We started Lookiloos to indulge the inner lookiloo in all of us, to showcase beautiful homes and gardens with original photos and stories, to give decorating tips and remodeling ideas and create a community to share our stories of home. Peek inside with us.
When floral designer Jose Ibarra stepped into Tina and David Sheffler’s Asian-inspired home, he knew just what he needed to set a smashing dining room table for her. The house was featured on the Rose Garden Homes Tour in October and needed a designer’s touch. As always, you can count on Jose to turn up the creativity a notch.
For the Shefflers’ table, while he celebrated the Asian inspiration by using wooden Geisha statuettes and delicate orchids, he honed in on a simple yet whimsical concept: Chinese take-out.
“Just because you have a party doesn’t mean it has to be catered,” Jose said. “It can be fun with what you have and at the same time look good.”
Next time you order Chinese takeout with friends and want to make some simple, but special touches, here are some of Jose’s ideas:
1. Use the white take-out containers as vessels for creativity: insert a small cup with water and add red roses; or fill with moss to give a “bok choy” effect. Jose stuck a pair of chopsticks in the moss and crinkled the paper chopsticks wrapper at the top to play with the color and texture. Wrap colored string around the boxes for extra color.
2. Add tall, wispy orchids in clear glass or simple vases to add height.
3. Keep the rest of the table minimalistic to showcase your special touches.
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.
This 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 designerJose 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.
*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;
*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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“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.
“We wander the garden and see what’s new. It’s a huge bond. It’s a personal garden, and I think it shows.”
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
The Christmas platter was a gift from my mom _ a platter that will likely never be soiled by turkey or roast beef. It’s large enough for either, with handles to carry the weight. But it seems destined to stand. On it is grand cursive script, whose message makes my mom choke up every time she says it: “Through the Years We All will be Together.”
She bought it at the Lazy K House in Lafayette, a century-old Spanish ranch house-turned-home-and-garden-boutique set behind the Orchard Nursery on Mount Diablo Boulevard. It is run by Anne Mercer, the daughter of my mother’s best friend, Muriel Schlichting. For years, the two have been making a trip together from San Jose to the shop at Christmas time, where it is festooned with all the glitter and gold of the holidays.
The shop is filled with great gifts from sophisticated $27 cashmere scarves, to whimsical $69 bobble-headed Christmas-themed garden stakes. The Lazy K has a great selection of glass ornaments from Eric Cortina, as well as Christopher Radko, who also shows his line of cookie jars and snowglobes ranging from $35 to $70. Wander through the old rooms of the Lazy K house, including the living room with the fireplace, and out into the garden where you may find some statuary or urns on sale.
The two-story house was once the main residence of a cattle operation in the Lafayette hills that used the Lazy K as its brand. When Highway 24 was built, the house was moved to its present location behind the Orchard Nursery. It’s been run as a gift shop for at least 25 years.
My Christmas platter is already perched on my dining room credenza, the first sign of Christmas in our house before we even have a tree. The Lazy K carries it each year and is priced at $60. In my house, it is destined to become an heirloom. It will provide the backdrop for Christmas Eve where, in fact, we all will be together.
To get to the Lazy K from the South Bay, take Highway 680 to Highway 24 toward Oakland. Take the Acalanes exit into Lafayette, turning right on Acalanes. Turn left on Mount Diablo Boulevard. It’s on the left behind the nursery at 4010 Mount Diablo Boulevard.
The Lazy K House
behind the Orchard Nursery & Florist
4010 Mt. Diablo Blvd.
Lafayette, CA 94549
David Edwards’s house in Santa Clara may have the distinction of being the "Greenest House in California," but he wants to be clear about one thing: "a guy living in a mud hut is greener."
We line up for home tours. We brake for open houses. We peek through fences. We fantasize. We want to get in! We started Lookiloos to indulge the inner lookiloo in all of us, to showcase beautiful homes and gardens with original photos and stories, to give decorating tips and remodeling ideas and create a community to share our stories of home. Peek inside with us.
-- Desiree, Julia and Sheila - Silicon Valley
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