Archive for January, 2010

Prairie-Style House Gets Modern Makeover

Friday, January 29th, 2010

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Hillary Fox and Matt Jacobs had lived in their 1920s Prairie-style home in Oakland’s Rockridge neighborhood for eight years before they remodeled. They loved the bones of the house, but they had to walk through a warren of rooms to get to the dark, galley kitchen.

4171100966_8a3c11ea47_b“We wanted to open it up with more light,” Hillary said. And she wanted it to be more modern, “but consistent with the principles of the house.”

Two years ago, they started the remodel. With two living rooms, they turned one into a dining room.

In the kitchen, they opened walls and added a new family room that stepped up their hillside lot. That gave them more space for their growing family.

4170346307_1d0a84c2a8_bThe couple love clean lines and neutral colors. In the kitchen, they installed white Caesarstone countertops with translucent, white glass subway tiles, then added red-topped stools for a splash of color. They opened their home to the Rockridge Kitchen Tour last fall.

The family decorated with Matt’s original paintings, inspired by Modigliani.

Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

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Indie Fixx Galleria: A place for Unique Finds

Monday, January 25th, 2010
houndstoothshotglass

Vintage Shot Glasses

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Tasha McKelvey Bowl

I am a huge fan of finding things for my home that either has a great story or is a super unique find. One of favorite sites to spy decor fit for the hippest casas is Indie Fixx Galleria, an online showcase of handmade, indie-made & vintage goods.  Whether you are on the hunt for a fine art prints, pottery or vintage wall hooks you are sure to find something here to tickle your fancy.   These are a few things that I am loving this week:

Pillows

Pillows

Handmade Pottery Bird Bowl by Tasha McKelvey This cute little bowl would be so perfect for new love birds (read engagement gift) or just something to remind you that spring is just around the corner! $60.00

I love things “mid century cool”, so I was enamored by the delights at the Sunny Day Vintage shop. I love these houndstooth shot glasses and this vintage Rules of my Kitchen plaque.

I am a sucker for pillows that bring a pop of color to my sofa or bed. My fave is the Red Bird on the Branch. Freshline Illustration &Design is a whimsical shop filled with many one-of-a-kind items.  They offer free shipping as well!

Birds of a Feather Hook

Monkey and Squirrel Shop: Bird of a feather Wall Hook – These  little cast iron bird hook is  “for hanging your keys, towels, cardigans, or vintage scarf”.  Perfect for when you want to hang things with some style!  Their online shop is full of whimsical goodies for you and your home.

Sheila - Lookiloos.com

Original artwork adds zest to decor

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

chairs-table

Catherine Richardson is a former editor at  Architectural Digest with a penchant for interior design and decorative objects.  Erin Lee Gafill is an artist from Big Sur who paints impressionist landscapes along the California coastline.  When Catherine discovered Erin’s artwork at a gallery of the famed Nepenthe restaurant, which Erin’s family has owned since it opened in the late 1940s, a creative collaboration began. Red-Wall

“I wanted to incorporate beautiful works of art along with beautiful objects to place in people’s homes,” said Catherine, whose design business is called “For Love of Home.”  (www.forloveofhome.net) When she came up with the idea to have seasonal shows in the backyard and tiny cottage of her southern California home,  showcasing vignettes of antiques and vintage pieces she had collected, she called Erin for help.

“I told her my theme and the colors I was using and asked her if she wanted to send beautiful little artworks,” she said.

And that’s when the fun begins. Together, they place Erin’s work in groupings on tabletops or a ladie’s desk, for instance, “that best show the quality of her work and work with interior spaces and sacred vignettes we’ve created,” Catherine said.

OrchidWith Erin’s paintings,  she artfully arranges Chinese and French porcelain, mid-centery Italian artglass, special Buddahs and other decorative pieces. She invites her friends and clients, who often are so inspired they want to bring home the entire vignette.

“It’s joyful. We love what we work with,” Catherine said. “It’s a labor of love.”

(to see more of Erin’s work, go to www.eringafill.com  Photos by Tom Birmingham.)

You might also enjoy these stories:

Nepenthe Turns 60Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

Before and After:Touch of Modern Art in Traditional Space

Get Lost in Brick Monkey

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

* Ball Pillow Getting lost drives me nuts. I hate it. I always stress about keeping my clients waiting and I don’t really care to be spending any extra time wandering around trying to figure out if I’m headed in the right direction.  But on this particular day, I found myself lost.  I was supposed to be in a very nice residential area of Redwood City and instead,  cow paintingI found myself in the middle of downtown Redwood City.  So I’m trying to find my way back to the street I need and something catches my eye.  A gorgeous red brick building and on that building there was a sign  — Brick Monkey.

What the heck is that?  Wait, what’s that in the window?  I loop around the block to check it out. It’s an interior design shop. Yippee! And it looks so wonderful.  Now, of course my client is waiting, so I can’t stop now.  I find my way  and finish my photo shoot.  I ask my client, “Have you been to the Brick Monkey?”  She had not, but heard they had some wonderful things.  So, I pack up my gear and I head back down to the Brick Monkey.  I crossed that threshold and instantly felt like a kid in a candy shop.

I have so many favorite things I wish I could have brought home with me. The cow painting at $395 is to die for and the turquoise sofa so inviting, so calming,  it chases my winter blues away.  Another one of my Modern Leather Chairsfavorites is this set of metal nesting tables for $1350.00 and let’s not forget these fabulous chairs.  I love the geometric shapes of the leather.  Now here is the best part—Brick Monkey is having their very first factory floor sale!  All of their custom metal furniture will be up to 70% off.  Metal Nesting TablesSo mark your calendars for January 23rd and 24th.  Be sure to come prepared with a large vehicle and moving pads to bring your one-of-a kind treasure home.  Trust me on this. Bring a big car.  I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been caught in the wrong vehicle.  Once a year,  designer Stephanie Kolkka, a Brick Monkey partner and the metal-smith( who created those wonderful nesting tables) clears out her Napa Valley studio to make way for new designs.  Expect great savings and wonderful finds.  OK, I’m putting this out there— I’m up for the floor sale! Who else wants to make the trip? I’ll drive and I’ve got a big suburban. Let me know. We could meet for coffee  (Peet’s preferably) and then some serious shopping! C’mon it’s twenty ten and we all could use a dose of fresh!  Comment here or drop me an email—desiree@lookiloos.com

Brick Monkey

2400 Broadway
Redwood City, CA 94063
650.260.1155

Desiree Looking Left - Lookiloos

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Celebrity Home Tour – American Idol’s Simon Cowell Bachelor Pad

Sunday, January 17th, 2010

American Idol’s 2010 season has begun. So in honor of one of my favorite guilty pleasures, here are a few sneak peaks into the home of everyone’s “favorite” AI judge Simon Cowell.

This $27 million ultra modern home took five years to build, according to an Extra show interview.  Decorated primarily in black and white, it is the ultimate bachelor pad.  The 12,000 square foot home has 5 bedrooms,  a state of the art gym, cinema, lap pool,  and a  garage full of luxury cars.  It is rumored that he has also installed his own tanning bed. (Of course he would, why not?! )

During his MTV Cribs interview, Simon shares his thoughts on the various artwork he hates in his own home (described as “flowers and strips of bacon” by Simon), the contents of his fridge and his vitamin collection. (Why didn’t this place come with a medicine cabinet?)

The home is gorgeous with soaring ceilings and clean lines.  I think America would vote that it was well worth the money.

This video is from Simon’s appearance on MTV Cribs.

Sheila Looking Left - Lookiloos

Carmel Remodel Ends with He-Said, She-Said Book

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010
The newly renovated breakfast room

The newly renovated breakfast room

Pam Gilberd hated nearly everything about the dilapidated ranch house they looked at in the Carmel Valley. “It smelled. The yard was described as an Italian cemetery. It had a hot tub 10 feet from the front door and you had to walk over the cord to get to it.”

Before:The original facade with hot tub in front yard.

Before:The original facade with hot tub in front yard.

Her husband, retired stockbroker Fred Gilberd, however, saw only possibilities. The view across Carmel Valley Ranch and to the Santa Lucia Mountains was stunning. The single-story layout worked. And he was anxious to prove his theory that with a little vision and a lot of elbow grease, “you could make anything nice.”

And so the couple embarked on a two-year project that Pam — a writer — hoped would be as romantic as the Italian remodel in bestseller “Under The Tuscan Sun.” After remodeling, compromising, nearly giving up,  finding hidden creativity — and, yes, romance — the Gilberds have just self-published their own version: “Under the Carmel Valley Sun.”  (Lookiloos will be giving away two copies of the book, so please leave a comment below!)

The couple bought the house in 2000, a market peak when there was little else for sale. At the time, they had no idea what they wanted the house to look like when they were finished.  But a previously scheduled bike-riding trip through Provence inspired them to work towards a French country look. And they vowed to do it themselves, without handing off any major work to contractors.

“For one reason, I’m a cheapskate,” Fred, 70,  said. “I also wanted the satisfaction of doing it myself.”

After: The updated facade, with faux-painted door.

After: The updated facade, with faux-painted door.

But what the couple quickly realized, as they ate dinner each night on one of the few pieces of furniture — their bed — “we got into something that was way over our heads,” Fred said.

Pam, 63, reached her low point about halfway though. She had envisioned that she would be like other homeowners who would uncover “wonderful archways” and would “laugh and learn together.”  At that point in the Gilberd remodel, however, there wasn’t much laughing going on.

“Pam was reaching a crisis stage,” Fred said. Even playing the soundtrack to Out of Africa for her, which had seemed to settle emotions before, had little effect. He suggested they simply finish off the house with white paint throughout and put it on the market.

PamFredGilberdHiPam was shocked that he would even consider giving up his dream because she wasn’t happy. “To me that was one of the most romantic things he ever said to me,” Pam said. For Pam, it was a turning point. “When he said that, I said, ”No way. Of course we’re going to finish this.’ I became almost as obsessive as he was.”

She doesn’t like sewing, but because they spent so much money redoing their fireplace, she pulled out her sewing machine to make her own cushions and curtains. She read books on the Toll House painting style and  painted two-tone fruits on a long, narrow dining table Fred made for her, and  olive branches on the walls of  her narrow hallway.

“It really forced us to expand our skills and our vision of what we could do,” she said.

And it also brought them closer together. “Renovating a house is a test of a marriage,” Pam said, but “it can be a wonderfully bonding time–as long as the small stuff stays in proportion to the overall intent.”

After:The new kitchen

After:The new kitchen

They looked for ways to complement instead of criticize, she said, and “got a lot further that way and had more fun.”

In the end, not only did they transform a run-down ranch into a French county oasis, but they were so proud of their accomplishment together, they took on another challenge: writing a diary-style book of their adventure.

When they realized their memories of the same events differed so wildly, they decided to write a he-said, she-said book with each penning chapters. It’s a delightful story of the highs and lows and –  with patience, understanding and compromise — the romance of the remodel.Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

 FinalCoverHiRLeave a comment and let us know if you’d like a copy.

New Year’s Resolution: Coat Racks

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

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TheCrosbie_Flowerrack

One of resolutions that I am determined to make my entire family commit to is hanging jackets on hooks and not leaving them on the ground.  I have been on the hunt for the perfect coat and or/key racks that are unique, beautiful yet functional. I found these hooks made by The Crosbie shop on etsy.

This “Gate Coat” rack is make with Filipino mahogany and finished with circular hooks.   The Crosbies’ creations are customizable and can be made in any size and color – just send ‘em a paint chip.  Price $70.00

They also carry smaller sizes, like this 5″x5″ square “Flowerfalls coat hook” perfect for hanging hand towels in the bathroom and kitchen or for pesky keys right next to the door.  Price $28.00Sheila Looking Left - Lookiloos

On a Roll and I Can’t Stop Now!

Friday, January 8th, 2010
Don't mind the seamless green screen---working on a different project

Don't mind the seamless green screen---working on a different project

Three weeks ago I purchased a set of 4 iron chairs to go in my backyard for $39 each. They are wing-backed in style with great fret work. They need a little cleaning up, a coat of paint and some cushions. Oh how I wish Laura from ShorehouseChic lived on this coast—she is a seamstress extraordinaire!

Continuing on my roll, after the holidays I stopped in at a local nursery. I was desperate for all white cyclamen for my front window box. My decorative cabbage had perished in the frost earlier and I had guests coming over. Isn’t that how it always happens you walk past the dried-up and shriveled plant for days thinking “I gotta take care of that” then your hosting a last minute dinner party and you send your son out into the cold to re-plant.

“Seriously, Mom. Who is gonna see it? It’s gonna be dark and it’s freezing out there,” said my youngest. Freezing??? C’mon you don’t know freezing. Try winter in Connecticut. I did that once and I learned my lesson. The next winter was spent in Florida. I kid you not.Chandelier

“Never-mind that. Plant away—you can warm up when you’re done” I replied, with a chilly tone in my voice. And here is the part you have all come to know about me and hopefully find it quite endearing—I digress. So, back to the nursery, I spied a little one light chandelier for $5. You can’t walk away from a 5 dollar chandelier. It will be perfect on my front porch! 5 dollar tag

So my point is and yes I do have one—I’m on a roll finding the perfect thing for my home at a super cheap inexpensive price! This weekend Move It Elsewhere is having their once a month sale and I’m going. I feel like I can’t miss. I’m not sure what I will find or what I need to transform my living space, but one thing I do know I’m on a roll!

Desiree Looking Left - Lookiloos

Darned House:Stained Glass Adds Drama to Remodel

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

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Lisa Murray logged onto Craigslist for the first time looking for a small stained glass window for the master bathroom part of her renovation. As with all things about the remodel of her Los Gatos home, she wasn’t looking for something ordinary. She was looking for something “that makes my heart beat faster.”

P1010687Then she saw it, an eight foot angel with golden wings, a long white robe and bursts of cobalt blue. Translucent. Brilliant. Mesmerizing. Once the adornment for a San Francisco mortuary, it was now stored in a Richmond warehouse. Lisa quickly realized it was too big for the bathroom, and, quite frankly, almost too beautiful for it.

Despite its mortuary provenance, “it’s not creepy to me,” Lisa said. “The angel represents a hope of something.”

But where could she put it and could she get it home in one piece? What followed would become a lesson in flexiblity, creativity, and nail-biting drama for Lisa and her husband, Craig Hinkley. The couple, along with their two children and dog Millie are living in the tiny backyard cottage they just restored as well as the newly built garage while undergoing a full renovation of their circa-1940 Los Gatos home. Lookiloos and the Mercury News are chronicling their design decisions and family adventures in the “This Darned House” series.

3642719406_53920d2df1After 15 years of marriage, Craig has learned to trust the fantastical vision of his artist wife. As usual, however, the vision would come with a price. The new home for the angel would be the south-facing bay window in the great room — and that would not only mean a new design concept for the room, but a major re-engineering of the bay window to hold its weight.
“I’m sure Vinnie can make it all work,” Craig told his wife of their contractor, Vinnie Tran, who had already completed the garage under budget.

But first, could they get the angel home safely?

After renting a U-Haul and wrapping the stained glass in blankets, the precious cargo bumped and lurched in the back of a truck all the way from Richmond to Los Gatos. When Craig rolled up the back door of the truck to inspect it, his heart skipped a beat. The window had dropped out of its wooden frame. But he couldn’t tell whether it landed intact or had shattered.

“Lisa, go inside,” he said. “You don’t want to see this.”

When he peeled back the blankets, he was amazed to see it had survived, thanks to the extra cushioning they had put down first. The window had been mounted in three sections. They stored each under their iron bedframe in the cottage until the house was ready for it.

In the meantime, though, Lisa went back to the drawing board — again. She had already undergone a major redesign when she and Craig realized they wanted less interior square footage and more outdoor living. This couple had lived through the hot buggie summers of North Carolina and the rainy winters of Seattle following Craig’s finance jobs and had spent most of their time inside. Only after living in California for six months did they realize that for nearly every beautiful weekend, another one followed. The first major change was to swap out the formal dining room for a vast outdoor terrace off the great room.

Angel-room-sketchBut Lisa had originally designed the great room that opens to the kitchen to have a retro David Hicks style with a geometric circle motif. And that would no longer work with the leaded glass window. So she has ditched the idea of using Kraftmaid kitchen cabinets that had a circular overlay as well as the splashes of hot pink she was planning in the family room furnishings.

Instead, to complement the dramatic angel, she is opening up to a new style, with “a tinge of Gothic.”

And that means tufted, deep blue velvet sofas in the living room, for instance, and finding new seeded glass pendant lamps over the kitchen island she plans to paint herself. She is also reconsidering making her backsplash more linear and adding blue glass inserts.

She’s looking forward to the colored light that will splay across her great room. Now she’s just crossing her fingers that the installation of the giant window will go smoothly.

As Lisa puts it, “the drama is half the fun.”Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos