Modern

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:
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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:

Woodside: Home and Garden Shop Emily Joubert Holds Benefit

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

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Two of Lookiloos’ favorite women whose fabulous homes have been featured on our site are teaming up Friday (April 17) for a good cause at Emily Joubert Home and Garden shop in Woodside. Judy Seiber, who owns Emily Joubert, will donate a percentage of her sales that day to the families of the Oakland police officers slain in March.

Woodside: Home and Garden Shop Emily Joubert Holds Benefit

And her good friend, Lisa Rissetto, whose husband recently retired from the Oakland Police force, will donate the proceeds from her exquisite handbag collection “49 sq. mi.” based in San Francisco. Seiber’s shop is known for its collection of garden pottery as well as Arte Italica and John Derian housewares.

Local businesses, including the famed “Buck’s” restaurant where many a Silicon Valley start-up has been dreamed up, will also donate appetizers, as will Robert’s Market across the street. The Village Pub, Woodside Bakery and Draegers grocery are all helping with food and drinks to make the 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. benefit a success. Some wonderful gifts will also be raffled. The shop is located just off Highway 280, west into the hills, at 3036 Woodside Road.

Woodside: Home and Garden Shop Emily Joubert Holds Benefit

Along with her home and garden shop, Seiber’s English cottage filled with treasures collected around the world was featured on Lookiloos last summer. And Risetto’s ranch-style house in Woodside that showcases vintage mid-century furnishings was also featured, along with her stylish, industrial studio in San Francisco where she designs her hand-stiched bags.

Julia - lookiloos.com

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Portola Valley: Green and Sustainable House on a Hill

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

Portola Valley: Green and Sustainable House on a Hill

Not much surprised Iris Harrell’s family when she left Virginia in her 20s to work as a history teacher on a Navajo Indian reservation, then toured the country for five years as a guitar player and singer in a pop and country band.

But when she put on a tool belt in her 30s and started doing carpentry, “they thought, ‘Have you lost your mind?’”

Living Room Center - Portola Valley: Green and Sustainable House on a Hill

It all made perfect sense to Harrell, who is 62 now and CEO of her own Harrell Remodeling company based in Mountain View.

“If you can control a public school sixth period class on Friday afternoon and you can control drummers and other free-spirited, independent people and travel all over the country,” she said, “it’s pretty powerful training.”

For the past three decades, she’s been orchestrating designers, carpenters and subcontractors to create beautiful homes for people all over the Peninsula. She finally was able to focus on her own home in Portola Valley, which she shares with her partner of 30 years, Ann Benson. They completed a major remodel last year that is both universal — meaning it works for all ages and abilities — and it’s sustainable, meaning it’s “green” and has a roof with 54 solar panels. They built it as much for Benson’s 91-year-old mother as themselves. They installed an elevator as well as a bathroom vanity that lowers to wheelchair height.

The couple was first drawn to the area when they visited a friend in the Portola Valley Ranch subdivision, an early 1980s-era development of 200 homes nestled among hills, oaks and meadows. A nature corridors runs through the development, so wildlife is free to meander. That means all gardening is relegated to a fenced-in “community garden” near the pool and tennis courts. In 1992, the house that was built as the developer’s office — with 10 “bedrooms”, one-and-a-half bathrooms and no kitchen — came on the market. Harrell and Benson, seeing the potential, took it “as is”.

Kitchen -Portola Valley: Green and Sustainable House on a Hill

They did a temporary remodel back then to reconfigure the house to a four-bedroom, with a kitchen. But in July, they finished a substantial remodel, turning it into a showcase of modern green technology as well as comfortable, lifelong living. They started with a demolition party and invited Benson’s mother and her friends from their San Francisco senior citizens’ home. But many in wheelchairs and walkers couldn’t navigate the hillside house.

What a difference a remodel makes. They built a wooden ramp from the street level down to the front door, winding through oak trees along the way. They removed a wall in the entry hall and a closet in the living room to open the vista from the front door through the living room and out to the hillside views. To make the living room with 14-foot ceilings seem more intimate, they hung what they call “lighted quilts” from the ceiling. Made of glass that is stained in traditional quilt patterns, the floating piece of art is an homage to Benson’s love of quilting.

They reconfigured the kitchen to allow for “hers and hers” refrigerators and sinks. Since Benson is the main chef for the couple, her fridge stores all the fresh food for cooking. With Harrell’s fridge, on the other hand, “you take it out and eat it or put it in the microwave.”

Master Shower - Portola Valley: Green and Sustainable House on a Hill

The kitchen opens to a small eating area as well as an intimate sitting area that faces an energy-saving, gas fireplace, one of five in rooms throughout the house. They provide their main source of heat and turn them on only when they spend time in those rooms.

They also made “green” plans to cool the house, especially when the morning sun pours into the living room on hot summer mornings. They installed exterior “European Rolling Shutters” that not only descend at the push of a button, but flap shut.

The laundry room doubles as a kitchenette for the downstairs master bedroom. Except for towels, they hang up all their clothes to line dry across the long back wall. A heated counter top for folding dries the moisture from the air.

They installed a sauna in the master bath and curbless showers for the day when they might need wheelchairs themselves. The house has won several awards for universal and green design, including most recently the National Contractor of the Year Award from the National Remodelers Association (NARI) for Residential Universal Design.

Iris and Ann - Portola Valley: Green and Sustainable House on a Hill

This house, Harrell and Benson say, is their “forever house.”

When they completed the remodel last summer, including the ramp and elevator, Benson’s mother and her friends from the senior home returned for a “wrap” party. They all easily navigated the space.

(Photographs by Bill Enos. Harrell and Benson portrait by Desiree Northend.)

Julia - lookiloos.com

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

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Collecting Art: A Passionate Art Collector Turns Home into Gallery

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

Collecting Art: A Passionate Art Collector Turns Home into Gallery

David Sussman started his art collection 45 years ago. He was a student at Boston University and picked up a Miro print for $15. He’s come a long way from the east coast to San Jose’s Rose Garden neighborhood, where his home — inside and out — has become a gallery of local art. And with the help of a noted painter who challenged him along the way, he developed a more daring collection.

Front View - Collecting Art: A Passionate Art Collector Turns Home into Gallery The house itself is a handsome, two-story Georgian built in the 1930s, with gray stucco and a red front door — a house that some might say lends itself to a traditional approach. But step inside, and you realize there is nothing predictable about it. Walk into the living room and a great white skull emanating spokes of graffiti stops you cold. An L.A. city street scene over the mantel pulls you into an edgy neighborhood. And filling the dining room wall hangs a figure of a contemplative, graying woman named Theta — a work that marked a turning point for him.

Skull and Crossbones - Collecting Art: A Passionate Art Collector Turns Home into Gallery “Buying art is like buying ties,” said Sussman, a family lawyer. “If you buy just what you like right now, all the ties in your collection will look the same.”

Sussman began appreciating more challenging works when he met Katherine Levin Lau at an open studio event more than a decade ago. He was drawn to the large painting of Theta. He had favored abstract works before, but found himself drawn to this figure.

“He said it was unlike anything he owned,” said Levin Lau, a former San Jose State lecturer who shows her work internationally. Still, he bargained with her.

“I’ll give you 20 percent off,” she conceded.

“Let this be your lesson,” Sussman told her. “I would have paid full price.”

And so began a long friendship, from which both have learned and benefitted.

And they started together at the De Anza Flea Market in Cupertino, where more than 800 vendors show their wares the first Saturday of every month.

Painting - Collecting Art: A Passionate Art Collector Turns Home into Gallery “The joy of going with her — you get to see how she saw everything,” he said. “Her eyes moved in ways yours didn’t. You realize you weren’t challenging your own eye.”

They started by collecting balls. That’s right. Just balls. Bocce balls, pool balls, ceramic balls.

“How about this one?” he would ask.

“No,” she would say. “You have to get balls that have integrity, David. They can’t be brand new, out of a decorator’s showcase. They have to be something real.”

Levin Lau made him a rubber band ball. He built a rectangular, plexiglass box for them and hangs it over a doorway.

As much as Levin Lau showed him how to look at things in new ways, Sussman always had his own strong sense of style.

“I love lines,” he said. “I love an Armani suit — not a lot of ruffles.”

And the artwork he was drawn to had a similar sensibility. Sussman became a regular at the annual auctions of the San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art — for 25 years running he bought at least one piece a year. And he also enjoyed the art sales of San Jose State University art students. He commissioned a whole set of ceramic plates from student Una Mjurka.

At one such art sale, he met art professor David Middlebrook and commissioned from him a double sculpture of bronze and stone for Sussman’s backyard, a piece that represents the organic versus the intellectual. It incorporates Sussman’s own thumb print.

Kitchen - Collecting Art: A Passionate Art Collector Turns Home into Gallery Even his kitchen has a strong, artistic flair. With the help of Neal Bunce from Coyote Valley Cabinets –”whose attention to detail and quest for perfection made the project a success” — the space incorporates angled glass on the bar counter, with roughly textured granite counters.

“The point is,” Sussman said, “everything looks old quickly if you don’t press yourself to try something out of your range.”

It’s an attitude Levin Lau is thrilled to hear.

“He’s just a wonderful, enthusiastic, curious collector,” she said. “He loves to learn and explore. He truly loves his art.”

Julia - lookiloos.com

Update:
Katherine Levin Lau is showing her work at a mid-April exhibit at the San Jose architecture firm of Bill Gould. She may be contacted through him at www.bgdesign.com.
Coyote Valley Cabinets can be reached at (408) 561-0989.

Update 2:
Lookiloos featured in the San Jose Mercury News
This post is featured in the San Jose Mercury News Home and Garden section here.

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Lookiloos Favorite Kitchens

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

Lookiloos Favorite Kitchens

This week's peek is a round-up of some of my favorite kitchens. Kitchens are the center of the home. A good kitchen functions well. A great kitchen not only functions well, but it looks fabulous doing it. So in no particular order here they are.

Penthouse Kitchen - Lookiloos Favorite Kitchens

Dreaming of a Penthouse kitchen. This one won't disappoint. I love the sleek white cabinets. The uppers open like garage doors. And that splash of tangerine drew me in.

Danville Kitchen - Lookiloos Favorite Kitchens

This next kitchen comes to us from designer Karin Washler of Danville. It is the little details that I most appreciated with kitchen. From the copper farmhouse sinks to the turned legs on the island, this kitchen feels well thought out.

La Estancia Kitchen - Lookiloos Favorite Kitchens

The La Estancia Estate kitchen is more traditional in style. The crispness of the white tile paired with the celery colored cabinets makes me think of a bygone era.

Los Altos Modern Kitchen - Lookiloos Favorite Kitchens

An aqua counter and backsplash calls you to take the helm of this Los Altos kitchen. It's design is reminiscent of a ship's bow and looking over the railing you can gaze down into the indoor pool.

Tudor Style Kitchen - Lookiloos Favorite Kitchens

And lastly, this Tudor style kitchen. I love the juxtaposition of the dark and the antique white paint cabinetry. The granite counters and the Limestone on the floor bring this all together. By the way, this is another design by Karin Washler.

I hope you enjoyed visiting my top Lookiloo kitchens.

Desiree - lookiloos.com

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Los Gatos: Modern Nursery with Vintage Flair

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

Los Gatos: Modern Nursery with Vintage Flair

When decorator Lisa Murray asked her Los Gatos neighbor and client what she had in mind for the nursery of her daughter-to-be, Wendy Riggs made it clear: “Cute, but not cutesie. No ruffles.”

Skipping Girl - Los Gatos: Modern Nursery with Vintage Flair

Wendy, whose story about the birth of her daughter was recently featured in the Mercury News, knew that request wasn’t going to be as easy to satisfy as it seemed. She had been searching online for crib bedding for weeks, but every time she plugged in “girl”, all that came up was pink. “Not even purple!” Wendy said. She finally came upon the designer Glenna Jean, who sells her McKenzie bedding through Baby Depot, Target and other retail and online stores, and fell in love with an Asian Marimekko — inspired set in red, lemongrass, gray and black. And the inspiration for the rest of the modern nursery was set.

That’s when Lisa came in. Wendy and Lisa are neighbors and good friends. But that didn’t stop Lisa from starting with the formality of a design board to show Wendy what she had in mind, right down to an end table, chandelier and a mural Lisa painted herself.

The house Wendy shares with her husband, two boys and newborn daughter has an angular, Miami-modern feel. Lisa loves modern, but likes to inject a touch of vintage as well. So along with the modern bedding, Lisa suggested a painted mural that included a nostalgic image — a silhouette of a skipping girl. The image is iconic in Australia, where Lisa went to college, much like the Morton salt girl in a raincoat in the U.S. The skipping girl gave the nursery movement, Lisa said, and the silhouette left room for the imagination.

“I like the idea of giving them the outline and they can make up their own stories,” she said.

Nursery Chandelier - Los Gatos: Modern Nursery with Vintage Flair

Along with the four base colors, she injected a few splashes of sky blue — in butterflies she painted on the wall and ceiling, and in a little bird statue that sits under glass. (She bought it at Pier 1 for $8, painted it blue and _ Voila! _ called it “Victoriana”.)

Lisa also played with scale, sitting a large red lamp ($49 from Ikea) on a small black table ($79 from Ikea) to give a Dr. Seuss or “Alice Through the Looking Glass” feel. The child-size black leather chair ($80 from Target) adds to the whimsey, as does the wall flower lamp ($9 from Ikea). The rug with bird motif ($28 from Urban Outfitters) pulls in the lemongrass color. And a black glass chandelier ($126 from www.gallery802.com) adds an edgy glamorous look.

Wendy loves the space. “It’s the best decorated room in the house by a longshot,” she said. “Now I’m concerned the boys are going to be jealous.”

Lisa did a beautiful job creating a stylish, modern nursery that suits Wendy perfectly.

But that could present its own set of problems down the road.

“Who knows?” Wendy said. “Maybe I’ll end up with a daughter who wants nothing but ruffles and pink.”

Julia - lookiloos.com

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Artists Design Modern Kitchen with Stainless Sculpture

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Artists Design Modern Kitchen with Stainless Sculpture

Mert Carpenter is an architectural photographer. His wife, Tonya, is a graphic designer and fine artist. So perhaps it should be no surprise that their remodeled kitchen in Los Gatos would have some artistic, sculptural qualities.

But would you actually expect a sculpture — a stainless steel wrap-around, freeform sculpture built into the island?

“People walk in and say,’Wow, what a kitchen,’” Mert said. “Then they walk a little further and say, ‘Wow, wow! Look at this sculpture!’”

Living Room - Artists Design Modern Kitchen with Stainless Sculpture

The couple bought their 1982 home new. The high-pitched ceilings were perfect for his 9-foot studio lights, and skylights and huge windows made for a bright work space for his wife who paints pastel portraits. But after 25 years, the kitchen with the cream-colored tile counters that opened to the family room was ready for a remake. The oven was kaput and the fridge was on its way out.

So they took a trip to the Pacific Design Center in Los Angeles and found a designer that understood them. They wanted a clean-lined, modern feel and they found Troy Adams of West Hollywood.

“He started by having us fill out a questionnaire about how we use the kitchen,” Mert said.

They ended up with a sleek modern kitchen warmed up with wood cabinetry and bi-fold doors in walnut, anigre and zebra. But still, the kitchen was incomplete.

Family Room and Kitchen - Artists Design Modern Kitchen with Stainless Sculpture

“We really wanted the new kitchen to be pretty and interesting from anywhere in the family room,” Mert said. Adams first suggested a concrete form at the end of the counter, then the idea morphed in a stainless steel rectangular form.

“My wife said, ‘What if we curved it in a big arc and went around the corner with it? It would define the space between the family room and kitchen.’”

It was at that moment when Mert knew it was time to call his old client, Darin Wacs, a sculptress whose work Mert had photographed. Wacs was already known on the Peninsula for creating a huge metal sign for the Palo Alto Children’s Museum.

After Adams designed the curving, stainless steel form for the end of the island, Wacs came in to design the three-dimensional, swirling stainless overlay. To fabricate the project, Wacs went to Therma Corp., a San Jose manufacturing company whose executives have a penchant for the arts. Wacs already had office space there for some of her projects.

Kitchen Galley - Artists Design Modern Kitchen with Stainless Sculpture

The job was complicated and required each phase of the project to be executed precisely.

“Therma came up with a template based on a CAD drawing that allowed everyone to go forward,” Mert said. “When it was all done, it all fit and it was all wonderful.”

And it’s still the big talker when friends come for dinner.

Mert’s Resource List:

Kitchen Designer: Troy Adams Design in LA
Kitchen Contractor:  DJ Dowling Inc. of Redwood City
Kitchen Contractor Supervisor:  Mark Dowling formerly with D J Dowling and now on his own as Dowling Builders
Kitchen Countertop Fabricators:  Avalos of San Jose
Countertop Suppliers:
Imperial White Granite (garage and beverage sink):  Integrated Resources of Brisbane
Golden Silver Granite (sink and range):  Da Vinci Marble of Redwood City
Sculpture Designer:  Darin Wacs
Sculpture Manufacturer:  Therma Corp. of San Jose

Photographs by Mert Carpenter

Julia - lookiloos.com

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Mid-Century Modern from California Ranch: A Town and Country Life

Friday, January 9th, 2009

Mid-Century Modern from California Ranch: A Town and Country Life

From the steep driveway, Lisa Rissetto’s home on a Woodside hilltop looks like an unassuming California ranch style spread, with a curving driveway and a taupe facade. But the inside is a surprising mid-century modern masterpiece.

The same is true at her design studio in San Francisco, where she worked her way up from merchandizing at Esprit de Corps in the 1980s to become president of her own leather handbag and accessory business. Outside, the three-story cement building is plain and austere. But inside is something else entirely — a vibrant, light-filled work space that has such a cool vibe and views of the bay that it’s been used for advertising photo shoots.

Mid-Century Modern from California Ranch: A Town and Country Life - Lisa Rissetto and Designer Jonathan Liberty

If design is a sensibility, perhaps it is no wonder that Lisa has surrounded herself with some of the best of it at her office in town and her home in the country.

Growing up in Bergen County, New Jersey, in the 1960s and ’70s, her influences were strong and clear. Her father was an architect and professor at Columbia University in New York and designed the family’s modern home that neighbors called “The Jetsons’ House” after the space-age cartoon family. Her mother was a style maven, uninhibited to wear a Bonnie Cashin-designed bright orange leather coat with brass toggles.

“That’s all I ever knew,” said Lisa, now 49. “It was different from what everyone else grew up with.” (There were no La-Z-Boy recliners with upholstered American eagles at her house.)

And it’s probably fair to say her home she shares with her husband and three children doesn’t quite conform to those of her neighbors in the horse country of Woodside. Sure, she has an acre, two horses and a rustic old barn that would be an ideal setting for a Ralph Lauren brochure.

Mid-Century Modern from California Ranch: A Town and Country Life - Living Room

But this is a woman who knows a Mies van der Rohe, Jean Prouve and Serge Mouille when she sees it. And a walk through her front door proves it. When she and her husband bought the house in 1995, they quickly tore down the interior walls of the main rooms to open up the floor plan, pulling in light from the back wall of windows deep into the dining and living rooms.

Once inside, you are greeted with a gallery-like space that’s spare and sleek, with pops of lime green and zebra. An extremely rare spider-like industrial lamp by Mouille, who was a mid-century French goldsmith and industrial designer, hangs like a mobile over the dining room table. The table chairs are Aalto, covered in vintage green linen.

In the living room, a low-slung avocado couch and oblong coffee table were designed by T. H. Robsjohn-Gibbings, a British-born architect and furniture designer who worked in the United States from the 1930s through the ’50s. Lisa acquired three of Van de Rohe’s famous leather Barcelona chairs at auction in Chicago — two a matched pair from the 1960s and the third produced in 1970. A slatted bench in the living room and a bubble lamp over the kitchen table are both classics by George Nelson. Some of her favorites, though, are pieces from the house she grew up in, including the bright red Bertoia chair in the corner.

Mid-Century Modern from California Ranch: A Town and Country Life - Dining Room

Bringing depth and personality into the modern space, Lisa’s collection of female portraits picked up at flea markets from Paris to Alameda rest atop a wall unit she had manufactured in the wood-and-metal industrial style of Prouve.

Her sense of style extends up Highway 280 to Bryant Street in San Francisco, where the interior of the concrete building is illuminated by a wall of industrial windows. More than a dozen designers sketching spring fashions and mulling over leather samples and metal buckles collaborate in the bright natural light.

It’s a business she helped build with former Esprit executive George Hensler, who started the company that designs and manufactures accessories for major retailers. When he retired in 2004 and Lisa took over, she fulfilled her dream of designing her own line of handbags. Her company still bears the G.Hensler name, but she labeled the California-casual line of supple Italian leather bags “49 Sq.Mi.,” an ode to the geography of San Francisco.

And while many are in the versatile blacks and browns and burgundies, some of her favorites are in the color of her mother — the bright oranges, soft yellows and rich greens.

Mid-Century Modern from California Ranch: A Town and Country Life - Lisa Rissetto

When her mother died, Lisa went through her closet and found 12 leather coats — all Bonnie Cashin originals. She reconditioned the leather, and still wears the bright orange one with brass toggles. And it looks fabulous with a sumptuous “49 Sq.Mi.” bag slung over the shoulder.

Like her mother before her, she wears it well.

Julia - lookiloos.com

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

Here’s the complete slideshow:

SOLo Lounge Table: The Ultimate Green Patio Furniture

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

SOLo Lounge Table

It has been raining here lately in Northern California, so it been a little chilly for BBQing.  But as you think about storing your lawn furniture, check out this find, the latest in hip patio furniture -the SOLo Lounge table.  This sleek table not only generates power with it built in solar panels, but comes equipped with an ipod docking station and outlet so you can power up your laptop and cell phone off the grid.  Looking at my old teak table – I am wondering, "What have you done for ME lately?"

These are built to order at about $12,000, but this is not the typical table you pick up at your local hardware store. Designed by Canadians, this piece not only is set up to collect solor rays, but is built to withstand temperatures well below freezing.  Personally if it was that cold, I would be inside, but it is nice to know, you don’t have to worry about moving it.

Silicon cells are embedded in the top of the table to harness solar energy and transform it into clean energy.  It collects enough energy to power up your 100 cell phones and 3 lap tops per day. One could connect an ipod and set the mood for a patio dance party.  The table even lights up in a multitude of colors to really give your patio some extra pizazz.

This modern table is quite the conversation starter and does it all – where form meets function. All it needs is a margarita maker and it would be perfect for your next backyard soiree!  (Then again, you could bring your own blender and plug it right in.)

Intelligent Forms
Vancouver, BC
http://intelligentforms.net/products/solo-lounge-table/

Sheila - lookiloos.com

Modern Cocktail Lounge Party

Friday, October 31st, 2008

Modern Cocktail Lounge Party

When the former visual director of Neiman Marcus in Palo Alto throws a party at his house, you’d expect the decor to be something special. But would you think he’d empty his Menlo Park cottage of furniture and transform the place into a swingin’ white cocktail lounge?

It was nothing but fun for Tim Ballengee, who filled the main rooms with white leather furniture last weekend, including a big round “daybed” in the middle of the living room. Oh, behave!

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