Decorating

Lookiloos: Home (finally!) for the Holidays

Saturday, December 25th, 2010

IMG_5321Lisa Murray was getting down to the wire. House guests from Australia were expected that afternoon, barely two weeks after she moved her family of four out of their tiny cottage on the back of the property and into their newly remodeled house in Los Gatos.

IMG_5346Unpacked boxes were everywhere. Only the living room and kitchen looked presentable. And she needed a privacy curtain for the front bathroom or her guests would be flashing the neighbors. She had already raced around Indian shops in Sunnyvale looking for fabric that would work in the iridescent blue bathroom and found nothing. As she was unpacking a box full of old clothes she hadn’t seen in a year, she pulled out a sari-like dress.

Hmm, she thought. “Dress or curtain? Dress or curtain?”

She took out the shears, cut it, and began the whirr of the sewing machine.IMG_5347

The entire remodel, which has been a year in construction and chronicled by Lookiloos and the Mercury News, has been a hands-on, nail-biting project from the start. Murray is an artist and wanted the home to reflect her avant-garde style as well as their international roots. Like many Silicon Valley families, they have traveled a circuitous route to get here. Murray’s husband, Craig Hinkley, is an Australia native. She grew up in Canada. With their two children, now 14 and 12, they have traveled the world and the United States, moving every two years or so following Hinkley’s jobs in high tech.

IMG_5323Unlike other homes Murray has transformed to suit their needs and prepare for resale over the years, she designed this one with creative abandon. She isn’t worried about pleasing a potential buyer anymore. After more than two years enjoying the life and climate of Silicon Valley and the town tucked into the foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains, they plan to settle down this time.

So when they moved their family, plus their rambunctious boxer Millie, back into the house just in time for Christmas, they began to feel a whole new sense of home. And with a giant angel on their shoulder — or tucked under the bed until the towering stained-glass window was safely installed in the living room — they have survived rainstorms and mud bogs, accidents and injuries, cramped quarters and a leaking storage unit that left many family keepsakes in ruins.

And now, after all that, Murray said, “We finally stopped moving, stopped renovating, stopped the dirt, stopped the noise and just put on the music.”

They can finally sit back and enjoy the home they built for no one but themselves. The peacock-blue backsplash in the kitchen. The quatrefoil ironwork on the banister. The colorful Moroccan lanterns above the dining table and the industrial pendants over the kitchen island.

IMG_5336And across the room from the stained-glass angel that casts colorful light across the floor is a sensuous portrait of Proserpina, the Roman goddess of spring, that Murray painted on the sliding pocket door.

“By saying to yourself, ‘I am not going to move; this is the house I would like my grandchildren to come to,’ you make it in a way that is incredibly personal,” she said. “You don’t need to answer to neutrality. You can take who you are and run with it.”

All along the way, her contractor, Vinnie Tran of VT Construction, put up with her brainstorms and second-guesses and finished the project within the year he promised.

Murray even changed the size and scale of the house early on, giving up a formal dining room and more interior space when they reined in their budget and decided to better enjoy what the Bay Area has to offer that their former residences of Charlotte, N.C., and Seattle didn’t — great weather. Instead of a formal living room, they now have a covered terrace.

The landscaping will have to wait. Inside, boxes remained unpacked and rooms undecorated. But after a full year of the parents sleeping in the cottage and the kids in bunk beds in the garage, they are all sleeping under the same roof.

Even now, they look back fondly on the past year. Son Cal says his best Christmas was in the cottage when they decorated the Charlie Brown Christmas tree in about 20 minutes and the smell of ham filled every square inch of the 360-square-foot dwelling.

IMG_5348In the new house the other night, Murray lit the outdoor fireplace and called the family to join her.

“I said to everyone, put down the homework, stop the texting, get off the phone. Let’s sit and listen to the crackling fire and the music and the frogs from the creek,” she said. “Everyone stop and be thankful for this moment and where we are.”

And then, for a memorable moment, the four of them sat together and talked.
Contact Julia Prodis Sulek at jsulek@mercurynews.com. Read the previous stories in “This Darned House” saga at www.lookiloos.com.

Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

LESSONS LEARNED

Have a renovation in your future? Here is Lisa Murray’s advice to other homeowners:

Know your style. If you are not confident in your design abilities, hire a designer who can communicate your style to your architect, contractor, stonemason, tiler, painter, etc.

Building green is relatively easy thanks to new state energy efficiency standards. It’s the demolition of the old home that is difficult.

Find a contractor that you like, respect and trust. This choice will affect your experience more than any other one. A good contractor will have good subcontractors and good subs collectively create well-built homes.

Never compromise on your finishes as this is what you will touch and feel every day.

The renovation will seem like it is taking forever. But, upon reflection, it will seem like it went at light speed.

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Decked Out Bedrooms for a Boy and a Girl

Thursday, December 16th, 2010
Rustic Boys Bedroom

Rustic Boys Bedroom

My decorating has always been relegated to the main living areas of my home.  I loved seeing the Holiday Home Tour showing me, how I might transform my kid’s bedrooms into a winter wonderland.  Chris Gomo  worked some holiday magic on two of the bedrooms at the Joye home.

Snowman with Twig Trees

Snowman with Twig Trees

First up is a rustic bedroom for a boy.  I love the  fun Chris used  with plaids, pine cones and twig Christmas Trees.   The overall feeling is warm and cozy—perfect for reading in bed with the covers up to your chin.

Holiday Glam for a Tween

Holiday Glam for a Tween

Chris went to town on this girlie tween room.  I simply adored all the pink and silver. This room was over the top with glamor.  I’m feeling I’d like something like this in my own room—but don’t think my husband would go for all the glitz.

Decked Out Headboard

Decked Out Headboard

So—do you decorate your kids bedrooms for the holidays? Do you go the whole nine yards or little touches? I’d love to know!

I’m also including the Jack and Jill bath between the rooms in the slideshow.

Desiree Looking Left - Lookiloos

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French Chateau in Country Manor Style

Sunday, December 12th, 2010

IMG_5002This beautiful home has been remodeled four times, but it looks like it’s always been just the way it is, situated so perfectly on a Saratoga hilltop. From the living room, you look out upon tree tops. From the dining room behind it, floor-to-ceiling windows look on the lovely — and level — back lawn. And the kitchen area opens to a charming courtyard.

IMG_5006What started as a simple ranch house built in 1954 has been transformed over the past 20 years by the Kenny family into a French Chateuu in the country manor style. And Linda Floyd of Linda L. Floyd Interior Design has been with the  homeowners every step of the way.  The home decor is French inspired with trims and tassels and elegance.  Linda also decorated the living room for the holidays and the Summit League Homes for the Holidays tour.

IMG_5027The dining room was spectacular for the tour, as Sharon Watts of Peony created an astonishing table display.

IMG_5053David Stonesifer of David Stonesifer Interior Design and Decoration appointed the family room, including a couple of oil paintings he created himself.

Debi Campbell of Cover Story on Main Street in Los Altos added sparked to the kitchen and bath.

IMG_5031Upstairs, the daughter’s bedroom was decorated by Wahlberg Designs, The Duke & The Duchess of Morgan Hill. Saffron and Genevieve in Santa Cruz created the boy’s room with wonderful linen bed spreads and the master bedroom and bath received the special touch of Warmth Company from Aptos. Tiffany and Co. created a special display in the upper hallway.

IMG_5013Lulu Pom of Los Gatos appointed the study; La Jardiniere brought whiteness and light to the backyard and Color in the Garden from San Jose created an inviting front entrance.
IMG_5061

Julia Looking Right - Lookiloos

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Not Too Shabby-ette Hosts Grand Opening; Open House

Friday, December 10th, 2010

NTSNot Too Shabby, one of my favorite stores where I have found some of my favorite pieces, is opening a new boutique across the parking lot from the main store on Bascom Avenue in San Jose this weekend (Dec. 11-12). Owner Vikki Graham is calling it Not Too Shabby-ette. Inside is a sign that says ”Paris Flea Market,” and as one of her helpers says of the boutique, it’s the flea market’s “French cousin.”

NTSInside, you will see vintage decor, from wrought iron garden chairs to sparkling chandeliers; sterling silver pieces to crystal compotes. (Not Too Shabby is where my Lookiloos partner, Desiree, and I fought over a set of ultra-cool Asian fretwork iron chairs and where I found a mirror that is going to be the centerpiece of my remodeled bathroom.)

Not only can customers rent the charming new space for parties — the interior setting with vintage tables, chairs and china is perfect for showers, bridesmaid’s luncheons, mother-daughter teas — but some of the garden arches and benches can be rented out for special occasions as well.

NTSAn open house is set for this weekend, 11-4 on both Saturday and Sunday. Mention Lookiloos and enjoy 10 percent off of items in the new store!  In the short term, Not Too Shabby-ette will only be open on weekends, but once Vikki is up and running, expect full hours.

Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

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A Little Hollywood Glam For My Dining Room

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

DiningSo far, out of all the areas in my home that I’m decking out for the holidays—I’m loving how my dining room turned out! Keeping with the green walls and my silver candle holder that’s mounted to the wall—I decided to do everything in silver, glass and mirrors with touches of green. I took an old wreath frame and wrapped a white boa around it. I finished it off with a string of very tiny silver jingle bells.

Dining Buffet The large vases were from my husband’s company function years ago. I filled them with different sized silver jingle bells. I purchased the bleached dried flowers and the greenery was from the bottom of our tree—love the zero cost there!  Then I gathered all my frames that were either silver or mirrored and added old holiday or winter photos. I loved putting this room together.

Boa and Hydrangea

So, I’m adding my foyer to this post since it’s leads right into the dinning room. I’ve been collecting nutcrackers for about 15 years and they always have guarded the staircase.

IMG_5301I’m not sure where I’d put them if not on the stairs. Now, it’s time to put all the empty boxes back in the attic until January.

Hope you enjoyed Christmas at my home!

Desiree Looking Left - Lookiloos

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Men’s Study-Smoking Lounge Enlivened with Style, Collections

Wednesday, December 8th, 2010

Men's Smoking Lounge by lulu Pom

Men's Smoking Lounge by lulu Pom

Laura Ziffer and Linda McFalone of lulu Pom in Los Gatos always seem to get great spaces to work with when the Summit League’s Homes for the Holidays tour comes around. And this year was no exception when they were asked to decorate the study as well as the wine cellar of the Kenny home.

In a manner of days, the duo transformed what had looked more like a woman’s sitting room into a masculine man’s smoking room, or as Linda and Laura put it, “a history-reading, cigar-smoking, absynthe-drinking room.”

Niche with collections and curiosities

Niche with collections and curiosities

The homeowners were collectors themselves. The husband had shelves of war books, and collections of lighters and leather boxes. “We regrouped and edited and added to,”  Laura said.

Some of the “added to” included the central focal point — a pair of vintage wing-back chairs whose dark wooden frames were bleached and wire-brushed, then reupholstered in a faux bois fabric with nickle nail heads and placed atop a zebra-skin rug for a “pattern on pattern” look.

Linda and Laura are expert at pairing vintage with modern and did so in the niche, where they replaced a sofa with a sparkling  starburst mirror and a credenza to display books, bankers’ boxes, crystal decanters and curiosities. They painted the ceiling a high-gloss gray to add more sparkle.

Absynthe glasses at the ready

Absynthe glasses at the ready

The wine cellar “was fabulous already,” Linda said, so they had fun getting it ready for a “blind wine tasting.”  They wrapped wine bottles in brown paper bags then tied large stylized numbers on each for guests to rate their tastes. Big candles were placed on the table, surrounded by galvanized wine stools. (The numbers, galvanized stools and candles can all be purchased at their Los Gatos shop on Main Street.)

While the spaces may have been designed with men in mind, the many women on the tour certainly wanted to linger.

Wine cellar
Wine cellar

Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

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A Peek Of My Home At The Holidays

Sunday, December 5th, 2010
Family Room Mantel

Family Room Mantel

Well, as I announced on the Lookiloos Facebook page, because I needed a deadline—I am showing you you all what I have been busy with since packing up everything turkey!

Today I am sharing my family room mantel. I’ve been feeling very nostalgic lately and so I dug up some old childhood memories to display.  I keep fussing with it and I might be driving my kids nuts, since I have to stand back to look at it then cross in front of the television to adjust then cross back in to ponder my new modification.  This has been known to go on for 15 minutes at a time.  “Mom, do you know how hard it is to play Black Ops with the Christmas music blaring and now you keep crossing in front—it looks good enough” said by, well really you could insert any one of 4 names here.

Raggedy and Friends

Raggedy and Friends

I loved Raggedy Ann when I was little and my Grandmother gave me the books Christmas of 1973. This Cinderella clock woke me up for years. Charlie, my husband purchased the polar bear puzzle on a trip to Park City, Utah for our kids 10 years ago.  He is always a favorite.  We usually he see who can assemble him the fastest each year.  I have never won the title.

Kalimba

Kalimba

Charlie was 12 he and his mom split the cost of this Kalimba at a local music shop.

Poinsettias

Poinsettias

So,  that’s my family room mantel.  Next up will be my living room and the tree.  I’d love to know—do you decorate every room in your house or just a few.  I currently have 4 areas decorated but debating on more.  My grandmother was always great at saying “WHEN.”  Me sometimes not so much!

Desiree Looking Left - Lookiloos

Ticket Giveaway! Summit League Holiday Homes Tour

Saturday, November 27th, 2010

A glimpse from the 2008 tour

A glimpse from the 2008 tour

One of the most elegant home tours is right around the corner and we’re giving away a pair of tickets to the lucky winner! The Summit League is presenting its Homes for the Holidays tour on Thursday and Friday, Dec. 3 and 4th.

Three beautiful Saratoga homes will be featured this year, each decorated in full holiday regalia by local designers and florists.

If it was this great in 2008, imagine 2010.

If it was this great in 2008, imagine 2010.

The first is a blend of traditional and California contemporary in one of Saratoga’s oldest neighborhoods on Farwell Avenue.  It was built in 1959 as a traditional east coast Williamsburg-style house and in 1999 received a total reconstruction and expansion.

The second house is a contemporary Tuscan home built in 2002 with a classic red-tiled roof, arched windows and warm interiors. The family built the house around outdoor entertaining. The resort-inspired grounds include a mosaic-tiled pool, terraces with wisteria-covered pergolas, fireplaces and a full kitchen with a pizza oven.

3114634199_5c01d1cf04_b[1]The third house is a French Chateau built atop a Saratoga foothill. The entry hall features a pier mirror that the family brought around the Horn in the late 1800s. A “tree house” office was added during the most recent renovation and the dining room decor evokes the feeling of a french garden. The renovated kitchen is state-of-the-art.

Leave a comment about why you want to go on the Summit League Homes for the Holidays tour and we’ll select a winner for a pair of tickets!

Julia Looking Right - Lookiloos

Traditional Home Gets Modern Addition

Sunday, October 24th, 2010

IMG_3287 Walk in the front door of this charming 1940 brick cottage and the front rooms are as traditional as you’d imagine: graceful dining room on the left, formal living on the right. But step through the front hallway and the back of the house opens to a modern, light-filled space.

Phil Health, who works at Nasa Ames Research Center, and Sam Miller, who owns a Mountain View laundromat, bought the house in June 2009, deciding they wanted to downsize after remodeling their big house on a big lot on the Peninsula.

They turned to San Jose architect Steve Hinderberger to update the dated and chopped up space and add a second story with a master suite. The IMG_3310couple wanted sleek, modern lines, but also were adamant about connecting with the rest of the traditional house. Hinderberger used wood detailing in rich stains, but gave modern details, including aluminum accents, on the stair railings and support columns.

The kitchen features green, orange and yellow tiles from San Jose’s Fireclay Tile. While the windows in the front of the house are divided light, the couple used no panes in the French doors overlooking the backyard.

Slate tile floors run from the kitchen through to the outdoor patio, connecting indoors and out. Upstairs, frosted sliding glass doors give privacy to the master suite, but let in light. The master bath was tiled in “boneyard” pieces of tile in different shapes and sheens to give added interest. A neighbor once likened the shower tile to a “bamboo forest.”

They have decorated the house with artwork collected along their travels as well as local “open studio” events. A prized pair of art deco console tables purchased at a San Francisco auction adorn the living room. The couple opened their home to the Rose Garden Homes Tour, benefitting St. Martin of Tours schools.

IMG_3280

GreenDesign provided the floral pieces. The landscaping and hardscaping was done by Rodriquez Landscape.

Julia Looking Right - Lookiloos

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Remodeled New England-Style Family Home

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

IMG_3321Liz Page was pregnant with their first child in 2002 when she and her husband Mark first laid eyes on this charming New England-style home. Liz grew up in Massachusetts and the traditional home with the formal entry hall and central staircase just felt right.

She wrote a “tear-stained letter” to the owner saying “this is where we want to raise our family.”

The house became their home on Halloween, the night the neighborhood comes to life with hundreds of children trick or treating. While the house hadIMG_3326 great bones, it was in its original 1940 condition and needed updating. Construction began two days after her son, Douglas, was born.

They ripped up wall-to-wall carpeting to reveal mint-condition hardwood floors, and redid electrical and plumbing. To add a master suite, they built over the existing living room. The kitchen was remodeled and a mudroom added.

And just recently, they pushed out the back, adding a family room behind the living room, and an office on top, an extension of the master suite, for Mark, a marketing executive. In the end, they got exactly what they wanted: a charming family home that maintained the look and feel of the original.

IMG_3333 Both their children, Douglas and Anna, attend St. Martin of Tours elementary school. Liz sought out Willow Glen Home and Garden to help choose comfortable family furniture paired with fun accessories as well as designing the back garden area with patios, trellises, stone walls, a fountain, umbrellas and patio furniture. The home was featured on the Rose Garden Homes Tour, benefitting St. Martin of Tours. It wouldn’t be complete without Jose Ibarra, who came in and worked magic with his floral designs throughout the house.


Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos


Here’s the complete slideshow:

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