California Living

Great Family Home in Los Gatos

Thursday, May 24th, 2012

This home is ready a for a family to move in and throw a party! You will love this space—and there is plenty of it. The grown-up living and dining rooms are open to each other.

The dining room has french doors opening to the backyard.

The kitchen is very spacious with cherry cabinets and granite counters.

The backyard is an entertainer’s dream. Large patio with outdoor kitchen that opens to two large lawn areas and a pool. There is so much more to this home—definitely check it out. Don’t forget to see the sunroom, artist cottage and the other backyard photos!

Tuscan Design: Indoor-outdoor, Stonework Galore

Monday, October 24th, 2011

In the 10 months it took to build this house from the ground up, a lot happened in the Wetmore family. Diane’s mother, the matriarch of the family, died, and her daughter got married. What she realized then was just how important it was that this new home become the center, the gathering place, for the family.

And to Diane and Ray, whose four grown daughters all attended St. Martin of Tours, that meant big, open spaces for entertaining, both inside and out. And that starts at the majestic front door, a work of iron art with wavy glass windows that open behind it, letting the California breeze blow from the front all the way to the glass doors that slide into the wall in the back. The family graciously opened their home for the Rose Garden Homes Tour this fall.

Ray is a commercial masonry contractor and the home that Diane describes as part Arizona, part Florida and part Hawaii needed some signature stonework. With the help of architect Chris Spaulding and designer Susan Powell, they created a stone alcove that can be glimpsed from the entryway as well as a stone-covered stove hood. Even the risers on the curving staircase are covered in a distinctive tile to add interest. The living room ceiling soars two-stories high, with windows upon windows to let light in. The front room was designed as a “mancave” with leather sofas, a wet bar, stone fireplace and vintage wine barrels. Limestone tile floors make a seamless transition from the living room through the wall of windows(that disappear when opened) to the covered patio, complete with a Tuscan-style dining table and plans for a full-service barbecue area.

With a gracious master bedroom downstairs, the upstairs is reserved for family, including a nursery for the Wetmore’s grandchildren.

“Everyone comes here and stays here,” Diane said. “It was built to bring the family together.”

Here’s the complete slideshow:

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

Charming Cabin Style at San Clemente Rancho

Saturday, August 27th, 2011


Don’t be fooled by the approach. To get to the 100 cabins nestled deep in the hills behind Carmel Valley, you first wind along a luxurious golf course and pass new multimillion-dollar estates.

But when the road narrows and the oaks make way for redwoods, you reach the old gate at San Clemente Rancho, a private enclave dating back half a century. What the 1960s-era cabins here lack in square footage, they make up for in vintage charm and, in some cases, high style.

Folks from San Francisco to Salinas have discovered this special place and brought their own sense of style – from modern organic to rustic to Americana – to these little abodes. And at nearly every one, you’ll find deck railings covered with beach towels and walking sticks for hikes and buckets at back doors for catching bullfrogs at the lake.

Three cabin owners opened their doors for a peek into how they made the most of their small spaces by combining a respect for the past with their own family heirlooms and contemporary touches.

The look: Modern organic

Kathi Fanelli-Mann, a Bay Area interior designer, shares her one-bedroom, 600-square-foot cabin with her husband, playwright Michael Norman Mann, and their two sons.

Their large Hollister home is filled with vivid colors – but not their tiny cabin at the rancho.

“I wanted to keep it peaceful in here with the color scheme,” she said. The existing whitewashed redwood walls drove the theme and texture. From the bedroom on one side, through the kitchen, she covered the floor with a neutral seagrass – a forgiving flooring that hides the tracked-in dirt and dries quickly when the boys leave their wet bathing suits behind. The chairs are covered in linen, the windows in canvas. A block of wood serves as an end table. Fern leaves picked from the property and propped in oversize jars provide the organic color that brings in the outdoors.

The most stunning focal point is reserved for the bedroom – a huge photo-on-canvas of a snow-covered Yellowstone bison that Mann took on vacation. But this lone bedroom is no master bedroom. Indeed, the Manns gave it up for their boys and flanked the buffalo with a pair of twin beds. A mirrored cabinet from Ikea provides storage and adds visual space – and a bit of sparkle – to the room. A jar next to one of the beds keeps a collection of wild turkey and quail feathers the boys gathered on the property.


An added benefit of giving the children the bedroom? Close the door and hide the mess.

The couple sleeps in the living room, in a sleek daybed with decorative pillows that doubles as a lounge space.

The real magic is outdoors, where an old patio lined by a low stone wall nestles into a grove of live oaks and a new deck overlooks a fish pond, Mann’s favorite place to write.

“In the evenings,” Fanelli-Mann said, “we sit outside, wrap ourselves in blankets and watch the bats come out.”


The look: Americana

When Lee Wilson first saw the Blackrock Creek surging past the cabin for sale at San Clemente Rancho, “I was absolutely enthralled.”

As a kid, he had spent time at a cabin in Boulder Creek with a stream running under it, so “when I saw this I thought, oh, I’ve got to have that. This is where I’ve got to be.”

The previous owners had left the one-bedroom cabin with a loft furnished – with a sofa, leather chair, an oak table and a pair of monumental elk trophy heads on the wall.

“I wasn’t real gung-ho about keeping those,” wife Terry Wilson said of the trophies. She thought their grown daughter “would have a fit and not want to be up there.”

But they didn’t seem to bother her, “so we just left them.”

They were part of the history of the cabin, after all.

An avid antiques collector, Terry Wilson filled the cabin with special touches, from vintage canoe paddles and embroidered samplers to a drum coffee table.

“I tried to pick little things that were Americana-looking, the red, white and blue,” she said. Many pieces are sentimental, from a handcrafted hutch her father made, to her mother’s handwoven Mexican blankets and her parents’ wall clock. On the hearth rest four pairs of children’s cowboy boots that belonged to her, her brother and the most recent addition – her granddaughter’s pink ones.

As much as Terry Wilson loves to decorate, it was Lee Wilson who was adamant about several statement pieces he acquired from places as divergent as the San Francisco Design Center (an American flag tile mosaic for the front walkway) and a roadside trash bin (a shutter for above the kitchen sink). He nailed to the kitchen wall his collection of Griswold cast-iron skillets and placed an old cigar-store Indian that was a gift from a friend at the front gate.

“I just walk in and have extreme calm,” he said. “I don’t go to the pool or the rec center because I’ve got everything right here, the best of all worlds.”

The look:Lakeside rustic

As you walk up the front path to this cabin, you spot the green canoe floating against the deck and wonder whether you’ve actually stepped into a Winslow Homer painting.

Carol and Lin Krebs of Los Gatos were smitten when they laid eyes on the lakeside cabin, made from a cedar log kit in 1972 from Pan-Abode, a company still in business today. The cabin was built by Mike and Donna Dormody and their four children, who bought the rancho in 1960 from the McFadden family that homesteaded the land in the 1920s. Some 16 miles southeast of Carmel, the property lies in the Santa Lucia Mountains – a two-hour drive from the South Bay.

At 1,000 square feet with three bedrooms and a loft, “it was one of the biggest,” said Bruce Dormody, who now runs the entire San Clemente Rancho development. While he and his family own the land, they sell 99-year licensing agreements to cabin owners. (Cabins for sale range from the mid-$100,000s to low-$500,000s, plus membership and other fees, and can be seen at www.mountain-cabins.com.)

At the lakeside cabin, Dormody recalled, none of the bedrooms had closets.

That was a problem the Krebs family set out to change, adding a master bedroom, bath and closet. With the help of decorator Lillian Stahl, they added a crackle finish to the kitchen cabinets, vintage chairs and Western paintings. Exposed pipes in the original bathroom were wrapped with rope.

On Fourth of July weekend, they drape red, white and blue bunting from the railing of the wraparound deck and watch the fish jump, the egrets fly and the kids jump off the swimming platform in the middle of Trout Lake. “You really feel you’re floating on the water,” she said.

Inside, she said, “small, comfortable and cozy was what I really wanted.”

And like most of the cabin owners who have found a respite here, that’s exactly what she got.

Here’s the complete slideshow:

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

Just Listed: Gorgeous Saratoga Estate

Thursday, July 7th, 2011


I was packing my bags when I realized, I didn’t have enough $$$ in my check book. This Saratoga dream is perfect for California entertaining.
Kitchen, dining and family rooms are open to each other. The french doors on either side open to the front or back of the home.

Love those draperies in the dining room. They look like elegant ball gowns!

The backyard has a pool, a lawn area and a large outdoor kitchen with a fireplace. So, if you decide to buy, could you please invite me to a party??? Check out the entire virtual tour here.

PS. Earlier our Facebook followers heard that this home is owned by a celebrity—all I can say is it’s a sports figure who has been “transferred”.

Looki What I Found: My Two Favorite Things

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011


I’m not big on after dinner drinks. They just are too sweet for my taste. I decided a little experiment was in order—mixing two of my current favorite things Mionetto Prosecco and Ciao Bella Sorbet. The result was exactly what I was hoping for. This little after dinner cocktail really hit the spot. Perfect for this 90+ degree weather we’ve had to endure. My personal favorites are the lemon and the blood orange sorbet. The prosecco adds an effervescence that screams summer. So here is how I put these magical little treats together.

First, using a small ice cream scoop—scoop out your choice of sorbet into a frozen martini glass— 3 to 5 scoops, depending on the size of your glass. Next, it gets complicated here, slowly pour the Mionetto Prosecco over the mounding sorbet. Viola, you are ready to sip these refreshing little cocktail. One discovery—the sorbet doesn’t melt right away so you are able to refill your glass!

Happy Summer Everyone!

PS. Check out both Mionetto and Ciao Bella on Facebook—Great recipes, events and promotions!

Summer Entertaining in Style

Tuesday, June 21st, 2011


Cathy and Craig Charon took a fifties ranch home and transformed it into a home ready to entertain family and friends. The kitchen and bathrooms have all the bells and whistles. Keeping the same footprint of the home, but reconfigured the layout to add an additional bedroom and half bath.

As you enter, the first thing you notice is the large picture window in the great room and the wonderful view it provides of the backyard. Craig designed the home to capture an indoor/outdoor entertaining space. I have to say this was my favorite part of this home.

The pool is gorgeous and I loved the deck that wraps completely around it.

The outdoor bar area lets you whip up a fruity cocktails or pour a glass of wine without having to run inside. Now, you don’t have to miss one second with your guests.

Here’s the complete slideshow:

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

Bedrooms: French-inspired from master to kids

Tuesday, June 7th, 2011

This Willow Glen home is lovely and sophisticated, with French-inspired crisp linen neutrals throughout the downstairs living spaces. But it was the bedrooms upstairs that I loved the most, from the elegant master suite to the charming and whimsical girls’ bedrooms — one in pink and one in orange.

With help from Steve Gilbert of Willow Glen Home and Garden, the homeowners, Virginia and Brett Nicoletti, have created the kind of rooms you want to live in. They graciously opened their home to the 2011 Willow Glen Lifestyles home tour.

The front bedroom with the orange palette was one of my favorites. Don’t you just love the bedding?

And the youngest daughter also has a haven all in pink. I also love the vintage-style bedspread in this room.

The 1992 home began an update when the Nicolettis bought it in 2000. They extended hardwoods throughout the house and antiqued the kitchen cabinets.   The result is an elegant space, upstairs and down.

 

Here’s the complete slideshow:

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

Ticket Giveaway: Willow Glen Home Tour April 30-May 1

Friday, April 15th, 2011

Don’t you just want to get into this charming English tudor? You can just imagine it’s as lovely on the inside. But hey, why imagine? It is one of five houses, plus a garden, that is being featured in the 2011 Willow Glen Home Tour. And Lookiloos has a pair of tickets — worth $60! — to give away.

Here’s a little advance info about the other homes and garden you will see:

* A remodeled ranch with a wall of windows in the family room leading to a gorgeous pool and yard;

* A southwestern-style bachelor pad with a new kitchen;

* A recently renovated contemporary home filled with a collection of local artwork — and another window wall overlooking a koi pond

* A lovely garden, tended by the homeowner who is a master gardener, features drought resistant plants.  This will also be the setting for a boutique featuring local artist and plants for sale, as well as box lunches.

 

If you’d like to win a pair of tickets , leave comment below otherwise, please go to sjdn.org to buy tickets that benefit the San Jose Day Nursery.  Tickets are $30 each and box lunches are $13.  Tickets may also be purchased on Lincoln Ave. at Willow Glen Home and Garden, Domus or Grace on the Ave. Tickets are also being sold at Able Printing on Meridian at Hamilton Ave.

 

 

Just Listed: Bocce Ball in Saratoga

Saturday, March 26th, 2011

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Who wouldn’t love coming home to your own bocce ball court AND in Saratoga! So, obviously one of my favorite features was the court. My other favorite was the family room and master bath. Once upon a time I shared a bathroom ( yep you got it ONE bathroom) with one husband and 4 boys—so I can say I love looking at master baths. You can see the whole virtual tour here. Be sure to check out the extra wide pic of the master bath.

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Offered at: $1,299,999
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 3

Desiree Looking Left - Lookiloos

Just Listed: Resort Living in Los Gatos

Friday, January 21st, 2011

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Rinconada Hills has a new listing—and it’s fabulous! Sitting on 1 1/2 acres this home has some of the most wonderful views and let’s not forget the country club living. Living in Rinconada Hills you have access to tennis courts, swimming pool and coming soon—bocce ball.
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But, on to the home— The living and dining space is huge and sporting those wonderful views. The master bedroom has a huge deck to take in California sunsets. The backyard has a great fire pit and a hot tub. The grounds in Ricconada Hills has many ponds and little waterfalls. I can imagine after a stressful day, a walk around the grounds or a glass of wine on the deck would wash away any weight you felt on your shoulders. Check out the listing here.

Bedrooms: 4

Baths: 3

Asking: $1,599,000

Desiree Looking Left - Lookiloos