Historic

Modern Living in a 1927 Spanish Colonial

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

4325521219_501a358290_o

 When my contractor invited me to an open house to view his latest
project–a renovation and addition to a 1927 Spanish Colonial home in Palm
Haven –I jumped at the chance to legitimately snoop around one of the most
historic, eclectic neighborhoods in San Jose.

009 A neglected two-bedroom one bath in disrepair when acquired by John
Ammirato of Ammirato Construction is now a four bedroom, two and half bath
dream home. While it has all the modern creature comforts, including an impressive
master suite, renewable resource cabinets, solar panels, and data networking
throughout, painful efforts were made to preserve the home’s original
architecture.
Like re-roofing the composite roof with reclaimed vintage clay tiles.
And keeping many of the home’s original features: the living room sconces,
fireplace mantel, arched doorways, built-in hutch, and coved ceilings.

“The living room hasn’t changed,” said Rita Strena, whose family owned
the home for more than 60 years before selling it to Ammirato. “But John
improved it. It has a new life now.”

Ammirato worked extensively with Stonelite Tile–which has been in
business in San Jose since the 1920s–to design the detailed tile work023
throughout the house. Some of it was hand pressed and painted using
original plates and molds from the early 1900s.
Ammirato, who has built several Spanish-style homes in Palm Haven, made
design decisions along with his wife, Linda, referencing books like Red Tile
Style, California Romantica, Casa California, and George Washington Smith:
An Architect’s Scrap Book.
The result is modern, stylish living while honoring the home¹s historic
past down to the gutters and porch brackets.

By Kim Kooyers,  a freelance writer and blogs at gratitude365 and SpiroChicks.

Here’s the complete slideshow:

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

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

Prairie-Style House Gets Modern Makeover

Friday, January 29th, 2010

4171109148_784b4b5e46_b

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

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

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

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

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

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

Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

Here’s the complete slideshow:

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

Darned House:Stained Glass Adds Drama to Remodel

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

P1010694

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

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

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

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

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

But first, could they get the angel home safely?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

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

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)

Classic Beauties on Rose Garden Homes Tour

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

Rose Garden Homes Tour

The best thing about home tours is finally getting into those homes you’ve always ogled. Well, lucky me, I got an advance peek of the homes on the Rose Garden Homes Tour coming up this weekend (Oct. 17-18) in San Jose and snapped this shot of the surprise behind a front gate.

Buddha - Rose Garden Homes TourThis contemporary, Zen-like garden makes you want to sit back and watch the rocks grow. Or maybe read “Eat, Pray, Love” while listening to the gurgling fountain.  Wispy bamboo balances the travertine tiles. A Buddha is nestled in the greenery.  As lovely as it is now, it will be transformed for the home tour by floral designer Jose Ibarra, whom we love to feature on Lookiloos for his inspired holiday decor.

Behind this courtyard is a lovely, remodeled ranch home that carries the Asian inspiration inside. (It was also once the home of the Langendorf bread family.)

Another surprise on the tour is a last-minute addition –  a DeMattei Construction remodel in the neighborhood that features a Sunset Magazine idea house kitchen that is already staged to perfection. Sunset readers got the chance to vote online to choose the layout and finishes.

As for the other homes, they all have a story.

Monterey Colonial - Rose Garden Homes Tour*The owner of a classic Monterey Colonial with a beautifully remodeled kitchen and new landscaping walks to the dining room window and looks out every time her grown children pull out of the driveway. She does it because that’s what the previous owner did, and does it out of gratitude and respect;

*The couple that owns a lovely Cape Cod with an enclosed porch bought it to be close to their children and grandchildren, and fell in love with the history of the house along the way — and that includes a family of pear growers;

*The woman who owns a two-story Mediterranean with wrought-iron detailing and a remodeled kitchen used to walk down the street as a teen-ager and dream that one day this home would be hers;

Mediterranean - Rose Garden Homes Tour*A spectacular garden where the tea party will take place has a walking labynth, plus a lovely holiday boutique.

Tickets are $30 in advance or $35 at the door and benefit St. Martin of Tours School. If you want to see the third courtyard, and the gorgeous house behind it, you can attend the gala on Saturday (Oct. 17) night for $100 (which also gains you admittance to the rest of the home tour). For more information on tickets, go to www.rosegardenhomestour.com.

Julia - lookiloos.com

You might also enjoy these other stories, including a peak at the Sunset kitchen:
Sunset Magazine’s Ultimate Kitchen
Wabi Sabi: Where the Imperfect is Beautiful
Floral Chic Mother’s Day
Going Green on a Budget for St. Patrick’s Day
How to Make Paper Roses for Valentine’s Day

Film Crew Shoots Vintage Farmhouse

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Film Crew Shoots Vintage Farmhouse

Deep in the golden hot countryside of Morgan Hill, the old white farmhouse languished for months with a For Sale sign planted in front. The knoll on which it was perched was bone dry and, but for the pomegranate tree, practically barren. Inside, the wooden floors were sloping, the wallpaper peeling. When the last member of the family that had owned the house for more than a century passed away, it was as though the house died, too.

But over the last two years, new life has been breathed back into the old place, first by an artist and her husband who had always wanted a vintage farmhouse to call their own, then by a local filmmaker and his crew making a low-budget independent short.

Filmmaking at the farmhouse

Filmmaking at the farmhouse

In extraordinary ways, both have celebrated the farmhouse’s humble history. And in return, the house has given back everything it has. Call it serendipity. Call it fate. But the house gave the artist and the filmmaker exactly what they needed, and more than they could have imagined.

The farmhouse brought Kerstin Schipper and Shawn Flanagan together on a late summer day in July. But it first beckoned Schipper two years ago. She and her husband, Peter, both came from Dutch dairy farmer stock and wanted a simple place with a sense of history. He was in the landscape materials business. She painted murals.

Kerstin Schipper - Film Crew Shoots Vintage Farmhouse The couple had raised their nine children in a 1930s house in what had once been Los Gatos countryside. But the Mediterranean villas and modern mansions started crowding in and when their children were grown, the Schippers’ search began. Hidden behind eucalyptus and oaks west of Morgan Hill, the Schippers found the farmhouse. It sat on a rise, overlooking a pasture and creek.

Except for electricity and plumbing, Schipper said, “they had done nothing to the house since it was built. It was untouched.”

Double wash basins remained on the back laundry porch and the blackened Wedgewood stove in the kitchen still fired up. A narrow staircase led to the attic. When they noticed a calendar hanging in the garage dated 1948 — the year both Schippers were born — the whole place just felt right. They bought the house and, maintaining its tradition, cleaned it up but barely changed a thing.

“You want to respect who built it and lived in it,” she said. “We both like history — to touch the past in a way.”

They furnished it with second-hand pieces, many in the simple farmhouse style popular at the last turn of the century. On the front porch she hung one of her favorite paintings, a portrait of her daughter surrounded by sunflowers and hollyhocks. Most of her work contained at least one sunflower; it was her favorite and had become her signature symbol.

Farmhouse Kitchen - Film Crew Shoots Vintage Farmhouse But the view from the porch of the barren landscape needed some tending. Instead of heading to the nursery, though, she simply grabbed the hose. “I just thought I’d water,” she said, and gave the property around the house a good, deep soak. And that’s when “they all came up.”

Sunflowers. Fields of them. Bright yellow and nearly 18-feet tall. And hollyhocks, pink, just like in her portrait. This was no simple cutting garden out back or a little patch of color here and there. The wildflowers surrounded the entire place and raced down the front hillside in an exuberant burst. The roots were so deep, she could barely pull one out if she tried.

“I thought it had to be an old garden,” Schipper said. “The only thing I know is that it felt like home right away.”

Director Shawn Flanagan with Actors

Director Shawn Flanagan with Actors

It was during this peak of summer bloom that Shawn Flanagan discovered it. A San Jose resident, he named his company Almaden Films after the neighborhood where he grew up. He had a number of independent short and feature films to his credit and was scouting locations for his latest Depression-era movie, “Whiskey Slide.” It is about Henry Percy (played by local actor Geordie Prodis) an artist who is down on his luck and in danger of losing his house, and his pregnant wife, Louise Percy (played by Kate Melia).

“It was supposed to be a no-budget short film where a bunch of friends get together and do whatever they can to get a movie done,” said Flanagan, 46. “Then great things started happening.”

Cameras rolling for Whiskey Slide

Cameras rolling for Whiskey Slide

The first was finding the farmhouse, which had been recommended to him by a mutual friend, Maggie Wilhelm. “When I got there, I just freaked out,” he said. “I loved every part of it. The outside with the flowers all around; the house being period-right. It was just a great setting.”

And for a director on a budget, he didn’t have to pay for set design. “We had the old stove, the old kitchen, several old rooms that were just right,” Flanagan said.

The story called for a painting room for Henry, and the attic just happened to be filled with Schipper’s paintings. The script called for a chicken coop, and there it was in the side yard. One scene had the pregnant wife washing clothes and, running along the sideyard, a clothes line was already hung.

“That stuff was there when I got there,” Flanagan said.

The only props he needed were the historic cars provided by San Jose collectors Don Skow and Shaughnessy McGehee.

Farmhouse - Whiskey Slide“It’s unbelievable the way things came together,” Flanagan said. Parts of the movie have also been filmed at San Jose History Park and the Radonich and Adams ranches in the Santa Cruz Mountains. But, he said, “the heart of the movie comes from that house.”

He plans to wrap up production shortly and have the movie ready to submit to San Jose’s Cinequest and other international film festivals. The only shame, he said, is that the movie is shot in black-and-white and won’t capture the brilliance of the sunflowers. But when he edits the scenes, “I will go out of my way to make sure I use some of the wider angles with the sunflowers.”

Schipper was thrilled to lend the farmhouse to the movie crew and loved that they embraced the house, just as it was.

Sunflowers - Film Crew Shoots Vintage Farmhouse Schipper likes to call it a “happy house.” But a friend who visited recently told her it was more than that.

“It’s a magical place,” her friend said.

“Thank you,” Schipper replied. “Yes.”

“She called it a magical place,” Schipper said. “I said thank you. Yes.”

(To watch an advance clip of Whiskey Slide, go to www.almadenfilms.com.)

Story by Julia Prodis Sulek, Lookiloos.

Photos of film crew by Mike Gendimenico, Faultline Digital

Julia - lookiloos.com

Here’s the complete slideshow:

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

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

Turning a Shed into a Charming Cottage

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

Turning a Shed into a Charming Cottage

For years, the old structure in the back yard was known as the “haunted shed.” When Rebecca Sweet was a girl growing up in her parents’ Los Altos ranch-style house in the 1970s, even her bravest friends couldn’t make it through a slumber party there.

Feathers in a Vase - Turning a Shed into a Charming Cottage

The roof was caving in. The floorboards creaked. Cobwebs covered old storage boxes. Spiders had taken over every inch. When Rebecca returned to her childhood home 11 years ago and moved in with her own family, the wood shed had only deteriorated further. Her daughter and friends would have Halloween parties and terrify each other over stories of the the eerie presence of the “shed monster.”

But over the last few years, with her husband, Tom Urban, taking the lead, the old shed has been given a new life and new purpose. Gone are the cobwebs and creaks. The structure is now a charming cottage and work studio for Rebecca, who is a landscape designer. As with the rest of the backyard garden once tended by her mother, who comes from a maternal line of avid gardeners, the shed was restored and decorated to maintain the family’s gardening legacy.

Shed Office Space - Turning a Shed into a Charming Cottage

The roof on the 18-by-12-foot shed was pitched and decorative wood beams added to create an airy feeling and rustic charm. Her husband replaced the old aluminum windows with vintage cottage windows. He plastered the walls and painted them a buttery yellow. A long counter was built on the far end, stretching across the back, to lay out design plans. The shelves underneath store the family’s earthquake supplies, but are hidden by lovely linen curtains.

A wicker sofa dominates the seating area. Above it hangs a decorative screen made of branches from one of Rebecca’s favorite shops in Los Altos, Cottage Green. One of her most cherished possessions is a dainty painting of pansies done by her great-great grandmother.

Potting Bench - Turning a Shed into a Charming Cottage

Rebecca also likes to point out the old piece of wood siding that bears the carved named of Rebecca’s brother, Tim. He had been punished for defacing the shed at the time. But Rebecca made sure her husband kept it in its rightful place, next to the front door.

Sitting on nearly a third of an acre in a 1950s development of classic ranch-style houses, the shed was an ever-present backdrop to the garden, which was first tended by her mother and now her. Rebecca remembers expeditions to Lake Tahoe to collect rocks along the roadsides that had tumbled down from avalanches. Together, they would choose the prettiest and haul them back to San Jose where her mother would build curving borders for raised garden beds.

Rebecca Sweet - Turning a Shed into a Charming Cottage

“I would watch her build this wall and tear it out because it wasn’t perfect,” Rebecca said. “It was her release.”

While she loves her mother’s stone walls, she has also made the garden her own by adding several sitting areas, curving pathways, fountains and an aviary. She writes about her garden and gardening tips on her blog www.gossipinthegarden.com.

When her mother visits, “she doesn’t come in the house. She goes around the garden first,” Rebecca said.

Ship Steamer Lounges - Turning a Shed into a Charming Cottage

“We wander the garden and see what’s new. It’s a huge bond. It’s a personal garden, and I think it shows.”

Julia - lookiloos.com

Here’s the complete slideshow:

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