Peek of the Week

Colonial Revival Home Renovation – Whitney Wright Mansion

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

Colonial Revival Home Renovation - Whitney Wright Mansion

My children and I walked past the Whitney Wright Mansion on Morse Street for years on our way to the Rose Garden YMCA.  This particular “mansion” was overgrown, dank and well, scary, leaving many lookiloos like us wondering what happened to the grandiose home.  In 2004, brothers Dave and Clyde LeBaron, along with their partner, local home builder Mark DeMattei, embarked on the gargantuan task of purchasing and restoring the 1920′s Colonial Revival home.

Front View Before - Colonial Revival Home Renovation - Whitney Wright Mansion

“When we bought the house, it was a huge eyesore,” said builder Mark DeMattei.  One side of the 4 bedroom, two-story home was lifting from its foundation.  Ivy was growing inside and cracks were so big through the walls that an entire hand could fit through.  The home was in such disrepair, DeMattei said he was told that the previous owner moved into one room to avoid leaking ceilings.  With a full crew, it took nearly a year to complete the home renovation.  And the results are stunning.

Ivy Outside - Colonial Revival Home Renovation - Whitney Wright Mansion

Ivy Inside - Colonial Revival Home Renovation - Whitney Wright Mansion

Because of its historical designation, the home was restored following the Secretary of Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation, which provides strict guidelines on preserving these types of homes.

Dining Room - Colonial Revival Home Renovation - Whitney Wright Mansion

As you enter the home you are immediately welcomed by the original stair case, which has been delicately restored.  The balustrade was cleaned and repaired, revealing fine original craftsmanship.  The team kept the old trim (thicker head pieces with thin side rails which were popular during that time), but replaced the old windows with modern eco-friendly types.  DeMattei made sure there were “no dead end rooms,” meaning that in true California style each room has several outlets or walkways to improve the circulation throughout the home.

Overall, the home felt fresh with a nice blend of old world charm balanced with modern amenities.  The living room opens up to the back yard through French doors, where you can make the most of California’s inside-outside style of living and entertaining.  The formal dining room connects to a butler’s pantry and features a beautiful antique chandelier.

Kitchen - Colonial Revival Home Renovation - Whitney Wright Mansion

Because parties often end up in the kitchen, the builders added a family room to the back of the house attached to a jaw-dropping kitchen remodel.  I can see myself cooking, entertaining, playing board games and checking my children’s homework in this beautiful, yet cozy space.  I love the microwave set low, so kids can heat up instant popcorn or afternoon snacks on their own.  The family room features recessed space above the fireplace ready for a new flat screen television.  I imagine myself leisurely prepping a fantastic gourmet dinner as I watch Martha Stewart giving me tips on making the perfect dessert.

The kitchen features beautiful subway style tiles (matched to the period trends), granite counters, a breakfast bar and walk-in pantry.  The builders were conscientious of placing period specific touches, such as shaker cabinets and square, not bullnose, finishes to counter tops.  Today many of these touches have come back in vogue and can be found in places such as Restoration Hardware or Pottery Barn.

Living Room - Colonial Revival Home Renovation - Whitney Wright Mansion

The second floor features two additional bedrooms and a grand master suite with a small balcony.  DeMattei picked the Italian calacatta marble for the bathroom himself, pointing out the rich brown honey tones that only a connoisseur knows to looks for.

“When I am involved in a project, I build it as if I was going to live in it,” DeMattei said.  After lookiloo-ing around a bit, I could tell he meant what he said.  It is hard to believe it is the same home we walked by years ago.  I am sure that Whitney Wright and his family would be proud.

Sheila - lookiloos.com

Related stories:
1872 Italianate Victorian Home Restoration
1870s Italianate Victorian Home Restoration
1931 Tudor Home Restoration
Craftsman Remodel
DeMattei Beach House in Aptos

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Updating Kid’s Playhouse to Tween’s Club House

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

Updating Kid's Playhouse to Tween's Club House

A couple of years had passed since 12-year-old Audrey Vaughan had set foot in the playhouse built especially for her when she was just two. Did she really have to spell it out to her parents? The plastic kitchen set was clearly for babies. And she was far too big for the little blue plastic chairs. Quite simply, she was growing up and her playhouse wasn’t.

Updating Kid's Playhouse to Tween's Club House - Inside

With the finishing touches just put on this week, the San Jose 7th-grader turned her little girl playhouse built in her backyard by Denver-based La Petite Maison in 1998 into a tween club house. And while her parents, Belinda and Matt Vaughan, and her grandmother and aunt helped out, this girl loves HGTV. And she knew “Hidden Potential” when she saw it — even in a room no bigger than six-by-eight feet. At the same time, her 1st-grade brother got in on the act, and the family turned what had been a storage shed attached to the rear of the playhouse into a tongue-and-groove pine-paneled “fort” with a loft just for him.

Updating Kid's Playhouse to Tween's Club House - Cabin and Loft

Audrey started as all good designers do — with a fabulous fabric for inspiration. Needing just a couple of feet to cover the top of an antique chest, the velvety fabric in green and blue florals set the tone.

She painted the walls and ceiling a pale green, and the old blue and white vinyl flooring was covered with peel-and-stick parquet squares. A fresh sheet of blue contact paper lined the back of a shallow, antique bookcase — just deep enough for Audrey’s collection of Nancy Drew mysteries.

A white shelf was painted pink and became the ideal spot for her favorite polka dot teacup from her grandmother, a pink stuffed bear she earned for selling Girl Scout cookies, and a framed photo of herself and her mom. She added a blue shag rug from Lowe’s and hung a dream catcher in the window.

Updating Kid's Playhouse to Tween's Club House - Inside

But design is a collaboration, and creative clashes are inevitable. When the plastic chairs went out, it was uncertain whether a pair of green canvas directors’ chairs from Pier One should come in.

“You said we shouldn’t get them,” Audrey said to her mom.

“I know,” Belinda answered.

“But I wanted them,” Audrey said.

“I know,” her mother said.

And, well, sometimes 12-year-olds are right.

On her birthday, five girlfriends crammed into the “tween” hangout.

“They liked it a lot,” Audrey said. “I’ve been waiting forever to change it.”

Julia - lookiloos.com

Year End Photo Party!

Sunday, December 28th, 2008
Lookiloos Year End Photo Party!

Cindy over at My Romantic Home is hosting a year in review photo party.  I got to thinking of all the photos I’ve taken over this past year and started going through them.  It was so hard to choose a few photos to create this mosaic, but it was a lot of fun.  So here it is!  I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

My Romantic Home Year in Review 2008

 

Desiree - lookiloos.com

Here’s a closer look at the photos in the mosaic:

Los Gatos Victorian Home in All Its Christmas Elegance on the Summit League Home Tour

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

Atkinson1

It was 35 years ago when Ann and Tom Atkinson first laid eyes on the old farmhouse Victorian in Los Gatos. Almost a century old at the time, it had been home to numerous families over the decades and for a time was a boarding house. It needed a lot of work.

Los Gatos Victorian Home in All Its Christmas Elegance - Staircase
But this couple had vision and when they walked in, they said to each other quite simply, "Yep, this is it."

Their parents, on the other hand, "thought we were crazy," Ann said.

The house was built in 1886 on two-and-a-half acres by Grace and Levi Kimball and is considered bracketed farmhouse style. The entryhall is what first captivated the Atkinsons. The staircase is a 180-degree turned balustrade.

Over the past four decades, which included the devastating 1989 earthquake, the couple has lovingly restored and updated the gracious home. They remodeled the kitchen and family room and, when a new foundation was added after the earthquake, built a master suite above the family room.

"We call it 'Suck-A-Buck Manor,'" Ann said. "But I love this place."

The couple opened their house to more than a dozen decorators to transform the house into Christmas splendor for the Summit League Home for the Holidays tour in early December. (Here are the two other houses from the home tour, a turn-of-the-last century Craftsman and a contemporary French Chateau.)

Julia - lookiloos.com

Los Gatos Victorian Home in All Its Christmas Elegance - Bedroom

Holiday Designers

Front Porch — Kelly Loughran, The Garden's Consultant, Los Altos

Entry, Downstairs office and Staircase — Nancy Keil, Fleur Fine Gifts & Interiors, Aptos

Dining Room — Brian Neel, Tiffany and Co., Santa Clara, and Anne Patrick, Flowers Ltd.

Master Bath — Gigi Hardy, Tapis Rouge Design, Boulder Creek

Master Bedroom — Dianne Van Voorhis, Design & Interiors, Los Gatos

Upstairs Bath — Lynne Johnson, Petale, Los Gatos

Children's Bedroom — Coleen Hickey, Saffron and Genevieve, Santa Cruz

Upstairs Office — Jan Corrie and Lorri Kagan, Collaborative Design, San Jose

Intimate Weekend Retreat — Stacey Costello Design, Scotts Valley

Living Room/Sitting Room — Patricia McDonald, Marcia Moore & Monica McAllister, McDonald & Moore Ltd, San Jose

Kitchen — Ann Timm Interior Design, Pescadero

Family Room — Judy Carollo, Presentation Designs, Los Gatos

Back Porch — Flowers by Jose Ibarra, San Jose

Laundry Room — Linda Arietta, Country Essences Flowers, Watsonville

 

Here's the complete slideshow:

Craftsman Remodel Decked Out For Christmas

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008

Craftsman Remodel Decked Out For Christmas

Judy and Tedd Wallace had been asked to put their Craftsman home a few blocks from downtown Los Gatos on the Summit League home tour for 20 — make that 25 — years. And each year she said no. As an interior decorator herself who had owned Cottonwoods fabrics and accessories in Los Gatos for two decades, Judy knew that it would be tremendous work to get it ready. And handing over her century-old Craftsman to a dozen other decorators to transform it for the holidays wouldn’t be easy, either.

Craftsman Remodel Decked Out For Christmas - Living Room But one of her dearest friends, Jan Willoughby, was president of the Summit League this year that raises money for charity. And with her husband game for the challenge, she agreed. Plus, truth be told, she thought her house was ready for a little updating, and the tour would be the perfect excuse. And the results? Fabulous. Moments before hundreds of people walked through the stately old place last weekend — and with decorators still primping the details — Lookiloos (with notebook and camera in hands) got an advance peek of perfection.

Not that all of the preparations went smoothly, mind you. There were some differences of opinion, shall we say, over recovering certain pieces of furniture.  And some of the furnishings she hoped would remain in the house were unceremoniously relegated to the carport for the duration. Craftsman Remodel Decked Out For Christmas - Front Porch

Decorated or not, the home itself was a gem to see. Built in the early 1900s, and considered one of the finest examples of Craftsman architecture in Los Gatos, guests are welcomed by a graceful front porch. Leaded glass door bookcases, half timbering in the living room and substantial moldings adorn the home. The Wallaces undertook a major remodel in 1987, adding a master suite and office upstairs, and an extended dining room, remodeled kitchen and new family room downstairs.

Judy considers her style eclectic, and her furnishings range from the antique to contemporary. And the dozen decorators added their artistic touches, both big and small, to the house. Evergreen garlands were wound around the four-poster master bed. Wreaths were hung in the dining room windows, each dangling a china plate as a centerpiece. Modern lamps were flanked on either side of the old fireplace.

“We loved the creative energy running through the house,” she said of her partnership with the decorators. “That’s what I miss most from not running my store anymore.”

Craftsman Remodel Decked Out For Christmas - Judy's Vignette In the end, Judy said, “it turned out beautifully.”

But still, she enjoyed making her own statement. With an antique table that had been sent to the carport, a mirror moved out of an upstairs bedroom, some candlesticks, an angel and uprooted succulents, she pulled together her own little vignette outside the back door. And she was happy to hear that for some people, it was their favorite.

Julia - lookiloos.com

(come back to www.lookiloos.com in the next two weeks to see the other Summit League Homes.)

Decorators for the Wallace House on the Summit League House Tour

Front Yard and Porch — Jason Bowman, California Horticulture Landscape Construction, Inc. Campbell, CA.

Entry, Front Hall and Staircase — Sharon Watts, Peony

Living Room — David Stonesifer Interior Design & Decoration, Los Gatos

Powder Room — Julie Black, Cassandra Dotzler

Master Bedroom — Claudia Mann, Debbie Walker, Rebecca Cabral, Vivie Desigaux, The Maids’ Quarters Inc, Los Gatos (story here)

Green Bedroom — Bev Viguerie, Viguerie Interiors, Capitola; Erin Crain, H Interiors, San Jose

Blue Bedroom — Gail Madison Goodhue, Madison Interiors, Santa Cruz

Dining Room — Fredrick Ojeda, Craig Shannon, Acanthus Interior Design, Los Gatos

Kitchen and Family Room — Joella Canover, Patricia Enos, Jessica Nakamoto, Interiors & Antiques, Los Gatos

Lanai — Lance Lew, NBC Channel 11, Petaluma

Guest House — Carmen Grande, Meg Picanco, Steve Gilbert, Willow Glen Home and Garden, San Jose

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Guest Room Decorating Tips

Friday, December 5th, 2008

Guest Room Decorating Tips

The holidays are upon us and we all know what that means.  Houseguests.  With the economy in a freefall, it’s unlikely you’ll be hearing, “Oh, we’ll just grab a hotel room.”  So, open your doors and make them feel welcome!  Whether you have a designated guest room, an office with a fold-out couch, or a kids room doing double-duty, here are some tips to make your guests feel welcomed and loved.

1. Make the bed as comfy as possible. A thick mattress pad, 600 count sheets and a wonderful down comforter are great basics.  It’s a good idea to store extra blankets in the closet in case your guest gets cold.  Next, lots of pillows not just because they look fabulous, but it’s nice to have something to lean up against when reading in bed.  Along with the bedding, offer luxurious towels and toiletries.

Guest Room Decorating Tips

Roll them up nicely in a basket and place in the guest’s room.  Small travel size toiletries are very nice.  Splurge on some nice French milled soaps.

2. Open up Closet Space. It’s a luxury anywhere, so make sure to clear out some space.  Replace any broken hangers with nice wooden hangers that won’t stretch or poke through your guests clothing.  Just remember, Joan Crawford always said “No wire hangers!”  It is actually very good advice.  A collapsible luggage rack can be very useful as well to hold a suitcase that might have to double as a dresser for the duration of the visit.

3. Be Multi-Media Friendly. A place to charge a cell phone, laptop and camera where they won’t be tripped over or stepped on is extremely valuable.  Maybe, a small desk or library table in a hallway can do double duty if the room is too small to support the electronic hub.  A surge protector would go that extra mile.

4. A bedside table is a must. Make sure it is equipped with a lamp, an alarm clock and a carafe and glass for water.

Guest Room Decorating Tips

A flashlight is important in case your guest has to find his or her way to the bathroom or kitchen.  Placing it on the bedside table makes it easy for your guest to find in the dark.

5. De-clutter! You want this to be a welcoming respite from the chaos of the holidays.  Clear off your son’s dresser covered with soccer trophies to give your guests a landing place for their toiletry cases!

6. The Personal Touch. A scented candle and fresh flowers go along way to create that sacred oasis.  Pick up some brochures to art galleries, museums or other local attractions to put in their room.  Are there any special events to check out?  Leave information on when, where and cost in your guest’s room.  Pick up a few magazines that are specific to your guest’s interests.  A knitter might enjoy the latest issue of Vogue Knitting or that special photographer might like to catch up with PDN or B&W Magazine.  It’s really all about little things we do to make people feel loved.

If you have any special ideas you do for your guests, we’d love to hear your tips.

Desiree - 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.

Summit League Home Tour

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

Summit League Home Tour 

Decorators and florists have been spending the last hours and minutes getting three gorgeous homes in Los Gatos and Saratoga ready for the holidays _ and an onslaught of Lookiloos! Natural garlands are being draped around four-poster beds, woodsy reindeer pillows are being fluffed up and strips of burlap and newsprint are being strung from a Christmas tree that is _ what else _ “green.”

Summit League Home Tour - Stairwell

The Summit League Homes for the Holiday’s tour runs Thursday and Friday (Dec.4-5). With $45 tickets available at the door, the tour runs from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day.

We got an advance sneak peek of the chaos that comes before showtime. And believe me, the beauty and craftsmanship of these gems shine through all the piles of packages, boxes and bags that are piled here and there as decorators begin their holiday transformations.

The homes include a stately Victorian built in 1886, with a turned-walnut balustrade on the central staircase. As the homeowner says, “the house originally cost $8,000 to build _ and $3,000 of it went to the staircase.”

A turn-of-the-last century Craftsman remodeled in 1987 is also on the tour, featuring not only the fine architecture inside, but the lovingly-tended gardens outside.

A contemporary French Chateau that even has a name — Tres Fleurs — will be showcased. Built for one of the Pinn brothers and his family by their construction company, the house is considered a mix of French, modern and “old Hollywood glamour.” The grounds are grand, with a background pool, waterfall, pizza oven, bocce ball court and putting green. A boutique with lots of great gifts will be your final stop.

Summit League Home Tour - Pool

Shuttles pick up guests at The Church of Jesus Christ Latter Day Saints parking lot, 15985 Rose Avenue, Los Gatos. Proceeds benefit the Pacific Autism Center for Education.

Julia - lookiloos.com

*Photos of Pinn house (dining room, backyard and the slide show photos) by Mert Carpenter.

Here’s the complete slideshow:

From Ranch to Craftsman in Saratoga

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

From Ranch to Craftsman in Saratoga

When Chuck and Sue Leiter first looked at the 1950s ranch house in Saratoga 12 years ago, they got a "bad, icky feeling." Not only was it filled with mildew inside and rats and overgrown ivy outside, the couple who lived there were divorcing.

From Ranch to Craftsman in Saratoga - Living Room

"It had such bad karma," said Sue Leiter, whose husband's family has owned Leiter's Pharmacy in the Rose Garden neighborhood for decades. But it was all they could afford and they liked the neighborhood, so – determined to clean it up and remodel someday – they bought it anyway.

The vibe got worse when they took possession and the former owner popped champaign and said, "may you be as happy here as we've been." To the Leiters – pregnant with their second child – it might as well have been a curse, Sue Leiter said with a laugh.

They brought in their rabbi for a blessing, and for the next decade they lived in a funky, but cleaned up and happy home. Still, there was little love lost when they tore the whole place down to the foundation three years ago and started fresh.

"We didn't want to keep anything of the old house," Sue said. "We loved our neighborhood, but everything else had to go."

They started with San Jose architect Lyle Mosher and contractor Rich Rose of Rose Construction, who had come highly recommended and had worked together on a number of Rose Garden and Willow Glen projects. Finding the right interior decorator, however, was more problematic. They went through three before they found Melody Mains. The first kept suggesting elegant materials when Sue needed kid-friendly. The second wanted to move walls. The third was never available.

The Leiters wanted a mountain home feel, and with rich wood detailing and cabinetry, vaulted wood beamed ceilings, stone fireplaces and tall windows, they accomplished their goal.

From Ranch to Craftsman in Saratoga - Kitchen
"They wanted the house to have a slightly rustic, yet warm environment," said Mains, who now works for Design and Interiors in Los Altos. "We used very organic materials. The colors on the wall are warm."

The generous windows, including Mosher's signature skylight in the kitchen, brought in lots of light. A wall of tall dining room windows overlooks a fountain, which draws the eye outside, making the space feel larger. The entryhall is one of Sue's favorite spaces, with large slate tiles and a stone wall that serves as the back of the fireplace. And there's a comfortable spot for their dog Lulu.

To the Leiters, Mosher, Rose and Mains made up their "dream team." They were so pleased with the results, they invited the trio with their spouses to a "wrap" party in the completed home. They've considered each other friends ever since.

From Ranch to Craftsman in Saratoga - Sue Leiter and Lulu

Julia - lookiloos.com

Here's the complete slideshow:

Saratoga Gem– Hakone Gardens

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008

Saratoga Gem - Hakone Gardens

Created in 1915 and named a landmark by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, Hakone Gardens – a Japanese garden in the hills of Saratoga – has a peaceful and tranquil feeling the moment you enter the large wooden gates.  Today, my stress du jour was checked at the door.

Saratoga Gem - Hakone Gardens - Twisted Maple

Currently the garden foliage is dressed for autumn.  It is wonderful, with warm golds and vibrant reds spotted throughout the grounds and in the ponds as well.  The Koi residents seem happy and greet you as you cross the footbridge.  Turtles don’t have a care, sunning themselves on large flat rocks.

The paths wind around wonderful garden sculptures and plantings.  The design of the garden is genuine replica of a Samurai or Shogun garden with a very regal feeling, but not like formal English Gardens.  Not stuffy and rigid.  The form is flowing, but controlled.  I spent the morning wandering alone through the garden.  It was a complete luxury and this experience invigorated me for the rest of the day.  And my stress wasn’t waiting to rejoin me at the gate like I had expected.

Saratoga Gem - Hakone Gardens - Garden Statue

There is more than the tranquil garden. Hakone offers classes as well.  Rejuvenate and treat yourself with yoga, Tai Chi or meditation classes.  Learn about traditional Japanese arts, such as ikebana or tea ceremonies.

It’s important to take your time, stop and absorb the serenity.  Reflect.  Try it you’ll be glad you did.

Hakone Gardens is located at 21000 Big Basin Way in Saratoga.  The Garden Hours are weekdays 10:00 am – 5:00 pm and weekends 11:00 am – 5:00 pm.  The cost for your moment of Zen $5 dollars for adults, $3.50 for seniors and students, and under 4 is free.

Desiree - lookiloos.com

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Manderley Revisited in La Selva Beach

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Manderley Revisited in La Selva Beach

"Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again."

Manderley is the exquisite estate by the sea made famous in the opening line of "Rebecca," a classic 1938 romantic thriller by British author Daphne Du Maurier. And when I first drove up the country lane toward La Selva Beach last weekend, through the eucalyptus groves and farm fields, and laid eyes on the gleaming white estate perched alone on a hilltop overlooking the sea, that famous line coursed through my brain.

Manderley Revisited in La Selva Beach - Front View

Even the name of the lane _ Sanderling Hill _ has a Manderley ring to it. It might not look like Du Maurier’s Manderley, but to me it feels like it _ a house that was as much a character in the book as Rebecca herself. In the novel, Manderley holds dark secrets. On Sanderling Hill, the setting sun envelopes it in a golden glow, but it still has a sense of mystery around it. It’s a house that has the bearing of a building that has withstood the fog and the wind and the sun and the salt for generations. It is an 1872 Italianate Victorian and has stories of its own, including the fact that it was literally quartered and moved from its original site in Watsonville just a decade ago to its present location down the road from Seascape and closer to Santa Cruz.

In all its 136 years, it has only been owned by three families: the Palmtags who owned a Watsonville brewery and built the house, the Muzzios who held great parties there since the 1920s, and the Bowens who rescued it in 1998. And perhaps soon, a fourth family may own it. The house is for sale, along with the four acres of farmland and a newly-built carriage house.

Manderley Revisited in La Selva Beach - Dining Room

My friend, Maria, first spotted the house returning from a camping trip to the beach. She grabbed a flier and, like me, has been obsessing ever since. It’s listed by Sotheby’s for nearly $2.7 million, a lower price than either of us expected, but still the stuff of fantasy.

"I want to have my family for Thanksgiving dinner in that dining room," she said.

Now I dream of it, too.

The house had been condemned after the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. And as much as Marina Muzzio hated to leave the house she grew up in, the plaster was crumbling off the walls and the brick fireplaces had been reduced to rubble. The neighborhood along the banks of the Pajaro River had also deteriorated and investing hundreds of thousands of dollars or more to restore it didn’t seem to make sense. The city of Watsonville acquired it and offered it up for $1 to the family with the best proposal to relocate and restore it.

Julie and Dayle Bowen, who had two young sons and already restored a Victorian in Santa Cruz, were awarded the Palmtag-Muzzio Mansion.

Manderley Revisited in La Selva Beach - Porch

They purchased four acres of farmland in La Selva beach, hired a house mover, and replanted it on the hilltop with its handsome balcony facing the lights of Santa Cruz across Monterey Bay. The kitchen and huge dining room look out to the ocean. The living room parlour looks down the sloping hillside over the organic row crops. The exterior of the house remains at is did in the 19th century, although the interior was relatively unadorned at the time. The Bowens assume the Palmtags might have run out of money to do the finishing touches. So when the Bowens stripped down the crumbling plaster walls to move the house, there was little ornamentation to preserve. When they put the house back together, they added picture rails and crown molding and widened the entrance to the living room. A fifth bedroom upstairs was converted to a bathroom, and the master bedroom was downsized a bit to include a master bath. The floors upstairs are original. Many of the windows still have the old wavy glass.

Manderley Revisited in La Selva Beach - Living Room

Julie Bowen restored the old house as a project. Now, she’s itching to do another one. Maybe she will look back and dream again of Sanderling Hill. Maybe the next family will buy it to live in for the next 100 years. No matter who comes to live here and what stories they will bring, this much is certain: this house has a character of its own.

(Photos by Marty Forsyth)

Julia - lookiloos.com

Here’s the complete slideshow: