Archive for December, 2009

Lookiloos: A Peek Back at 2009

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

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Looking back over the year I have taken thousands of photos.  Lookiloos loves getting to peek inside homes big and small.  I created a slide show using some of my favorite shots. The only problem—my little slide show isn’t so little!

Desiree Looking Left - Lookiloos

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Get the flash player here: http://www.adobe.com/flashplayer

White Reindeer A Must See!

Friday, December 25th, 2009
Adult White Reindeer

Adult White Reindeer

Last week I stopped in at Almaden Valley Nursery and spotted the most adorable white reindeer.  This particular little guy reminded me of the real white reindeer up at Mt. Madonna County Park in Watsonville.  We had taken the kids to see them years ago, but I hadn’t seen them in quite awhile.  I wanted to go and see them again. Wouldn’t it be like ol’ times? Doe

“Hey who wants to go see the white reindeer?” I asked very excitedly I might add.  The response wasn’t exactly what I had hoped for. “What? Where is it? Well how far is it and how long will it take?.  The Niners are gonna play today, so I’ll pass on the reindeer thing Mom” was what I got from four different teenage boys. I had one taker,  the husband (extra Santa points for him). Love this one

There were 2 large male deer and about a dozen smaller does.  The males would not come closer for photos…sounds like my household. The does were much more cooperative…also like my household!   I know this has nothing to do with home or garden, but it all started with my little stuffed friend form the Almaden Valley Nursery.  Merry Christmas to All.

Vicki Does Christmas with Succulents, Cabbages and Magnolia

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

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Vicki Petulla  likes to call her California decor “Donner Party Chic” for her penchant for mounted antlers, magnolia leaves and willow branches. But she has a knack for reinventing her home every season so old things looks new again and hidden pieces are brought out of the shadows.

4207145081_8f469cba13_o“You know me, I get so bored, it’s sad,” she joked. Before Thanksgiving had even arrived, she was already anxious to start her Christmas decor.

In her living room, she added rich foliage and pomegranates into vintage cement urns she picked up at the Alameda Antique Fair that is open the first Sunday of each month.  She drapes a male portrait with fresh cedar. And on her chair, which until recently was red velvet, she rerecovered with an old white linen table cloth.

4207904770_3ff909f958_oIn her dining room, leave it to Vicki – the daughter of a decorator — to turn a liquor basket she keeps on the side board into a Christmas floral display with succulents, pink cabbages, white hydrangeas and lemons on the branch. It’s an unexpected display with surprising bits of sparkle as she tucks in vintage ornaments here and there.

From the chains of her dining room chandeliers, she hung eucalytus leaves and berries. A bay wreath hangs from the mirror.

4207929590_c821922b58_oVisiting Vicki’s home is always a treat, no matter the season. Thanks Vicki for opening up to us again! We want to come back!Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

For more of Vicki’s Vignettes — and to see how her house looked in the fall — please read these stories and check out the gorgeous photos:

Fall Decorating Ideas, with Vicki’s Vignettes

A Decorator’s Daughter

Before and After:An outdoor Fireplace Transformation

Vicki’s Vintage-Inspired Holiday Party Favors

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Get the flash player here: http://www.adobe.com/flashplayer

Snowmen Take Over Willow Glen’s Eclectic Touch

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

Snowmen have always been one of my favorite Holiday accessories.   The jolly winter characters have a way of making me smile and think back to when I was little and believed nothing was better than a day in the snow making snow “families” with my childhood friends.

This time of year Willow Glen’s Eclectic Touch is filled with beautiful items  from serving dishes, guest soaps to train sets to to get your home ready for the holidays or for a last minute hostess gift.  Images of Snowmen, along with angels, Santa and many other holiday favorites can be found in this unique shop.  Year round you can find home furnishings, decorative accessories, custom floral design and gifts that don’t say Pottery Barn.

Here a just a few fun items that can transform your home into a Winter Wonderland this month.

Eclectic Touch

1171 Lincoln Avenue

San Jose, CA 95125

(408) 292-7434

Found: One Christmas Angel

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

Christmas AngelThought you were gone. Thought I’d never see you again. It’s been three long Christmases since you were last seen. So glad you’re back! My Christmas Angel.  Angel Wings

I purchased this angel 6 years ago. She is constructed of recycled molding and tin ceiling tiles. She is weathered, rustic and beautiful. She went missing 3 years ago. The same time roughly my oldest son moved back home and re-arranged our garage and attic storage. “No, Mom never saw her. What does she look like again?” said my darling eldest.

Angel Above Clock Niche

Suddenly,  she just appeared in the garage. And no one put her there….Hmmmmm.  Somehow I don’t think I’m getting the WHOLE story. But I don’t care she’s back and my living room feels complete this year.

Desiree Looking Left - Lookiloos

Winter Wonderland in Almaden Valley

Sunday, December 20th, 2009
Almaden Nursery: Winter Wonderland

Almaden Nursery: Winter Wonderland

A Lookiloo reader contacted me about a nursery that has a home and garden gift shop as well.  “It’s so wonderful. When I need a hostess gift it’s my first stop”, said Judy.

“OK, Mom I’ll check it out” I replied.  Since this was my Mom’s hot tip, I figured we should go together and then maybe a little lunch to finish the day.

The Coveted Snowman Platter

The Coveted Snowman Platter

What a winter wonderland! I can see why my Mom loves Almaden Nursery. Christmas ornaments range from adorable to elegant. I found so many things I’d love to “give” to my favorite hostess.  The hard part would be parting with the magical item. Seriously, I’d have to buy two.  The items to top my list would be this snowman platter for $39.99 and this completely adorable white reindeer for $44.99.  Just look at that face!

White Reindeer

White Reindeer

I also loved the giant penguin and I mean GIANT.  He stood at almost 5 feet tall and was very generous in the width department. Now , far be it from me to comment on someone’s girth, but this guy was obviously a very good eater.  I didn’t even ask “how much”,  because I think I would have somehow figured out how to swing it and well I know the kids would love him. The husband—not so much.  I can hear him now, “Where does he sleep the other 11 months of the year?”  And, yes even I couldn’t answer that.

My Giant Penguin

My Giant Penguin

desiree I’ve got more photos in a slideshow.  I’d love to hear what is your favorite…

Almaden Valley  Nursery:  15800 Almaden Expressway, San Jose. CA.

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Get the flash player here: http://www.adobe.com/flashplayer

Lionel Train Set in Living Room: What to Do?

Friday, December 18th, 2009

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When my husband’s old Lionel train set arrived by UPS from his brother in Michigan, it was as though Santa himself appeared in a big brown truck. It was five years ago, Christmas Eve. I was standing in the driveway with our two children, who were 5 and 7 at the time, when the driver headed our way with a large cardboard box.

Carefully packed inside was the electric model train set that my husband, Chris, and his three brothers used to play with each winter in the basement of their home outside Detroit. It had been his father’s before that. And now, on the most magical night of all, it had arrived in San Jose for the next generation, just in time. I choked back tears as I wished the driver a Merry Christmas.4189164464_63d0d386bb_b

Sounds like the end of a heartwarming story, doesn’t it? This was the part when the parents are supposed to embrace and the children open the box with eyes filled with wonder. Can’t cha hear the whistle blowing?

Funny how nostalgia can turn to exasperation and a midnight argument last week that almost woke up the kids. Where in the world can we set up this thing?
Unlike my husband’s boyhood home in the 1960s and ’70s, our home doesn’t have a giant basement rec room with a snooker table big enough for two full sheets of plywood on top to serve as a platform for this Michigan-made train set.

4188401331_ca73499522_bWithout it, the track never really found a home in our house. That first Christmas, the engine that had been boxed up for 30 years was too worn out to pull cars behind it. The next two years, when the track was laid on the living-room floor, the kids kept tripping over it, knocking down the cars and disconnecting the track. In 2007, Chris placed a piece of plywood on top of the dining table on the screened porch. But it was chilly, few ventured outside to play with it and the track started to rust. Last year, it didn’t even make it out of the boxes.

This year, though, Chris insisted the train and the plywood come back in the house and into the living room. And it had to be elevated, he said. That’s when the discord began.
I’m sorry, but am I out of line to protest when my husband wants to squeeze in the equivalent of a table set for 12 in the middle of our cramped living room that is barely big enough for a Christmas tree? Must this be a shrine to Lionel?

I already had holiday decorating insecurities. As much as I envision our house as an enchanted space filled with our hand-carved nativity scene, nutcrackers, Christmas candelabras and poinsettias, it more often than not feels like a mismatched montage.
To make matters worse, we were planning a Christmas cocktail party, plus Christmas dinner for 18. We needed more room, not less, for entertaining.

4188400775_9539e15bc0_b“Hmm, an 8-foot-by-4-foot sheet of plywood in your living room,” mused my friend Carolyn. “Sounds like a dance floor.”
One friend suggested that if we really wanted to show off the train set, we should deconstruct it and arrange the engine and cars artfully on the mantel. Another suggested building a catwalk around the ceiling like they do at pizza parlors. All we needed was sawdust and peanut shells on the floor. Great.

But the tradition of this train set was important to Chris and I understood why. The train set was sent a few years after Chris’ father died. It wasn’t an elaborate model with mountains and tunnels, but it included some special vintage pieces: a 1940s O gauge track with a pressed-tin signal house and a man with a swinging lantern who pops through the door when the train passes; a foot-tall light tower; three pieces of die-cast rolling stock; a 1975 Illinois Central GP9 engine that blows smoke and a matching caboose that lights up. It came with a bag of miniature pedestrians, benches and trees. Inside the GP9 engine box was the original handwritten note the boys found that Christmas morning when they unwrapped it for the first time: “Merry Christmas, Joey, Chris, Paul and Ed.” It was signed S. Claus.

Still, did it have to be mounted full scale, table height, smack in the middle of the living room? Couldn’t it be, maybe, half the size, in a corner somewhere? Midnight is the wrong time to have a conversation like this. When I imagined Chris pulling out the sheet of dirty white felt he used under the track to look like snow two years ago, I marched upstairs.

4188400611_7d76b12642_bAs we got ready for bed, though, Chris said one more thing: “I want the kids to have memories of this train.”
“I do, too,” I said.

The next morning, Chris said that the train didn’t have to be table height. It could sit on milk crates just a foot off the floor. But something would still have to be moved out for it to fit in. I volunteered that my writing desk be moved to the shed.
We could still sit a 6-foot Christmas tree on top of the platform in the middle of the track. I would replace the white felt with chocolate brown burlap.
And to convince myself that I could salvage some sense of style, I would sew a string of silky brown pom-poms to finish the bottom edge. (Chris objected at first, worried they would distract from the track, but relented.)

Last weekend, Daniel, who is 10 now, helped his father assemble the track. Claire, 12, set up a station vignette around the signal house. It was a rainy afternoon and I took in the scene as Chris plugged in the twinkling tree lights and turned on the Christmas music. Daniel blew the whistle.
As the train came around the bend, I approached the platform, knelt down before it, and fluffed the pompom skirt.
Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

Whimsical Christmas Decor at Bloomsters

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Bloomsters Red

This Christmas season at Bloomsters, one of the foremost floral design businesses in Silicon Valley, owner Kren Rasmussen added whimsy with a contemporary twist to his Almaden shop.

Kren started with a traditional palette of golds and deep reds, but added a modern flare by introducing the color of Michelle Obama’s inaugural address outfit — bright chartreuse green.Bloomsters

“When you’re using all your Christmas colors, it can get a little heavy,” he said. “Adding a bright burst of color,” he said, “adds a needed pop.”

Bloomsters, which often donates its time and talent to add drama to homes for local home tours, is known for using natural foliage in its decor, including eucalyptus and curly willow.  For Christmas, he added spray snow, glitter and ribbons.

“Taking nature as your motivator and giving it a splash of glitz takes that object and makes it visually approachable,” he said.

Santa TinsFor those choosing artificial trees this year, he suggested insetting pine bows through the branches so “it just tells you it’s Christmas.”

And for whimsy? Kren had fun with icycles and snowmen.  There’s still time to find something unique to set your home apart this year.

Bloomsters: 5945 Almaden Expy • San Jose, CA 95120 • 1.800.377.4595

Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

Tween Room Inspired by Audrey Hepburn Style

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

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Ashleen Cummins was tired of her room with the pink, green and yellow garden theme. She was 12 now and wanted a more sophisticated look that reflected her passions.

“I wanted it to be Audrey Hepburn — kind of French looking,” said Ashleen, standing in her bedroom overlooking the Rockridge neighborhood in Oakland.3991515431_c0be59eae3_b

Her parents had fun remodeling the kitchen downstairs in the French country style (which will be featured on Lookiloos soon). So it was Ashleen’s  turn to make her room her own. With the classic black and white photo of Hepburn on her wall and a palette of pink, black and white, she created a room perfect for her.  

“She was very picky about the drapes,” her mother, Clarice Cummins said. The black and white swirling fabric was actually tablecloths from Home Good that she converted to drapes.

3991515779_3cf05487f4_bAshleen also wanted an antique, vintage feel. She asked her grandmother if she was willing to part with her crystal chandelier. “My grandmother took it off her ceiling,” Ashleen said.

Julia Looking Left - LookiloosAnd in her room, it looks right at home.3991515223_f10b057cb5_b

To take a peek at a couple of other Tween Rooms, check these out:

From Little Girl To Tween Room;

Downsizing and Restyling from French Country to Modern Neutral

And a lovely nursery: Modern Nursery with Vintage Flair

Naughty or Nice Party: Christmas Decorating Simply Chic

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009
Elegant Front Porch

Elegant Front Porch

What to do when you’ve invited 24 girlfriends over for a ”naughty or nice” sit-down dinner party? Call San Jose floral designer Jose Ibarra to come up with special Christmas decor, inside and out.

Pinecones with Pewter Ribbons

Pinecones with Pewter Ribbons

He started with the front entrance way of this Willow Glen home — a house he also decorated for Thanksgiving. While most folks feel pretty relieved to get a decent wreath on the door, Jose takes it up a notch by creating a whole natural scene — with a little sparkle — to welcome guests. He started with bare branches arching over the front doorway. With his secret — a $1.99 can of fake snow or flocking from Walgreen’s drug store — he sprayed sugar pine cones (the tall, skinny ones) with just a hint of winter. He tied the cones to the branches with burlap and pewter double satin ribbon. They dangle over the doorway.

“The homeowner wanted elegant,” he said, “but not overstated.”

Inside, he set a long narrow table and cascaded 200 dark red roses — three different kinds — down the center. You’ll find no vases here. Instead, he cut the stems off the roses and effectively tossed them onto the table. He added green orchids as well.

Roses and Orchids

Roses and Orchids

He tried to “reinvent the idea of simple,” he said. “Not over the top, but new and different.”

Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Get the flash player here: http://www.adobe.com/flashplayer