Willow Glen

Willow Glen Home Tour May 1-2; Ticket Giveaway!

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Charming cottage on Willow Glen Home Tour

Charming cottage on Willow Glen Home Tour

The annual Willow Glen Home Tour on May 1st and 2nd promises six  beautiful homes this year — and UPDATE — we just gave away two pairs of tickets — one to Jackee and one to Beth. Still, it is a not-to-be-missed tour and proceeds go to a good cause.  Grab a few girlfriends and enjoy a day meandering through a remodeled craftsman with a fabulous outside living area, a storybook cottage of stone and wood, a chic bungalow and a traditional Willow Glen home filled with antiques and collectibles. 

Thanks fof leaving comments explaining why you should win a pair (are you a lookiloo extraordinaire?).

The tour supports the San Jose Day Nursery that provides subsidized early care and education to low-income families.sjdnht2010_Roycott_way[1]

Tickets, at the pre-tour price of $30, are available at the following San Jose businesses: 

  • Domus, 1395 Lincoln Avenue, on the corner with Minnesota Avenue;
  • Eclectic Touch, 1171 Lincoln Avenue;
  • Willow Glen Home and Garden, 1123 Lincoln Avenue; and
  • Able Printing, 1595 Meridian Avenue at Hamilton Avenue. 

 Tickets, the dates of the tour, may be purchased for $35 on the corner of Lincoln and Minnesota Avenues, in front of Chase Bank. Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

Just Listed: Modern Bungalow in Willow Glen

Friday, April 16th, 2010

FrontThis place is so cute! I love the angle of the flat roof line. It has been completely remodeled and has all the modern conveniences.  Plus it has a good size yard.  Larger than some brand new homes in the area.  It’s open this weekend–stop by to check out this adorable home and you can get all the details here.

2 Bedrooms

2 Bathrooms

Asking  $459,000

Living RoomKitchen

Desiree Looking Left - Lookiloos

Just Listed: Willow Glen Charmer

Friday, April 16th, 2010

FrontCute curb appeal–that’s what I first noticed.  This home is super cute but needs some updating.  The location is amazing–just a short walk to downtown Willow Glen. Oh the shopping and dining and no worries about parking. That’s a dream! The other thing I love about this little place is the pie shaped lot and all the way in the back was an artist studio. Cute little space that I could spend time working on my latest project–oh I’m just a little green with envy. Check out the virtual tour here.

2 Bedrooms + Den

1 Bath

Asking $719,000

Artist StudioKitchen

Desiree Looking Left - Lookiloos

Growing Family Downsizing with Style

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010
Desk in Breakfast nook

Desk in Breakfast nook

Meg Picanco has quite a home decor pedigree. For years, she and her  late mother, Nancy Biagini, owned and ran the highly-regarded Casa Casa store on San Jose’s Lincoln Avenue. And until last fall, she was a  partner in Willow Glen Home and Garden just down the street.

So you would expect the home she shares with her husband and two young children to be well appointed. But several life-changing events over the past few years have forced her to rethink the importance of belongings and what it truly means to make a house a home.
The top of a bookcase serves as a spot for special things

The top of a bookcase serves as a spot for special things

Like many families in these tough economic times, the growing Picanco family has downsized to half the space they were used to. And leave it to 41-year-old Picanco to do it with style.
She has turned the 1,400 square-foot cottage she rents in Willow Glen into a charming oasis filled — sparingly — with carefully chosen, quality furnishings from her retail days as well as the family heirlooms she cherishes most.
From her grandmother’s spice cabinet with a needlepoint inset to her mother’s glass-topped coffee table, the house has a feeling of warmth and deep roots no matter how temporary the rental may be.
“Bringing things into your home that have history give it a special aura,” Picanco said.
4414854286_145d8f0942_bHer journey to the rental house has taken a circuitous path. Picanco, her husband, Mario, and their two young children, Gabrielle and Giancarlo, were living in a 2,800 square-foot home in Boise, Idaho — “in search of a calmer life where we could live on one income.” But less than a year into their lives there, she was confronted at the same time with two frightening realities: her mother was diagnosed with colon cancer and her 19-month-old son was confirmed deaf.
Not only did she want to be close to her mother in San Jose as she fought the disease, but Picanco and her husband discovered that a top preschool for the deaf was located just up the peninsula in Redwood City.
“We knew we had to return to California,” she said. San Jose is where she studied interior design from San Jose State University and when she was 23, opened Casa Casa with her mother. Her sister joined later. When children came along for the sisters, the trio decided to sell the business. Picanco stayed on as a buyer for the new owners for a year before moving to Idaho in 2006.
They had been homeowners in San Jose before they moved and her husband holds a solid job in high tech, “but we could not afford to buy back into the market when we returned.”
So what did she do? She did what any woman would do: she held a garage sale. And she was compelled to sell “all the things that were wonderful, beautiful things I loved.”
But she kept a painted chest that her grandmother had left to her (and had tucked a note addressed to her inside for posterity,) a pair of her mother’s table lamps, a set of nesting tables her aunt brought back from Florence, and a delicate, bamboo-style chandelier that has stayed with the family through their moves and is decorated with holly berries at Christmas and streamers for birthdays.
4414024163_5f71b43c5d_oAfter a stint in one Willow Glen rental distinguished by a pink tile kitchen with a butterfly motif, she found the house her family now calls home, a place she hopes to stay in for at least the next several years.
It is the simplest of floorplans: small living and dining rooms, a newly-remodeled kitchen with a tiny breakfast nook, and three small bedrooms and one bath off the back hallway. No family room. No walk-in closets. The only extra is a quarter-basement that is just big enough for the washer and dryer and Picanco’s hanging clothes, folded sweaters, and neatly stacked shoes.
She maximizes every inch with function and style. She has turned the breakfast nook, that was practically too small for a table and chairs, into an office with one elegant, oversized desk topped with a computer. When the kids come home with backbacks and school papers, “everything gets filed immediately,” she said.
clock collection

clock collection

Perhaps the most surprising personal touch is her decision to invest in shutters for the dining room and bathroom. “I knew when we rented it , we would be here for at least several years, so why not make it our own home?” she said, “and I couldn’t live with metal mini blinds.”

She painted every room a separate color — coating the master bedroom with the same heathery hue she has used for her bedroom in every house. She filled her dining room hutch with her sterling silver and blue and white china as well as a pair of rhinestone-studded starfish. One had been her mother’s, and when she died in 2008, Picanco nestled it in a bowl with her own.
The Picanco family has lived in this house for just a year and in that time, their daughter has adjusted beautifully to her new school and their son has excelled at his. With cochlear implants, he can carry on conversations. “Every five minutes is a miracle,” Picanco said.
Their neighbors have become some of their best friends.
“I can’t deny I wouldn’t love to own my own house,” she said, “but we’re so happy here.”Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

Here’s the complete slideshow:

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

Snowmen Take Over Willow Glen’s Eclectic Touch

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

Snowmen have always been one of my favorite Holiday accessories.   The jolly winter characters have a way of making me smile and think back to when I was little and believed nothing was better than a day in the snow making snow “families” with my childhood friends.

This time of year Willow Glen’s Eclectic Touch is filled with beautiful items  from serving dishes, guest soaps to train sets to to get your home ready for the holidays or for a last minute hostess gift.  Images of Snowmen, along with angels, Santa and many other holiday favorites can be found in this unique shop.  Year round you can find home furnishings, decorative accessories, custom floral design and gifts that don’t say Pottery Barn.

Here a just a few fun items that can transform your home into a Winter Wonderland this month.

Eclectic Touch

1171 Lincoln Avenue

San Jose, CA 95125

(408) 292-7434

Naughty or Nice Party: Christmas Decorating Simply Chic

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009
Elegant Front Porch

Elegant Front Porch

What to do when you’ve invited 24 girlfriends over for a ”naughty or nice” sit-down dinner party? Call San Jose floral designer Jose Ibarra to come up with special Christmas decor, inside and out.

Pinecones with Pewter Ribbons

Pinecones with Pewter Ribbons

He started with the front entrance way of this Willow Glen home — a house he also decorated for Thanksgiving. While most folks feel pretty relieved to get a decent wreath on the door, Jose takes it up a notch by creating a whole natural scene — with a little sparkle — to welcome guests. He started with bare branches arching over the front doorway. With his secret — a $1.99 can of fake snow or flocking from Walgreen’s drug store — he sprayed sugar pine cones (the tall, skinny ones) with just a hint of winter. He tied the cones to the branches with burlap and pewter double satin ribbon. They dangle over the doorway.

“The homeowner wanted elegant,” he said, “but not overstated.”

Inside, he set a long narrow table and cascaded 200 dark red roses — three different kinds — down the center. You’ll find no vases here. Instead, he cut the stems off the roses and effectively tossed them onto the table. He added green orchids as well.

Roses and Orchids

Roses and Orchids

He tried to “reinvent the idea of simple,” he said. “Not over the top, but new and different.”

Julia Looking Left - Lookiloos

Here’s the complete slideshow:

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

Whatnots & Dodads – Holiday Ornaments Galore

Monday, November 30th, 2009

The day after Thanksgiving marks the day the hunt for the “perfect” tree ornament starts at our house. Every year each child in our household gets to choose one for our family tree.   This year, we are buying our ornaments at a new gift and antique shop in San Jose’s Willow Glen Whatnots &Dodads.

Located on Lincoln Avenue, the shop fits in nicely with the avenue’s mix of independent shops.  The store has a mix of antiques, new finds and crafts created by local artisans.  This month the store is overflowing with unique ornaments, nutcrackers and holiday decor.  Whatnots & Dodads carry tree trinkets from some of the most beautiful and intricate ornament lines around including: Bethany Lowe Designs, Santa’s Workshop, Kurt S. Adler and Katherine’s Collection.  Ranging in price from $4.95 to $11.95 each  of the ornaments that grace their displays are worthy of being handed down from generation to generation.

Sheila Looking Left - Lookiloos1330 Lincoln Avenue San Jose, CA 95125

(408)295-3500

Holiday By Jose: Non-traditional Thanksgiving Decor

Saturday, November 28th, 2009
Thanksgiving Table

Thanksgiving Table

The French-inspired San Jose home has an “antique chic” sensibility with a textured, neutral palette. And that’s all Jose Ibarra needed for inspiration when he decorated the home for Thanksgiving.  You’ll find no bright orange here.

“They’re going to have turkey for dinner and that’s as traditional as they get,” said Jose, a San Jose floral designer.

He started with the things the homeowner loves: a burlap tablecloth topped with mirrored glass. The combination of rustic and glamorous provided the perfect foundation for Jose’s tabletop design.  He  strips of heavy, woven vintage ticking as napkin rings.  The homeowner planned to top each coarse napkin ring with a rhinestone broche – adding star quality to peasant stock.

To complement the homeowner’s love of simplicity, Jose adorned the mirrored table with roses — not in the traditional fall colors, of course. Instead, he cascaded cream-colored roses — Sahara and Quicksand — down the center of the table, dripping pedals and “skeleton leaves” he picked up at the San Francisco Flower Market.

Since the living room was converted to the dining room for Thanksgiving — and the long narrow table positioned in front of the fireplace — Jose also was charged with rearranging the living room furniture throughout the house and adding simple, elegant touches throughout.

Wave of Roses

Wave of Roses


Take a look at the slideshow for glimpses of his holiday decor as well as other wonderful rooms — including a fabulous kitchen — in this lovely home. And then stayed tune. Jose will be redecorating this same home for Christmas — next week in fact. And Lookiloos will be hot on the trail.

Julia Looking Right - Lookiloos

Halloween Finds on Willow Glen’s Lincoln Avenue

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

While the kids go door-to-door looking for candy or chocolate bars, Lookiloos tend to keep an eye out for great Halloween decorations.  Trimmings for this holiday often ranges from gory to campy, yet a discerning eye strikes the balance of both. Here are a few finds celebrating Dia De las Muertos and Halloween from San Jose’s Lincoln Avenue in the Willow Glen Neighborhood.

Photos taken by Sheila Dowd at Fleurish and Domus.

Sheila - Lookiloos.com

Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

Dana and John Kouretas always loved the quaint charm of the two-bedroom home they bought in 1998, before they had children. It was on a big, pie-shaped lot in Willow Glen and just a block from the coffee houses and boutiques of Lincoln Avenue. So after having two children and plans for a third, they knew it was time to expand. They wanted to more than double its size, from 2,000 to 4,400 square feet. But maintain the quaint charm? That was a tall order.

Family Room - Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

With old-fashioned detailing in marble and wrought iron, eclectic furnishings and fixtures new and old, and lots of windows pulling in light and framing leafy views, the Kouretas family couldn’t be happier.

“It’s quite big and looks big on the outside, but inside, people are like, ‘oh, it feels more homey than you would think,’” Dana said. “People who had been in the old house said it feels like the old house, but everything is opened up.”

The couple had been clipping ideas from magazines for years before they hired architect Larry Kahle from Metropolis Architecture in Mountain View and Kathleen Monarch of Monarch Designs in San Jose. John acted as general contractor.

“I liked a lot of light, a lot of windows,” Dana said. “I wanted it to be traditional, but not stuffy traditional.”

Front Exterior - Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

She liked Spanish European and French styles, too. So how to blend it all together, so it’s worthy of hundreds of lookiloos traipsing through on the Willow Glen Homes Tour in early May?

And don’t forget, she wanted the house to feel cozy. With ceilings designed at 10 feet downstairs and nine feet upstairs, Kathleen Monarch knew she was in for a challenge. And the last thing she wanted was the house to feel so huge it echoes and so stark it’s cold. So what did she do?

“I never wanted it to look like a designer house,” Kathleen said. “The family is so warm and welcoming to everybody and this huge expanded family and friends, I wanted it to feel like that inside. To me the house looks like them.”

Kitchen Island - Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

But what does that mean when it gets down to the business of decor?

It means listening to the clients and pushing their boundaries a bit. Dana likes pastels, so Kathleen “tried to take that and take them out of the box a little further, make them go to a place where they’re a little nervous.”

With a crisp white backdrop in trims, doors, cabinets and baseboards, the duo decided on a rich brown for the study, a deep rust for the dining room, and yellows, pinks and greens elsewhere.

Master Bath - Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

“Everything had to pop off white,” Kathleen said. “Even the materials we selected had a lot of white in them, white Carrera marble, white Calcutta marble. The kitchen island I did in honed black granite. The white and black grounded everything.”

They also played with scale and textures.

In the living room, with the French style cast concrete mantel, a fluffy white rug softens the room. In the master bedroom, a custom-designed minty green mohair headboard contrasts with the sparkling mirrored dresser.

The white-on-white master bath, which combines five different tiles with various patterns, from brick to Versailles, is a favorite.

“It’s a combination of so many materials, but nothing is jarring. Nothing is shiny,” Kathleen said. With so much white, she added, “you can’t look like you went to Vegas. Everything is honed down.”

Pink Twin Bedroom - Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

Dana included her family antiques throughout the house, including her great-grandmother’s china hutch in the dining room and her grandmother’s twin beds that are now in her daughters’ room. She also has a favorite pair of Bergere chairs she picked up at a garage sale for $300, a fraction of what would be more than $2,000 new.

The house has become the center of the couple’s extended family, who often gather three-deep in the kitchen to prepare Greek meals. Their third child, a boy, was a toddler when they finished the project.

Modern Master Bedroom - Design Inspiration: Big Remodel Maintains Homey Feel

“Ever since we moved back in, it’s like, ‘let’s go to John and Dana’s house,’” Dana said. “And that’s what we like.”

(Photographs by Desiree Northend)

Julia - lookiloos.com

You might also enjoy these stories:
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Gentle Remodel on Spanish Bungalow
Small House Remodel Maintains Charm
Downsizing and Restyling: From French Country to Modern Neutral
Mid-Century Modern from California Ranch: A Town and Country Life

Here’s the complete slideshow: