Carmel

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:

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Carmel hideaway with Big Sur Vibe:My fantasy

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

IFV_2821

If I were to pinpoint one house that truly made me a Lookiloo, it would be this Carmel hideaway. I first went through it in 2003 when it was on the market, and now, as I gasp for breath, it is for sale again. I saw it last weekend and have been obsessing about it ever since. It doesn’t look like much from the front — a brick wall spans across  — but it hides a midcentury modern masterpiece inside.  Enter through a gate, wander down a brick path and step inside the front door. Stand on the elevated landing and you look across a sunken living room to a wall of windows. Outside is a courtyard with three live oaks and a stone fireplace.

IFV_2903 This house actually has a Lookiloos provenance: I wrote about it in June 2003 in an essay about my open house obsession for the San Jose Mercury News. I wrote about Lookiloos like me — and this was some five years before I co-founded this website. (I’m true blue!)  In it, I wrote this: “A wall of windows overlooking a courtyard of a Carmel open house makes me imagine myself a famous novelist with a salon of literay friends who drive down to Nepenthe for inspiration.”  I called myself the “Walter Mitty of real estate.” Is it so hard to believe, I wrote, “that living in a great space can be inspiring and life-transforming?” I still believe that.

The house has an open staircase with one end attached to the wall and the other suspended by cables.  The whole house is less than 1,400 square feet, with one bedroom and a loft, plus a studio guest house. But with the open, airy feeling and 18-foot ceilings in the living room, it feels huge.

IFV_3033The house was designed by John Gamble, who designed a number of modern homes on the Monterey Peninsula.  And now it’s for sale again, for $1.29 million. If you buy it, please let me know. Maybe you can invite me over.

For more information about the house, contact Merritt  Ringer at Alain Pinel Realtors at mringer@apr.com.

And I’d love to know, if this house were yours, how would you decorate the living room?

You can also look at a couple of my other favorite Carmel and Big Sur house stories:

Big Sur’s Nepenthe Turns 60, But Log Cabin is still home

Dreaming of this Carmel Cottage Compound

Julia Looking Right - Lookiloos

Here’s the complete slideshow:

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

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.

Vintage Garden Statuary of Carmel: Just Perfect

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

carmel statuary 002

While wandering through the sidestreets of Carmel, I came upon a lovely little tudor home — a house that was obviously new, but doing its best to look old. What captured my eye more than the architecture, though, was the vintage garden statuary in the front courtyard. Entwined with flowers and vines, the statues gave this new house had been here a long, long time.

carmel statuary 013

The courtyard, even on this tiny scale, reminded me a bit of some of the tricks of the famous 18th century English landscape designer “Capability Brown.” Although he was known for his naturalistic landscapes surrounding the finest castles, what I remember most about his work were the little “surprises” found at the end of walkways and curving paths. Brown would often punctuate hidden spots with garden statuary so the wanderer might happen upon something unexpected.  That’s the way I felt as I passed this Carmel gem — a statue here, a bird bath-turned-urn there. carmel statuary 007

And the homeowner also had a sense of whimsey, adding a garden nome here and there.

carmel statuary 011Julia Looking Left - LookiloosCarmel never disappoints. And neither did this lovely little garden.

carmel statuary 004

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:

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Outside In – A European-inspired Home and Garden Shop in Aptos

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Outside In - A European-inspired Home and Garden Shop in Aptos

Outside In, a home and garden shop, is easy to miss, situated as it is in a nondescript strip mall in Aptos. But once you find it and step inside, a beautiful world of French linens, Hungarian pottery and American chandeliers opens up before you.

The shop is the passion of John and Jerri Hammond, who have traveled the globe looking for unique pieces and whimsical gifts. Along the way, “we try to support the small family businesses around the world,” Jerri said. “Small factories are closing down. You try to help save some of them.”

Humming Bird Feeders - Outside In - A European-inspired Home and Garden Shop in Aptos

Their travels take them to Thailand and Cambodia, India and Paris, where they have found colorful glass torcheres for the garden (from $10.95), distinctive pottery with raised glazes of golds and rusts (from $29.95), to jeweled napkin rings (from $3.95)

They also discover unique local finds, from rooster glasses hand painted in Carmel (from $12.95), to a stunning $2,000 chandelier from New Jersey.

One alcove is filled with melamine plates, bowls and platters, each more substantial than regular plastic and embossed with Italian-style patterns. Perfect for summer parties in the backyard or poolside (or to add a bit of non-breakable sophistication to everyday family dining indoors.)

Table Linens - Outside In - A European-inspired Home and Garden Shop in Aptos

The shop is most known for its large apple-scented candles for $48 that burn for 200 hours. (Realtors buy them by the box load for open houses. The shop once sold 75 of them in one hour.)

The Hammonds also opened a children’s gift boutique a couple of doors down in the same complex, filled with everything from tutus to animal wallpaper, Chinese silk baby hats to vintage-style wind-up toys.

Outside In
7568 Soquel Drive
Aptos, CA 95003
just north of State Park Drive, which can be accessed from Highway One.

Julia - lookiloos.com

If you stop by Outside In in Aptos, you mind also enjoy visiting other antique and garden shops along Soquel Drive:
Wisteria
Center Street Antiques

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Big Sur Nepenthe – 60th Birthday and Readers Want more Photos!

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Big Sur Nepenthe - 60th Birthday and Readers Want more Photos!

Lookiloos received so much reaction to our story about the 60th anniversary of Big Sur’s Nepenthe restaurant that we decided to give you more! More photos that is. If you haven’t heard of Nepenthe, it’s a fabulous example of mid-century modern architecture in 1949, perched on the cliffs of California’s coast. Lookiloos also took readers to the lesser known, but fascinating log cabin just above the restaurant — a cabin that Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth bought for a love nest away from Hollywood in 1944, a cabin that is still home to the granchildren of the couple who founded Nepenthe in 1949.

So, here, please enjoy a whole slideshow of photos from Nepenthe as well as more shots of the log cabin inside and out. And if you ever find yourself heading down Highway One, make sure to stop. It’s just south of Ventana Inn and the Post Ranch. (On the coast side, of course.)

Nepenthe
48510 Highway #1
Big Sur, California 93920
(831) 667-2345

(Historic photos are courtesy of Nepenthe. Cabin photos by Julia Prodis Sulek for www.lookiloos.com.)

Julia - lookiloos.com

Big Sur’s Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

For 60 years at Big Sur’s famed Nepenthe restaurant, cameras have been clicking away on the obvious – the cliffside view of the dramatic Pacific coastline, the iconic, mid-century restaurant of glass and wood, the grand terrace where Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton filmed the 1965 classic, “The Sandpiper.”

But just above the terrace is a humble, but intriguing dwelling hiding in plain sight from guests awed by the captivating view.

Log Cabin 1930 - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

Behind a brick facade is a structure of logs and adobe cement that Hollywood legend Orson Welles and his wife Rita Hayworth bought on a romantic whim in 1944.

This weekend, as Nepenthe celebrates the 60th anniversary of the restaurant’s opening, we turn our lens toward this tiny and surprisingly vibrant place that is still home to members of the same fascinating family that founded Nepenthe and run it today.

The Bohemian aura of Nepenthe, the beatniks, the belly dancing, the poetry, the parties began in this cabin. In those days, the cabin was the first stop for guests.

“The log cabin was the hub of everything that went on,” says Romney “Nani” Steele, who grew up in the cabin with her grandparents and cousins in the 1960s. “The restaurant was built in such a way, it was somewhat added to the cabin,’’ she says. “My grandmother created a whole life behind the restaurant.”

Bill Lolly and Kids - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

Her grandparents, Bill and Lolly Fassett, moved into the three-room cabin in 1947 with their five children and within two years had built Nepenthe, naming it for the Greek word meaning “no sorrow.”

The cabin and 12 acres had cost them $12,000 after Welles and Hayworth divorced and sold them the property. The Hollywood couple had planned the 1925 cabin as a getaway when they purchased it from a hiking group. The stars even measured for curtains, but never returned.

Renting the cabin at the time was author Henry Miller, who had already written the scandalous “Tropic of Cancer.” He moved out when the Fassetts bought the cabin, but became lifelong friends with Bill Fassett, a gregarious storyteller who ran a magazine in Carmel. Lolly Fassett was a cultured, artistic woman in her own right, having lived her teen years in Europe as the traveling companion of her grandmother, artist Jane Gallatin Powers, who was part of the original Carmel art scene.

Holly and Erin - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

The Fassetts were great entertainers and envisioned Nepenthe even though Highway One had been open only a decade and traffic through the area was light. Lolly, influenced by the great piazzas of Capri, insisted that architect Rowan Maiden – a disciple of Frank Lloyd Wright – design a great terrace for dancing and a restaurant that opened to the air. It was Lolly who made the adobe bricks and laid them for the giant round fireplace on the terrace. When Nepenthe opened April 24, 1949, about 500 people attended the grand opening. Photographs were shot for architectural magazines.

The guests had traveled 30 miles of winding road from Carmel and beyond. Life in Big Sur, then, as now, was dictated by the ebb and flow of nature. In the winters, the roads washed out and in summers, wildfires whipped through.

“It created tension and upheaval and a dynamic quality of people,” says Kirk Gafill, a Fassett grandson, who grew up in the cabin and runs Nepenthe with his mother, Holly Fassett.

From artists to hippies, his grandmother welcomed them into her living room.

Filming On Terrace - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

“When we were growing up, nightly 10, 15, 20 people were in the living room visiting with her,” says Steele, whose book “My Nepenthe” will be published this fall (www.mynepenthebook.com). “People came in and napped there.” Some of those wayfarers fell in love with the Fassett daughters, married them, had children, then continued on their journeys. Four of those children spent part of their childhood living in the cabin.

“Our absolutely favorite thing to do was to lie on my grandmother’s long row of beds and look out the window with our hands perched under our chins,” says Steele, 43. “People would get up and dance. Someone would be in the corner reading poetry or playing music. I can remember the sun coming through the window and watching for hours what was going on.”

Every once in a while, her grandmother would say, “Go dance!” “She would wrap scarves around my waist and we’d whirl around,” Steele says. “We’d do that for guests and we would come back up the stairs. She always had plenty of costumes, petticoats, Flamenco costumes, just amazing stuff.”

Piggyback 1968 - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

Erin Gafill, 45, Steele’s cousin who is an artist, says that “the line between fantasy and reality was totally blurred. There was so much magic and glamour around here.” She has a foggy memory of lying on her back as a toddler on the terrace, looking up at the sky between the branches of the old oak tree.

“This man appeared and scooped me up. I couldn’t stop crying,” Gafill recalls. “Years later my mom told me this was Richard Burton, and that Liz Taylor took me from his arms and handed me to my mom, who was sitting on the bleachers in shock at the whole thing.”

It was 1964 and the movie stars were filming “The Sandpiper” on the terrace. Its theme song, “The Shadow of Your Smile” became a classic. When the movie about an artist’s illicit affair with a schoolmaster premiered in 1965, Nepenthe was transformed. The Fassetts opened Nepenthe from seasonally to year-round.

After Lolly died in 1986, Gafill returned to the cabin, raised two children, and still lives there her husband.

Picture Frames - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

“It seemed like an impossible place to live,” she says, recalling her decision to make the move. The cabin “was so psychologically important to us. I had to make sure the change was OK with everybody.”

She’s done her best to preserve the spirit of the cabin. It still has three main rooms, including the kitchen and big stone fireplace. An extra bedroom was added along the way. Behind the door of the log cabin’s kitchen is the industrial prep kitchen for the restaurant. When the adobe cement began to chip away on the side of the cabin facing the terrace, a brick facade was overlaid to protect it from the wind and fog. Inside, she covered the cabin’s redwood walls with her great-great grandmother’s paintings. Family and restaurant crew took them to safety when the wildfires came dangerously close to Nepenthe last summer, closing the restaurant for three weeks.

Outdoor Dining - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

As the extended family gathers this weekend for the anniversary, the cabin will beckon them in. And as they planned all along, there will be dancing on the terrace.

Julia - lookiloos.com

(Top black and white photograph of Nepenthe taken in1950 by Morley Baer, ©2009 by the Morley Baer Photography Trust, Santa Fe; Lee Harbick Collection, California History Room, Monterey Public Library. Color photo in cabin with Erin Gafill on right and her mother, Holly, by Tom Birmingham.)

Related stories:
Artist Getaway on Big Sur Coast
California Daily Art: Landscape Paintings
Carmel Valley Cabin
Artist in Residence

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

Update 2:

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Small House Renovation Maintains Charm

Saturday, March 7th, 2009

Small House Renovation Maintains Charm

Judy Stanley has a recurring dream. In it, her husband announces, “I sold the house. We’re moving.” And in every dream, Judy cries over and over.

“I love this house,” she said.

White Gate - Small House Renovation Maintains Charm

She loved it when it was a two-bedroom, one-bath home she bought in 1994 with her husband, Guy, and his young son. And she loves it now, 15 years and two more children later after a gentle remodel in 2006 that added another bedroom and two bathrooms — plus a just-the-right-size craft room for her decorative belt buckle business.

Indeed, there is a lot to love about this 1,600-square-foot, one-story house in Los Gatos that was built around 1950 with only 1,225 square feet. A little old lady had been the only owner of the house. And when they bought it, the 10,000 square-foot lot was huge, but overgrown. The best feature, she said, was the sprawling brick patio off the back, which — even with the extra 440-square-foot addition — remained mostly intact.

Judy Stanley - Small House Renovation Maintains Charm

On a late winter morning, a white gate and big magnolia beckon visitors to the front door. Once inside, a stunning, original white marble fireplace mantle grabs your attention.

The couple hired San Jose designer Greg Ybarra of ADG Design to reconfigure the bedrooms, hallway and bathroom wing of the house. An original bedroom was converted to a master bath and Judy’s craft room. And the children’s bedrooms were added on the back of the house.

“They have a beautiful lot, nice open space,” Ybarra said. “We didn’t want to spoil that.”

Judy spends a lot of time in her backyard, entertaining, watching the kids play and planting her huge vegetable garden. On the patio, there is room for a big table and chairs, two chaise lounges and three fountains. She also uses the space to glue pearls, beads and other decorations to belt buckles that she sells at Bella Rosa Boutique in Los Gatos and European Jewelers in Carmel.

The couple had done a kitchen remodel 10 years ago, with white cabinets and tile counters. During that renovation, she penned a note and slipped it into the wall. It was written with love and said something like, “If you’re reading this, we’re dead and gone. Hope you enjoy this house as much as we did.”

It’s hard to imagine anyone wouldn’t.

Julia - lookiloos.com

Related stories:
Gentle Remodel on Spanish Bungalow
Colonial Revival Home Renovation – Whitney Wright Mansion
Before and After – Rustic Kitchen Remodel
Los Gatos Estate – La Estancia – A Mission Revival Kept Lively by David and Larry
Restored Italianate Victorian Home Revives Neighborhood
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

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San Antonio and 10th – Carmel – Open House

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

San Antonio and 10th - Carmel - Open House

 
List Price:  $4,679,000
 

Open House:
Saturday 1/24 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM
Sunday 1/25 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM
 
Bedroom: 4 Bathroom: 3.5 Sq. Ft:  2,460

Description:
one block to beach, construction just completed, a beautifully finished cottage-style home. RARE FIND on oversized corner lot with 4 bedrooms / 3.5 baths. Spacious master suite, living room, dining & kitchen areas. Private courtyard with fireplace and outdoor shower. Other amenities: Oak plank floors, purified water, built-in custom cabinetry, pantry/laundry room, more.
 
Agent:  Christine Kashfi
Company:  Coldwell Banker
Phone:  831 594 4294
Email:  christine.kashfi@camoves.com
Website:  www.camoves.com
 

Address:
SE Corner San Antonio and 10th
Carmel, CA 93921