Bungalow

Growing Family Downsizing with Style

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010
Desk in Breakfast nook

Desk in Breakfast nook

Meg Picanco has quite a home decor pedigree. For years, she and her  late mother, Nancy Biagini, owned and ran the highly-regarded Casa Casa store on San Jose’s Lincoln Avenue. And until last fall, she was a  partner in Willow Glen Home and Garden just down the street.

So you would expect the home she shares with her husband and two young children to be well appointed. But several life-changing events over the past few years have forced her to rethink the importance of belongings and what it truly means to make a house a home.
The top of a bookcase serves as a spot for special things

The top of a bookcase serves as a spot for special things

Like many families in these tough economic times, the growing Picanco family has downsized to half the space they were used to. And leave it to 41-year-old Picanco to do it with style.
She has turned the 1,400 square-foot cottage she rents in Willow Glen into a charming oasis filled — sparingly — with carefully chosen, quality furnishings from her retail days as well as the family heirlooms she cherishes most.
From her grandmother’s spice cabinet with a needlepoint inset to her mother’s glass-topped coffee table, the house has a feeling of warmth and deep roots no matter how temporary the rental may be.
“Bringing things into your home that have history give it a special aura,” Picanco said.
4414854286_145d8f0942_bHer journey to the rental house has taken a circuitous path. Picanco, her husband, Mario, and their two young children, Gabrielle and Giancarlo, were living in a 2,800 square-foot home in Boise, Idaho — “in search of a calmer life where we could live on one income.” But less than a year into their lives there, she was confronted at the same time with two frightening realities: her mother was diagnosed with colon cancer and her 19-month-old son was confirmed deaf.
Not only did she want to be close to her mother in San Jose as she fought the disease, but Picanco and her husband discovered that a top preschool for the deaf was located just up the peninsula in Redwood City.
“We knew we had to return to California,” she said. San Jose is where she studied interior design from San Jose State University and when she was 23, opened Casa Casa with her mother. Her sister joined later. When children came along for the sisters, the trio decided to sell the business. Picanco stayed on as a buyer for the new owners for a year before moving to Idaho in 2006.
They had been homeowners in San Jose before they moved and her husband holds a solid job in high tech, “but we could not afford to buy back into the market when we returned.”
So what did she do? She did what any woman would do: she held a garage sale. And she was compelled to sell “all the things that were wonderful, beautiful things I loved.”
But she kept a painted chest that her grandmother had left to her (and had tucked a note addressed to her inside for posterity,) a pair of her mother’s table lamps, a set of nesting tables her aunt brought back from Florence, and a delicate, bamboo-style chandelier that has stayed with the family through their moves and is decorated with holly berries at Christmas and streamers for birthdays.
4414024163_5f71b43c5d_oAfter a stint in one Willow Glen rental distinguished by a pink tile kitchen with a butterfly motif, she found the house her family now calls home, a place she hopes to stay in for at least the next several years.
It is the simplest of floorplans: small living and dining rooms, a newly-remodeled kitchen with a tiny breakfast nook, and three small bedrooms and one bath off the back hallway. No family room. No walk-in closets. The only extra is a quarter-basement that is just big enough for the washer and dryer and Picanco’s hanging clothes, folded sweaters, and neatly stacked shoes.
She maximizes every inch with function and style. She has turned the breakfast nook, that was practically too small for a table and chairs, into an office with one elegant, oversized desk topped with a computer. When the kids come home with backbacks and school papers, “everything gets filed immediately,” she said.
clock collection

clock collection

Perhaps the most surprising personal touch is her decision to invest in shutters for the dining room and bathroom. “I knew when we rented it , we would be here for at least several years, so why not make it our own home?” she said, “and I couldn’t live with metal mini blinds.”

She painted every room a separate color — coating the master bedroom with the same heathery hue she has used for her bedroom in every house. She filled her dining room hutch with her sterling silver and blue and white china as well as a pair of rhinestone-studded starfish. One had been her mother’s, and when she died in 2008, Picanco nestled it in a bowl with her own.
The Picanco family has lived in this house for just a year and in that time, their daughter has adjusted beautifully to her new school and their son has excelled at his. With cochlear implants, he can carry on conversations. “Every five minutes is a miracle,” Picanco said.
Their neighbors have become some of their best friends.
“I can’t deny I wouldn’t love to own my own house,” she said, “but we’re so happy here.”Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

Here’s the complete slideshow:

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Just Listed: Cute Los Gatos Cottage Bungalow

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

IMG_0553

This 1930′s  bungalow is so adorable.  The living room is simply beautiful. I love everything about it–the bay window, the wall color and the fireplace.  When it was remodeled in 2008 the homeowners worked with the Los Gatos Historic Preservation Committee. I’m so glad they did!

Bedrooms: 3

Baths: 2

Square Footage: 1525

Check out the virtual tour here.

IMG_0487IMG_0486

Desiree Looking Left - Lookiloos

Ticket Give-away for Los Gatos Historic Home Tour

Monday, November 2nd, 2009
Los Gatos Historic Homes Tour
Like this house? Wanna see inside? Lookiloos has a pair of tickets to get you in! This house is one of seven on the Los Gatos Historic Homes Tour on Saturday  and Sunday (Nov. 7-8). The tour promises to show off great examples of Victorian architecture, as well as an unusual Hawaiian-inspired house, an old hunting lodge and, as a bonus, a new Provence-inspired farmhouse.
The tour benefits the Museums of Los Gatos, providing the operating revenue to keep their doors open for the next year. So if you don’t win this pair, buy a pair for yourself and a friend. (See below for contest rules.)
Here are a few sketches of the tour highlights:
The Queen Ann Cottage

Queen Anne Cottage

Queen Anne Cottage

charming Queen Anne Cottage, built in 1893, and fully restored by the current owners. Once the home of a Los Gatos grocer, the home features an unusual five-sided wrap-around front porch. Inside, you’ll see original windows, wainscoting, transoms and chandeliers.

Victorian Hunting Lodge

Victorian Hunting Lodge

Victorian Hunting Lodge

This home was built in 1884 as a Victorian hunting lodge and summer home. The current owners restored the home, and with antique treasures from their travels in Botswana, embraced the hunting theme.

A Hawaiian Plantation Home

Hawaiian Plantation Home

Hawaiian Plantation Home

This house was designed in 1912 after a Hawaiian plantation home to reflect the original owners’ fascination with Hawaii. The new owners kept the facade, but updated the rest of the home inside.

To win two tickets to the tour — worth $35 a piece — please leave a comment here or at the Lookiloos Facebook page and we will draw a name randomly on Thursday, Nov. 5.  Please leave a valid email address so we can contact you with details on where to pick up tickets.

If you don’t win, but still want to support the Museums of Los Gatos and see these homes, tickets may be purchased at the Art Museum, 4 Tait Avenue in Los Gatos. You may also purchase tickets on line at www.museumsoflosgatos.org or call 408 375-7386.

UPDATE:  The winner of the tickets is Michelle Bogdan!  Congratulations.  We know you will have a great time and hope to see you there.

Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos(Photographs by Mert Carpenter)

Dreaming of this Carmel Cottage Compound

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Dreaming of this Carmel Cottage Compound

Whenever I visit my parents at their home in Carmel, I often go out of my way to walk past this extraordinary Carmel cottage compound. I’ve been doing it for years, walking, lingering, dreaming. If I could choose the quintessential Carmel cottage lifestyle, this would be it.

Patio - Dreaming of this Carmel Cottage Compound

Sitting on more than a half acre, the property is lined by Monterey Cypress. Roses tumble over grapestake fences and arbors. Crunchy pebble pathways wind through fountains and fireplaces. Green shutters. Carmel stone walls. A peek of bay. Fairytales.

For years I have peeked through the fences and looked up the drive, fantasizing what may lay within. Last week, on another of a countless walk-bys, I couldn’t believe what I saw: a For Sale sign.

As a “professional” Lookiloo, I’ve talked to a number of people who have told me their stories of home — of how they had always walked by a favorite property, dreamed that if it ever went on the market they would buy it, and indeed, they did. Ah, dreams fulfilled.

Aerial View - Dreaming of this Carmel Cottage Compound

But with this Carmel compound — and a pricetag over more than $5 million — I had to keep walking by. But being a “professional” Lookiloo also has its privileges. I called Sotheby’s Realtor Steve LaVaute, and asked for a private tour.

“See you in 10 minutes,” he said.

And so, after years of just imagining what lay inside, I walked through the door of the main house — a 2,100 square-foot structure that was actually the caretaker’s house on a much larger property that was subdivided years ago.

Kitchen - Dreaming of this Carmel Cottage Compound

What struck me was how authentic this cottage — that looked to have been built in the 1920s — had remained. The footprint appeared to have been unchanged. The living room was small with French doors to a courtyard. A charming limestone fireplace remained as the focal point. The kitchen was as small as a butler’s pantry and the eating area not much bigger. A narrow, steep staircase led to two small bedrooms upstairs with a separate bath. It’s amazing that the house hasn’t suffered a massive addition. There is no gigantic master suite with a walk-in closet or expanded kitchen with double ovens.

It is, in every way, a classic Carmel cottage. It is surrounded by beautiful gardens — that take $1,500 a month to maintain, LaVaute told me — and seven separate sitting areas tucked in here and there. A separate, smaller cottage on the property is a studio guest suite, also with a stone fireplace.

Living Room - Dreaming of this Carmel Cottage Compound

And, hidden behind the wall of the guest house is what LaVaute calls a “secret dining room.” It’s a complete surprise, separated from the main house as it is. An open door revealed the space to be dark as a wine cellar, with stained concrete floors and a crystal chandelier, dimmed. A long, wooden refectory table is set for ten with candelabras fit for Liberace’s piano. “It’s for catered affairs,” LaVaute said.

In some ways, the whole place made me think of Marie Antoinette, and though she lived in splendor at Versaille, she had a peasant’s cottage built for her on the grounds. I wonder if it felt a little like this.

Julia - lookiloos.com

If you have $5 million to spend, email Steve at slavaute@gmail.com.

Here’s another fantasy house of mine:
Manderley Revisited in LaSelva Beach

Here’s the complete slideshow:

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

Backyard Landscaping Gives Bungalow Home Style and Function

Saturday, June 27th, 2009

When Rick Partridge and Jack Black purchased the 1916 Arts and Crafts Bungalow in San Jose’s Hanchett Park in 2005, they finally found a home for the period Stickley furniture they had been collecting for more than two decades.

Backyard Brick Wall - Backyard Landscaping Gives Bungalow Home Style and Function

But the backyard was another story. An awkward triangular deck off the back bedroom was a safety hazard with steep stairs and an overgrown hedge along the driveway split the small backyard in two. The homeowners were big entertainers and wanted a space that worked for parties of 100, as well as an intimate space for two to lounge around the hot tub.

“Jack and I both grew up in the south, where you turn the AC on from March ’til October,” Rick said. Now that California was their home, they wanted to take advantage of outdoor living. (And they also wanted a place for their hammock.)

The solution? Bring in a friend and neighbor, architectural designer Steve Hinderberger of Hindesign. The first order of business was to rip out the hedges.

Flagstone Patio - Backyard Landscaping Gives Bungalow Home Style and Function

“That was the most dramatic,” Hinderberger said. “It opened up the space and you could see the potential.”

They decided to keep all the trees, especially the Chinese Pistache in the middle of the yard.

“It became a centerpoint and things radiate out around it,” he said. And that meant designing a series of outdoor rooms, from formal to casual.

He started by replacing the old deck at the back of the house with a new, larger one made of dense Ipe wood, and gave a sense of enclosure with brick planters. A few steps down is the semi-circular dining patio. Hinderberger unearthed some of the original stones that had sunken and re-used them for the patio.

Replica Stove - Backyard Landscaping Gives Bungalow Home Style and Function

Pavers were used along the driveway to make it feel more like a patio than a driveway, and a built-in barbecue was installed near the back kitchen door. (Another neighbor, interior designer Madeleine Randal, transformed the inside white kitchen from what Partridge called an “operating room” into an updated space with grey soapstone counters and seaform blue backsplashes.)

The focal point of the backyard is the arbor at the back corner of the yard surrounded by soft landscaping. During the Hanchett Park Home Tour in late May, Partridge and Black hung a bright red swing from the arbor (their answer to the hammock.) But the arbor also serves as a frame for an ever-changing feature.

“Even in the plans, we put ‘sculptural element here,’” Hinderberger said. “It becomes almost a stage to highlight something of interest. They change it at least once every year, so it’s kind of fun to see what’s going to be there.” Partridge and Black have swapped out a fountain, a sculpture and a large planted urn under the arbor over the years.

Backyard - Backyard Landscaping Gives Bungalow Home Style and Function

“It’s kind of fun when you have a design concept, but what becomes really great is when the client embraces that and lives that,” Hinderberger said. “We were very in sync.”

Perhaps the most meaningful focal point of all came when Partridge and Black exchanged wedding vows in a ceremony surrounded by friends. Under the arbor were framed the groom and groom.

Julia - lookiloos.com

Hinderberger, of San Jose, can be reached at stevehinderberger@att.net.

(Photos by Desiree Northend)

Related stories:
Craftsman Bungalow Stays Tiny After Big Makeover
Spanish Style Bungalow Home
Gentle Remodel on Bungalow
Spanish-Style Bungalow Gets Soho-Chic Kitchen
Home with a Dining Room Fireplace
Rustic Kitchen Remodel
More Hanchett Homes on the Tour

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Tiny Craftsman Bungalow Stays Tiny After Big Makeover

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

Tiny Craftsman Bungalow Stays Tiny After Big Makeover

The 1920s Craftsman bungalow was 1,450 square feet when the family of three moved into the house. And after a significant remodel and another baby, it hasn’t grown a square foot. But with creativity and style, it works beautifully for this young family.

Kitchen - Tiny Craftsman Bungalow Stays Tiny After Big Makeover

The biggest change Jamey Graham and his wife Sharon Kojima made was converting a family room and laundry room that spanned the back of the house into a master bedroom on one side and a master bathroom and closet on the other. With a central hallway dividing the two spaces, plus a glass door leading to the back yard at the end, visitors walking in the front door can see clear through to the back yard. For a small house, the light at the end of the tunnel goes miles in making the bungalow feel larger.

Back Hall - Tiny Craftsman Bungalow Stays Tiny After Big Makeover

The only problem? “We violated Feng Shui” principles by being able to see through the house, Jamey said. But the couple installed a door to close off the master suite from the rest of the house — and keep the good spirits inside.

They installed hardwood floors into the two children’s rooms in the bedroom wing, and in the main living area, they tore down a wall that separated the kitchen from the dining and living rooms. Walk in, and you feel one big open, inviting, living, dining and kitchen space, plus a peek to the back yard. All were put together with quality and care by “Paradise Art and Garden” on Park Avenue in San Jose and J.P. Novotny Construction.

Front View - Tiny Craftsman Bungalow Stays Tiny After Big Makeover

The San Jose house was the smallest on the Hanchett Park Home tour in late May. But it made a big impact.

Julia - lookiloos.com

Related stories:
Watch the Favorite Spots Regaled at Hanchett Park Home Tour
More Hanchett Homes on the Tour
Front Porch, River Rock Sells this Craftsman Home
New Craftsman Home, Just the Right Size
Craftsman in Los Gatos

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Home Design Ideas: Front Porch, River Rock Sells this Craftsman Home

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

Home Design Ideas: Front Porch, River Rock Sells this Craftsman Home

Suzanne Garcia and her husband, Rob Brackett, had spent many an evening wandering through the Hanchett Park neighborhood, taking snapshots of the old Arts and Crafts homes with broad front porches and side-gables.

Green Tiled Fireplace - Home Design Ideas: Front Porch, River Rock Sells this Craftsman Home

They were ready to buy, but none of their favorites were ever for sale. So they decided to do the next-best thing and build their own Craftsman home a neighborhood over, using their photos for inspiration. They had reached the permit stage when their realtors told them about a vintage Craftsman for sale in San Jose’s Hanchett Park.

“They had told us it’s one of the houses in the neighborhood that has river rock,” Suzanne said. “When we drove up, we were — ‘oh gosh, I have a picture of this house in my binder!’ Who can believe it, right?”

Kitchen Cabinets - Home Design Ideas: Front Porch, River Rock Sells this Craftsman Home

Once inside, they were thrilled to see that none of the impressive woodwork from the 1916 home had been painted.

“Now that I’ve lived in it for a while, you get used to it, but people just stop and say ‘Wow, wow, you just don’t see woodwork like that!’”

The floor plan was mostly original and the biggest changes were to areas they planned to update anyway — the kitchen and bathrooms. And after their purchase in 2007, a careful renovation began.

Green Bathroom - Home Design Ideas: Front Porch, River Rock Sells this Craftsman Home

“We wanted a real master bath with the luxuries of today, but with that vintage quality. So we did handmade subway tile from Fireclay,” in San Jose, she said. “We found some accent tile in recycled green glass.”

Inspired by her collection of Bauer pottery, the couple painted the downstairs rooms in rich colors.

While they added a clawfoot tub in one bathroom, they added a luxurious steam shower and jacuzzi tub in the master bath.

Blue Bathroom - Home Design Ideas: Front Porch, River Rock Sells this Craftsman Home

“Some people will say we should have been more authentic,” she said, “Others will say what a great way to blend the old with the new.”

People who got a glimpse of the home during the Hanchett Park home tour in late May got to make up their own minds. And it’s hard to imagine anyone would disagree that the house is a lovely blend indeed.

Master Bedroom - Home Design Ideas: Front Porch, River Rock Sells this Craftsman Home

Julia - lookiloos.com

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Favorite Spots Regaled at Hanchett Park Home Tour

Monday, June 8th, 2009

Perhaps this woman on the Hanchett Park Home Tour summed it up best when she said, “It’s such a surprise to see all these gems all around.” The little known San Jose neighborhood opened five historic homes, from California Craftsmen to an Italian Revival in late May. Listen to what they liked best and check out photos of these unique homes. Also, stayed tuned to Lookiloos over the next few weeks as we profile each home in greater depth, with stories and photo shoots of great architectural detailing, interior decor, and intimate and grand gardens. Lookiloos had early access to one of the tour’s grandest homes. Here’s the story: Italian Revival Like Hollywood Movie Set

Watch the video:

Related Stories:
New Craftsman in Los Gatos
Doings of a Mad Architect

Before and After: Outdoor Fireplace Transforms Backyard

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

Before and After: Outdoor Fireplace Transforms Backyard

It would be difficult to find anyone who could say that Vicki Petulla’s backyard was ever anything but elegant and lovely. From the modern-lined furniture to the graceful urns and vintage outside mirror reflecting the patio, this was always a stylish spot. But exit the mobile chiminea and insert a sturdy stone fireplace and voila! Something extra special just happened.

“We created this to be an outdoor room because those French doors are open all the time,” Vicki said of the doors off her kitchen and breakfast room. (A minute after Desiree took this photo, the three of us were sitting here sipping a crisp white wine. Now this is my kind of yard!)

Here’s the before shot:
Before Photo: Outdoor Fireplace Transforms Backyard

What a change! She and her family now have a dramatic focal point to their San Jose backyard, made of Monterey stone and built by Martin Delariba. And they have a mantel on which to place — get this — a big screen TV. She and her husband and school-age son have movie nights in the backyard where Vicki will bring out a plate of broken chocolate and marshmallows. Now how wonderful is that? Add red wine and I’m there! (again!) Vicki said that just recently, the family watched “It’s a Wonderful Life” outside. I concur.

Here’s another shot Desiree took last fall of the outdoor dining area just off the French doors. Now I’m surveying my backyard looking for a spot for an outdoor mirror. Isn’t it fabulous?

Patio - Before and After: Outdoor Fireplace Transforms Backyard

Want to see what’s behind those French doors? When Lookiloos visited Vicki last fall, we wrote a whole story and included a wonderful photo shoot. Take a look: A Decorator’s Daughter

Desiree also just compiled photos of her favorite outdoor fireplaces for www.hookedonhouses.net. Take a look here: Outdoor Fireplaces

Julia - lookiloos.com

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Willow Glen: Spanish-Style Home with a Dining Room Fireplace

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

Willow Glen: Spanish-Style Home with a Dining Room Fireplace

Becky Fricke had fantasized that one day she would have a fireplace in her dining room. “I thought it was a pipe dream,” she said.

Spanish Mission Walkway - Willow Glen: Spanish-Style Home with a Dining Room Fireplace

But destiny seemed set.

The couple were taking a walk through their Willow Glen neighborhood when they noticed the For Sale sign in front of a charming Spanish bungalow with a red tile roof and a brick-walled courtyard in the front. The house was empty.

She peeked in, and there it was. The curved plaster fireplace with green tile trim was nestled in the corner of the room. And an alcove next to it looked like the perfect size for their large credenza. They moved from window to window, looking into the large living room and master bedroom in the back.

“We knew it when we saw it,” she said. “It has Old World charm. The floor plan is great. We have three young kids. We just knew when we saw it it would work out for us.”

Dining Room Fireplace - Willow Glen: Spanish-Style Home with a Dining Room Fireplace

The couple has maintained the original floor plan, but added a counter-height breakfast bar in the nook. They replaced a modern jacuzzi tub with an old-fashioned clawfoot tub and finished the small basement, converting it into a cozy wine cellar/tasting room.

Just off the master bedroom at the back of the house is another stunning fireplace — this one in the backyard. The couple completely re-landscaped the small space, removing grass and building a patio, fireplace and fountains. A trellis behind the fireplace gives the yard total privacy.

The couple opened the house for the Willow Glen Home Tour in early May. Willow Glen Home and Garden shop on Lincoln Avenue helped get it ready in all its fine detail.

The house is not quite 1,900 square feet, but works just fine for this young family. The living room doubles as the family and TV room. With a flat screen TV from The Art of TV (www.theartoftv.com), based in San Jose, the screen appears as a beautifully-framed mirror when not in use.

Wine Cellar Mural - Willow Glen: Spanish-Style Home with a Dining Room Fireplace

Julia - lookiloos.com

(photographs by Desiree Northend)

You might also enjoy these stories:

Spanish Bungalow Goes Soho Chic
Spanish Bungalow for Willow Glen Woman
A Decorator’s Daughter Loves Small House Style
Gentle Remodel on Spanish Bungalow
Before and After – Rustic Kitchen Remodel
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: