nepenthe restaurant, cameras have been clicking away on the obvious – the cliffside view of the dramatic Pacific coastline, the iconic, mid-century restaurant of glass and wood, the grand terrace where Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton filmed the 1965 classic, “The Sandpiper.”

But just above the terrace is a humble, but intriguing dwelling hiding in plain sight from guests awed by the captivating view.

Log Cabin 1930 - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

Behind a brick facade is a structure of logs and adobe cement that Hollywood legend Orson Welles and his wife Rita Hayworth bought on a romantic whim in 1944.

This weekend, as Nepenthe celebrates the 60th anniversary of the restaurant’s opening, we turn our lens toward this tiny and surprisingly vibrant place that is still home to members of the same fascinating family that founded Nepenthe and run it today.

The Bohemian aura of Nepenthe, the beatniks, the belly dancing, the poetry, the parties began in this cabin. In those days, the cabin was the first stop for guests.

“The log cabin was the hub of everything that went on,” says Romney “Nani” Steele, who grew up in the cabin with her grandparents and cousins in the 1960s. “The restaurant was built in such a way, it was somewhat added to the cabin,’’ she says. “My grandmother created a whole life behind the restaurant.”

Bill Lolly and Kids - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

Her grandparents, Bill and Lolly Fassett, moved into the three-room cabin in 1947 with their five children and within two years had built Nepenthe, naming it for the Greek word meaning “no sorrow.”

The cabin and 12 acres had cost them $12,000 after Welles and Hayworth divorced and sold them the property. The Hollywood couple had planned the 1925 cabin as a getaway when they purchased it from a hiking group. The stars even measured for curtains, but never returned.

Renting the cabin at the time was author Henry Miller, who had already written the scandalous “Tropic of Cancer.” He moved out when the Fassetts bought the cabin, but became lifelong friends with Bill Fassett, a gregarious storyteller who ran a magazine in Carmel. Lolly Fassett was a cultured, artistic woman in her own right, having lived her teen years in Europe as the traveling companion of her grandmother, artist Jane Gallatin Powers, who was part of the original Carmel art scene.

Holly and Erin - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

The Fassetts were great entertainers and envisioned Nepenthe even though Highway One had been open only a decade and traffic through the area was light. Lolly, influenced by the great piazzas of Capri, insisted that architect Rowan Maiden – a disciple of Frank Lloyd Wright – design a great terrace for dancing and a restaurant that opened to the air. It was Lolly who made the adobe bricks and laid them for the giant round fireplace on the terrace. When Nepenthe opened April 24, 1949, about 500 people attended the grand opening. Photographs were shot for architectural magazines.

The guests had traveled 30 miles of winding road from Carmel and beyond. Life in Big Sur, then, as now, was dictated by the ebb and flow of nature. In the winters, the roads washed out and in summers, wildfires whipped through.

“It created tension and upheaval and a dynamic quality of people,” says Kirk Gafill, a Fassett grandson, who grew up in the cabin and runs Nepenthe with his mother, Holly Fassett.

From artists to hippies, his grandmother welcomed them into her living room.

Filming On Terrace - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

“When we were growing up, nightly 10, 15, 20 people were in the living room visiting with her,” says Steele, whose book “My Nepenthe” will be published this fall (www.mynepenthebook.com). “People came in and napped there.” Some of those wayfarers fell in love with the Fassett daughters, married them, had children, then continued on their journeys. Four of those children spent part of their childhood living in the cabin.

“Our absolutely favorite thing to do was to lie on my grandmother’s long row of beds and look out the window with our hands perched under our chins,” says Steele, 43. “People would get up and dance. Someone would be in the corner reading poetry or playing music. I can remember the sun coming through the window and watching for hours what was going on.”

Every once in a while, her grandmother would say, “Go dance!” “She would wrap scarves around my waist and we’d whirl around,” Steele says. “We’d do that for guests and we would come back up the stairs. She always had plenty of costumes, petticoats, Flamenco costumes, just amazing stuff.”

Piggyback 1968 - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

Erin Gafill, 45, Steele’s cousin who is an artist, says that “the line between fantasy and reality was totally blurred. There was so much magic and glamour around here.” She has a foggy memory of lying on her back as a toddler on the terrace, looking up at the sky between the branches of the old oak tree.

“This man appeared and scooped me up. I couldn’t stop crying,” Gafill recalls. “Years later my mom told me this was Richard Burton, and that Liz Taylor took me from his arms and handed me to my mom, who was sitting on the bleachers in shock at the whole thing.”

It was 1964 and the movie stars were filming “The Sandpiper” on the terrace. Its theme song, “The Shadow of Your Smile” became a classic. When the movie about an artist’s illicit affair with a schoolmaster premiered in 1965, Nepenthe was transformed. The Fassetts opened Nepenthe from seasonally to year-round.

After Lolly died in 1986, Gafill returned to the cabin, raised two children, and still lives there her husband.

Picture Frames - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

“It seemed like an impossible place to live,” she says, recalling her decision to make the move. The cabin “was so psychologically important to us. I had to make sure the change was OK with everybody.”

She’s done her best to preserve the spirit of the cabin. It still has three main rooms, including the kitchen and big stone fireplace. An extra bedroom was added along the way. Behind the door of the log cabin’s kitchen is the industrial prep kitchen for the restaurant. When the adobe cement began to chip away on the side of the cabin facing the terrace, a brick facade was overlaid to protect it from the wind and fog. Inside, she covered the cabin’s redwood walls with her great-great grandmother’s paintings. Family and restaurant crew took them to safety when the wildfires came dangerously close to Nepenthe last summer, closing the restaurant for three weeks.

Outdoor Dining - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

As the extended family gathers this weekend for the anniversary, the cabin will beckon them in. And as they planned all along, there will be dancing on the terrace.

Julia - lookiloos.com

(Top black and white photograph of Nepenthe taken in1950 by Morley Baer, ©2009 by the Morley Baer Photography Trust, Santa Fe; Lee Harbick Collection, California History Room, Monterey Public Library. Color photo in cabin with Erin Gafill on right and her mother, Holly, by Tom Birmingham.)

Related stories:
Artist Getaway on Big Sur Coast
California Daily Art: Landscape Paintings
Carmel Valley Cabin
Artist in Residence

Update:
Lookiloos featured in the San Jose Mercury News
This post is featured in the San Jose Mercury News Home and Garden section here.

Update 2:

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Petaluma Antique Faire is HERE!

Friday, April 24th, 2009
Petaluma Antique Faire is HERE!

Antique and collectible seekers up and down the peninsula are waiting with baited breath for the Petaluma Antique Fair. Come out to browse and shop the 23rd Annual Petaluma Spring Antique Faire on Sunday April 26th 2009, 8 am to 4 pm. Historic Downtown Petaluma will transform itself into an antique marketplace. Wandering through the over 180 dealers you will find everything from estate jewelry, linens, art and every collectible under the sun. I plan on attending and I’m bringing the big car. I’d hate to drive all the way up there and not be able to bring my treasure (s) home. I hoping to find some old camera’s, milk glass(green) and old hand railings from staircases. The weather should be a perfectly mild day and I think a salad and a glass of wine at little outdoor bistro sounds great. I’ll not only let you know what I come home with but what my Mom manages to find as well. These escapades are starting to get addictive!

Desiree - lookiloos.com

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White Elephant Sale for Oakland Museum
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Gardening on a Budget

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Gardening on a Budget

Terrie Rogers has transformed her South San Jose yard into kaleidoscope of color and she’s doing it on a budget. This isn’t a new thing either, she’s been gardening on a dime for years. She and her husband Rich purchased their third home 6 years ago and there are reminders of the former addresses all over her yard. From bulbs and tubers to plants and trees, she has dug them up and moved them from yard to yard.

SequoiaTree - Gardening on a Budget

“We moved the 2 sequoia trees. We couldn’t leave them,” she said. And really how could you, if you’ve named them after family members. “We named the trees after my in-laws, Norene and Roland. They told us to get away for the weekend and they’d take care of Kristin, our daughter. We went to Muir Woods and purchased those saplings in the gift shop.”

Terrie has kept her costs down by harvesting seeds from her current plants for next year. She gets requests from friends who visit. A particular flower might jump out at them and before they leave she has a packet of seeds for them. Of course these seeds are neatly wrapped in the tissue paper she saved from last years Christmas gifts.

Being thrifty in the garden and the garden shops is Terrie’s forte. The landscaping lights came from a contractor who had a client that changed their mind at the last minute. 50% off was the cost of the lights. Home Depot has a $.99 table. These plants might need a bit more care, but you couldn’t tell the difference in Terrie’s yard. She had recently planted a strawberry pot and the total cost was under 5 dollars. She has a knack for bargain hunting in the garden.

This past February she had 600 tulips in bloom. 600! “I was able to give a way more than 20 bouquets of 10 or 12 tulips,” Terrie said.

You can see how happy sharing her garden makes her. A few of her neighbors have hired her to help with plantings and yard care. That’s a great compliment!

Seedlings - Gardening on a Budget

Terrie said she spends about “6 hours” per week in her garden, but her husband Rich disagrees he says it’s more like “10″. It must be hard to keep track of the time when you enjoy what you are doing. In fact, when her husband’s golf buddy comes to pick him up, he always says “You’re out of control”.

Desiree - lookiloos.com

Take a Peek at these:
Saratoga Gem–Hakone Gardens
Sonoma’s Opia: An Asian Inspired Home and Garden Shop
Le Jardinet Home and Garden in Danville

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Tips for Hanging Art by Artist Sonya Paz

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Tips for Hanging Art by Artist Sonya Paz

Who better to give tips on hanging precious art in a home than an artist?  Lookiloos had the opportunity to chat with artist Sonya Paz, who shared her approach to displaying art pieces.

While she offers tips, she did emphasize that each art piece is different, so it requires different treatment – lighting, placement and how you group or not group it with other pieces.  There are no rules that cover all type of wall art, so feel free to be creative.

Sonya’s Tips:

Home Gallery - Tips for Hanging Art by Artist Sonya Paz

1.) Look at your wall space.  How tall, wide or small is it?  Do you want to fill the entire wall or just a portion?  Your arrangement can be as simple as one large print to fill the entire wall or having multiple sizes mixed together spreading across your space.  Consider what will be around the painting after it is hung – a tv, another piece of art, a window.  How will this enhance or detract from the art itself?  Does a red wall bring out the red in your painting or make it look horrible?

2.) Have tall walls?  Start at eye level and then move up, emphasizing the height of your walls.  No one wants to have to crane their necks to look at your favorite prints.

3.) Themes:  Black and white, colorful, muted pastels, all small prints, photos featuring cars or uniform colored frames – these are just some themes that can help guide your arrangement.  You can also carry a theme throughout a home or just in one room.

Cars - Tips for Hanging Art by Artist Sonya Paz

4.) Home “gallery systems” help you change art quickly and hang art without putting holes in your walls.  These systems make it easier to add or remove paintings to your collection as needed.

5.) Good lighting makes a huge difference!  It can be as sophisticated as lighting attached to each piece, placing your painting in a room that gets a lot of sun or making sure a lamp illuminates your piece just right from a table close by.

6.) The art should be the primary focus.  A frame should not take away from the piece itself.  When it comes to framing and matting – less is more!

Antlers - Tips for Hanging Art by Artist Sonya Paz

7.) Arrangements do not have to be permanent.  They should be changed and moved occasionally.  A work of art can take on a new look when paired with something different or when it is placed in a different spot in your home.

Sheila - lookiloos.com

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Plantscapes – A Green Design Vision from Vietnam to San Jose

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Plantscapes - A Green Design Vision from Vietnam to San Jose

Talk about vision. When Thai Pham, a 29-year-old landscape designer, set eyes on the space that would become the showroom for his living, growing plantscapes, the place couldn’t be darker. It had been a photographer’s studio, for crying out loud — as in dark room.

Plantscapes - A Green Design Vision from Vietnam to San Jose But this Vietnam native and UC Berkeley graduate who designed the landscape for the Buddhist Temple on McLaughlin Avenue only saw possibilities. And with his family helping, he put in skylights and removed walls and earlier this month opened Green Design on The Alameda in San Jose. Walk in and you are greeted by the trunk of a great Oak tree dripping with living plants. Listen to the fountains and three macaws. Tropical plants are everywhere.

Pham’s business is a showcase for his landscape design business, giving his clients an idea of what he is capable of. But he also has a huge collection of sandblasted pottery for sale from his hometown in Central Vietnam, as well as Buddhas and other icons. Photos of Douglas Campbell and prints from Paul Sakamoto are also for sale. A floral designer is also on staff to create beautiful bouquets and centerpieces.

Vases - Plantscapes - A Green Design Vision from Vietnam to San Jose “Check back often,” Pham said, “You’ll see a lot of surprises.”

Green Design is located on The Alameda in San Jose at Martin Avenue.

Julia - lookiloos.com

Green Design Indoor Outdoor Plantscape
1341 The Alameda
San Jose, CA 95126
(408) 971-4089

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Leku Eder: A Beautiful Place in Danville for Asian Decor
Sonoma’s Opia: An Asian Inspired Home and Garden Shop
Saratoga Gem– Hakone Gardens
Carmel Valley’s Organic Garden Art