Archive for May, 2009

Hooked On Outdoor Fireplaces!

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

This week I'm totally hooked on outdoor fireplaces.  I really want one. I've been compiling  a list of all the features I'm looking for in my little backyard oasis. 

I want one that includes some seating around it like this one.

3068606444_169c36dfb5_o(2)

 Look at the good time they're all having!

3068606538_fbf3782749_o

Love the mantel on this one…LOVE IT!

Outdoor Fireplace

I like the stone work on these…

2900585303_85d3017c6e_o

3498489531_6766a0d76f_b

And, lastly I love the Spanish Tiles and that cobalt blue….

3499433556_5f813834c8_b

Which one is your fav! I'd love to hear.

Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

Dana and John Kouretas always loved the quaint charm of the two-bedroom home they bought in 1998, before they had children. It was on a big, pie-shaped lot in Willow Glen and just a block from the coffee houses and boutiques of Lincoln Avenue. So after having two children and plans for a third, they knew it was time to expand. They wanted to more than double its size, from 2,000 to 4,400 square feet. But maintain the quaint charm? That was a tall order.

Family Room - Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

With old-fashioned detailing in marble and wrought iron, eclectic furnishings and fixtures new and old, and lots of windows pulling in light and framing leafy views, the Kouretas family couldn’t be happier.

“It’s quite big and looks big on the outside, but inside, people are like, ‘oh, it feels more homey than you would think,’” Dana said. “People who had been in the old house said it feels like the old house, but everything is opened up.”

The couple had been clipping ideas from magazines for years before they hired architect Larry Kahle from Metropolis Architecture in Mountain View and Kathleen Monarch of Monarch Designs in San Jose. John acted as general contractor.

“I liked a lot of light, a lot of windows,” Dana said. “I wanted it to be traditional, but not stuffy traditional.”

Front Exterior - Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

She liked Spanish European and French styles, too. So how to blend it all together, so it’s worthy of hundreds of lookiloos traipsing through on the Willow Glen Homes Tour in early May?

And don’t forget, she wanted the house to feel cozy. With ceilings designed at 10 feet downstairs and nine feet upstairs, Kathleen Monarch knew she was in for a challenge. And the last thing she wanted was the house to feel so huge it echoes and so stark it’s cold. So what did she do?

“I never wanted it to look like a designer house,” Kathleen said. “The family is so warm and welcoming to everybody and this huge expanded family and friends, I wanted it to feel like that inside. To me the house looks like them.”

Kitchen Island - Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

But what does that mean when it gets down to the business of decor?

It means listening to the clients and pushing their boundaries a bit. Dana likes pastels, so Kathleen “tried to take that and take them out of the box a little further, make them go to a place where they’re a little nervous.”

With a crisp white backdrop in trims, doors, cabinets and baseboards, the duo decided on a rich brown for the study, a deep rust for the dining room, and yellows, pinks and greens elsewhere.

Master Bath - Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

“Everything had to pop off white,” Kathleen said. “Even the materials we selected had a lot of white in them, white Carrera marble, white Calcutta marble. The kitchen island I did in honed black granite. The white and black grounded everything.”

They also played with scale and textures.

In the living room, with the French style cast concrete mantel, a fluffy white rug softens the room. In the master bedroom, a custom-designed minty green mohair headboard contrasts with the sparkling mirrored dresser.

The white-on-white master bath, which combines five different tiles with various patterns, from brick to Versailles, is a favorite.

“It’s a combination of so many materials, but nothing is jarring. Nothing is shiny,” Kathleen said. With so much white, she added, “you can’t look like you went to Vegas. Everything is honed down.”

Pink Twin Bedroom - Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

Dana included her family antiques throughout the house, including her great-grandmother’s china hutch in the dining room and her grandmother’s twin beds that are now in her daughters’ room. She also has a favorite pair of Bergere chairs she picked up at a garage sale for $300, a fraction of what would be more than $2,000 new.

The house has become the center of the couple’s extended family, who often gather three-deep in the kitchen to prepare Greek meals. Their third child, a boy, was a toddler when they finished the project.

Modern Master Bedroom - Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

“Ever since we moved back in, it’s like, ‘let’s go to John and Dana’s house,’” Dana said. “And that’s what we like.”

(Photographs by Desiree Northend)

Julia - lookiloos.com

You might also enjoy these stories:
French Chateux with Modern Twist
A Decorator’s Daughter Loves Small House Style
Mission Revival Los Gatos Estate
Gentle Remodel on Spanish Bungalow
Small House Remodel Maintains Charm
Downsizing and Restyling: From French Country to Modern Neutral
Mid-Century Modern from California Ranch: A Town and Country Life

Here’s the complete slideshow:

California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Pool and Carport - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

Realtors are well-known for “expanding” the boundaries of popular neighborhoods like San Jose’s Willow Glen and Rose Garden. But the residents of the distinctive Hanchett Park neighborhood, a largely unknown enclave of period California Craftsmen, Italian Revivals and Prairie-style homes, are tired, quite frankly, of being referred to as “the lower Rose Garden.”

Sequoia Home - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

Hanchett Park’s graceful streetscape design, including European-like traffic roundabouts and original entrance pillars, was designed in 1907 by John McLaren who designed Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. The neighborhood is often referred to in a larger sense as the Shasta Hanchett neighborhood because Shasta Avenue is the main street that runs through it. But the historic name is Hanchett Residence Park and it is nestled between The Alameda and Park Avenue. Several of the Arts and Crafts homes in the neighborhood were once featured in American Bungalow Magazine.

Now, a grass roots group, calling itself the Hanchett Park Heritage Project, hopes to rebuild the historic gateway pillars with pergolas at key entrance points around the neighborhood, including Martin Avenue at The Alameda. They’re hosting their first home tour, featuring five historic houses, on May 30 to raise money for the project.

Tillman Pillars - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

“Hanchett Park is one of only two residential parks in San Jose. The other is Palm Haven and no one has ever heard of us,” said Hillary Savage, a neighborhood resident who is helping plan the home tour. Residential parks were some of the first “subdivisions” at the turn of the last century that were planned with utility poles running at the back of the lots, decorative lighting and landscaping to “retain a park-like atmosphere.”

One of the most enthusiastic supporters of the project and the neighborhood is Larry Camuso, who has restored his 1926 Italian Revival home into a stunning showplace and earned it a city historical designation. The house, which was originally built as a one-story home in 1908 then radically remodeled in 1926 with a second-story and Palladian windows, echoes the Hollywood glamour and style of its day.

Sequoia Foyer - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

And Camuso, with his partner Kirk Wentland, is getting it ready for the tour. Camuso, 49, is long a fan of the classic “Sunset Boulevard,” where the Hollywood mansion is a much a character as stars Gloria Swanson and William Holden.

“I discovered that movie in my 20s and thought that was what I was all about,” Camuso said. “That whole period of time, the style, design, art and decoration, it created a vision for me.” In fact, the look of the upstairs master suite, including the custom-made water spout in the bathroom, came right out of an Art Deco movie set book. Interior designer Paul Rokovich brought the vision to reality throughout the house.

“I’m stuck in the 1920s living in this house,” said Camuso, who is semi-retired from his antique and collector car parts business. (The house was built with a detached three-car garage, including a repair “pit” in one of the bays. “Sold!”)

Sequoia Home - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

Like many homeowners in the neighborhood, Camuso embarked on a historically-correct renovation. Though the house was in good condition when he bought it in 1991, he began five years later to restore its original footprint and fixtures. And he marshaled the memories of one of its original inhabitants, Lucretia Martin Schlueter, who was raised there until 1954.

“By way of old pictures that Lucretia supplied, I was able to put it back the way it was,” he said. Camuso threw an 80th birthday party for the house in 2006, and invited Lucretia, who is in her 90s and lives in Carmel, as the guest of honor.

“The house had great bones, but was never fully realized as far as its aesthetic values.” He removed a bathroom and closet off the main entry hall and returned the space to its original purpose — a rear hallway that separates the living room from the study. He also replaced the replacement windows — in other words, any flat glass that had been installed to fix broken windows over the years was replaced with vintage wavy glass that Camuso tracked down at Anderson C&M Used Building Material on Montgomery Street near downtown San Jose. He had nearly every one reglazed.

Shasta Home - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

“It’s like a shimmering show of wavy glass,” he said.

Along with Camuso’s home, several turn-of-the-century Craftsman bungalows will be on the tour, including one with original stone columns in front. Also on the tour is one of the first homes built in the subdivision, considered the model home of its day. The large, shingled house was designed by the well-known Wilson-McKenzie architecture firm, which designed many homes in Naglee Park near downtown.

Outside the downtown core of Victorians, “this was considered modern, in terms of 1908,” Savage said.

Yosemite Home - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

Preparation for the home tour has been a neighborhood preoccupation over the past two years, as several homeowners have hosted cocktail and garden parties to raise money among themselves for the event.

The city of San Jose’s Redevelopment Agency is helping with funding to build the first set of pillars at The Alameda and Martin that were removed in the 1960s, probably because of disrepair. But residents want to rebuild the pillars at other key entry points as well, including at Park and Tillman avenues, with an estimated cost of $40,000 each.

“We have to have a lot of home tours,” Savage said.

Tickets for the Saturday, May 30th tour, may be purchased for $25 the day of the tour at 1265 Sierra Avenue, or $21 in advance through hanchettpark.org.

Julia - lookiloos.com

(Story by Julia Prodis Sulek. Photos by Desiree Northend.)

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

Here’s the complete slideshow:

DIY Workshop: Hand Tied Bouquets, Blues and Zinfandel

Monday, May 18th, 2009

White Rose Bouquet - DIY Workshop: Hand Tied Bouquets, Blues and Zinfandel

Learn to make beautiful hand tied bouquets while being inspired by Blues music and sipping Zinfandel wines. Who is putting this mix together? Astrid Senior. She created this one day workshop in preparation for this summer’s entertaining season. The workshop is being held in a beautiful outdoor setting in Morgan Hill. The cost of the 6 hr. class is $60 and includes enough flowers to make two or three arrangements and a local organic lunch.

Workshop - DIY Workshop: Hand Tied Bouquets, Blues and Zinfandel

Astrid Senior is a professionally trained European floral designer and is the owner of The Floral Show. Her company designed floral arrangements for the Royal Family and has been featured in several magazines in England. The workshop is on May 31st from 10 am to 4 pm. To make your reservations visit The Floral Show or call 408-500-8982. See you there!

Photos courtesy of Astrid Senior.

Desiree - lookiloos.com

Related Stories:
Gardening on a Budget
Small House Renovation Maintains Charm
Campbell Farmer’s Market: Lookiloos out on the Town

Willow Glen Home Tourists Name Their Favorite Spaces

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

Was it the courtyard in the back with the fountain or fireplace? Maybe the wine cellar with the leather stools. Perhaps it was the glamorous 1930s-style master bedroom, or the original yellow tile in the Spanish bungalow. No matter what, everyone who attended the Willow Glen Home Tour in early May had something to talk about. Take a listen as lookiloos like us talk about their favorite spaces.

Watch the video:

Milfleur – Pleasanton: Historic Barn Converted to Home and Garden Shop

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

Milfleur - Pleasanton: Historic Barn Converted to Home and Garden Shop

Just off Pleasanton's Main Street is an old barn that, but for its historical legacy, would be long gone. And now it is the resting place of Milfleur, a delightful home and garden shop specializing in silk floral wreaths and wind chimes.

Wreath - Milfleur - Pleasanton: Historic Barn Converted to Home and Garden Shop

The barn is the oldest surviving structure in Pleasanton, dating back to 1852. It's that charming exterior stucco with bricks peaking through that makes you think modern buildings try dismally to replicate. Inside the building with its old vaulted ceilings is a treasure trove of gifts, jewelry and wreaths.

Terri Carlson is a long-time floral designer and owns the shop at 200 Ray Street. In her custom wreaths, which adorn many Pleasanton front doors, are roses, peonies, hydrageas, tulips and berries.

Humming Bird - Milfleur - Pleasanton: Historic Barn Converted to Home and Garden Shop
"Even in these economic times, people still want a wreath on their door," Terri said. Her custom wreaths range in price from $85 to $200.

Milfleur
200 Ray Street
Pleasanton, CA 94566

Julia - lookiloos.com

Related stories:

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
Mother Brings Style and Storage to Pleasanton House

New Craftsman Home, Just the Right Size in Willow Glen

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

New Craftsman Home, Just the Right Size in Willow Glen

Little more than a 700 square-foot shack with a dirt floor greeted Christina and Steve Guzzetta when they first laid eyes on the Willow Glen property. But it was perfect for Steve, a general contractor ready to build his own family home from scratch.

Hallway - New Craftsman Home, Just the Right Size in Willow Glen

Unlike many McMansions that were being built a few years ago, the Guzzettas decided to build a house that seemed “just the right size” for the couple and their two children. Besides, they didn’t want to disturb the gorgeous trees, including the redwoods, on the property. They decided on Craftsman style, which fit in with the neighborhood and lent itself to the family’s desire for simplicity and practicality.

“With clean lines, it always looks clean even if it’s messy,” Christina said.

Playing with the style, the couple installed Rosewood flooring, wainscoting, and Fireclay Tile. The family graciously opened their home to the Willow Glen Home Tour in early May.

Back Porch - New Craftsman Home, Just the Right Size in Willow Glen

At 2,800 square feet, no room is overwhelming. The intimate living and dining rooms in the front of the house are just big enough for special occasions — and for some of Kristina’s favorite family heirlooms. The 18th-century crystal chandelier in the dining room belonged to her great grandmother from Sweden.

Chandelier - New Craftsman Home, Just the Right Size in Willow Glen

The back of the house opens up to a good-sized kitchen and family room, the heart of the family home.

Here are some of the resources they used to get the house ready for the home tour:
Designer: Janette Coran
Staging by Ybette Head
Flowers by Dorida Yaghoub of Midoriz

Julia - lookiloos.com

You might also enjoy these related Lookiloos stories:
Craftsman Decked Out for Christmas
Small House Has Style, and Storage
Los Gatos Craftsman

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Spanish Style Bungalow Home For Willow Glen Woman

Friday, May 8th, 2009

Spanish Style Bungalow Home For Willow Glen Woman

Stacie Puma was renting in Los Gatos when she took a drive with her boyfriend down a shady street lined with charming old cottages. “What neighborhood is this?” she asked him. “It’s gorgeous.”

Bathroom - Spanish Style Bungalow Home For Willow Glen Woman

Ten years later, she’s living on that very street, in a Spanish bungalow she has made her own with French and Tuscan touches. And just as she loved walking to the charming downtown streets of Los Gatos, she can now walk to Willow Glen’s Lincoln Avenue. She opened her house for the 2009 Willow Glen Home tour in early May.

Stacie always loved old houses, and this one still maintained its vintage charm. Built in 1926, this 1,600 square-foot home still has its original yellow tile in the kitchen and bath. The windows and living room mantel are also original details she loves. When she needed extra room for the refrigerator in the kitchen, a little wall was knocked out, revealing a brick chimney coming up from the basement. She asked the crew to keep the brick exposed. It adds a rustic feel, next to a vintage Wedgewood stove she purchased from a San Francisco couple.

Kitchen - Spanish Style Bungalow Home For Willow Glen Woman

“It’s almost like French Provincial meets Tuscany kind of feel,” she said. “I added a lot of iron to have some masculinity to offset the feminine look.”

She added rich colors of reds, golds and olives to complete the look inside.

Outside, with the help of her neighbor, Matt Guarascio of “The Scape Artist,” she added fountains and pathways. They preserved the old fireplace at the rear of the yard for evening gatherings.

“My backyard is my sanctuary,” she said, adding that she opened her master bedroom to the yard with French doors.

Stacie also designed an iron gate, which was fabricated by Garcia’s Ornamental Iron Works. For the tour, flowers were beautifully arranged by Flowers by Pat Conroy.

Stacie knows that after all these years, she has found home.

Fountain - Spanish Style Bungalow Home For Willow Glen Woman

“I have met the most amazing people in this neighborhood,” she said. “It’s a whole new family for me.”

Julia - lookiloos.com

You might also enjoy these stories:

A Decorator’s Daughter Loves Small House Style
Gentle Remodel on Spanish Bungalow
Colonial Revival Home Renovation – Whitney Wright Mansion
Before and After – Rustic Kitchen Remodel
Small House Remodel Maintains Charm
Downsizing and Restyling: From French Country to Modern Neutral
Renovating and Decorating to Inspire Home and Business
Mid-Century Modern from California Ranch: A Town and Country Life

Here’s the complete slideshow:

DIY – Floral Chic Mother’s Day Dining Room Decorating

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

DIY - Floral Chic Mother's Day Dining Room Decorating

Jose Ibarra credits his late mother with inspiring him to become a floral designer. As a talented seamstress, she always expected her children to help with the cutting and sewing. And Jose has inherited her creative spirit, working with colors and textures — and his own two hands. So when Lookiloos asked Jose to decorate a Mother’s Day table for brunch, he set one in her honor, using things she loved, things she gave him, and things she could only dream about. And then, as always, he took it all up a notch with a trendy and surprising floral display inspired by Jeff Leatham’s designs at the Four Season’s George V Hotel in Paris.

Table Setting - DIY - Floral Chic Mother's Day Dining Room Decorating

“She always liked Paris, but she never went there,” Jose said of his mother. “So I brought Paris to her.”

Here are some of Jose’s tips for a beautiful, thoughtful and stylish Mother’s Day table:

1. Use special things your mother gave you, but have tucked away, including special china, glassware or linens.

2. Set the table in her favorite colors. Jose’s mother’s were orange and green.

3. Decorate with things your mother loves. Jose’s mother loved bugs. So he set out a collection of decoupage plates adorned with bees and beetles.

Flowers - DIY - Floral Chic Mother's Day Dining Room Decorating

4. With a bunch of the same-colored flowers, use Jeff Leatham’s “tip to fall” style. Fill tall vases with water, tie stems together, balance the stems near the top of the water, then arch the flowers over the edge of the vase. They look like they will tip over and fall out, but they don’t. This is all the rage among the floral chic!

Mom - DIY - Floral Chic Mother's Day Dining Room Decorating

5. Pull out an old recipe of your mother’s and make one of her favorite dishes. Place a framed photo of your mother on the table. With all your attention to details and the things your mother loves, she will know how much you appreciate her.

Happy Mother’s Day!

Julia - lookiloos.com

You might also enjoy looking at some of Jose’s other holiday displays here:
Wabi Sabi: Where the Imperfect is Beautiful
Valentine’s Day Decorating Tips: How to Make Paper Roses
St. Patrick’s Day Table Decorating Ideas: Going Green on a Budget

Filoli: A Mother’s Day Tradition

Monday, May 4th, 2009
Flower-show-2 Flower-show-1

Do you have plans for Mother’s Day? It’s not too late to create that special day for Mom. Filoli Gardens in Woodside is hosting their annual Flower Show, where over 80 professional and amateur floral designers will show off their spectacular arrangements to compliment elegant table settings. To go along with the the tour Filoli is also offering a special tea, boxed lunch or champagne brunch. The greenhouse will be open for touring and there will be a flower chat at 1:30 on the Dining Room Terrace. Prices for the tour are $20 for members and $25 for non-members. I can’t think of a better way to spend the day.

Desiree - lookiloos.com

Related Stories:
St. Patrick’s Day Table Decorating Ideas
Gardening on a Budget
Saratoga Gem–Hakone Gardens
Emily Joubert