KAREN WIGHT -- No Place Like Home
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I love a home tour. I’ve been a tour-a-phile as long as I can remember.
When I was growing up, my mother always volunteered for the Riverside
Panhellenic Home Tour (and still does), so attendance was not only
mandatory, but helping out was mandatory as well.
It was really the best of both worlds. Raising money for a good cause and
appreciating great architecture, art, and Riverside history.
Over the years, I have seen some fabulous houses. Growing up in Riverside
gave me the opportunity to see styles of homes we only dream of here: old
homes with orange groves for their front and backyards; historic homes
set at the base of Mount Rubidoux; rooms that served as residences in the
Mission Inn; Victorian estates with carriage houses larger than the home
I live in now. Historic, charming, unique and unlike anything we
experience on the coast.
My fascination for homes has followed me everywhere I’ve gone. While I
was at UCLA, I had a chance to see gorgeous homes in Beverly Hills,
Brentwood, Pacific Palisades, Malibu and Holmby Hills.
Families of friends that I met and visited had great houses in
Hillsborough, Saratoga and one house in San Francisco that I still think
about every once in a while.
It was an old Victorian on Green Street, three stories high, four if you
count the basement. The architecture was magnificent and quirky all at
the same time. The moldings, the scale, the attention to detail was
something out of a romance novel. It conjured up great visions and left
me desirous of a similar fate for myself.
So here I sit in my California ranch home, circa 1965, a house with
possibilities. Symmetry was obviously not in the vocabulary of the
architect who designed this house. The flow is good but the details are
lacking.
I try not to be covetous of some of the spectacular homes I’ve seen in
the past, but sometimes it’s hard. I’ve tasted something sweeter, but I
wouldn’t trade in the beach, the schools and the friends -- even for
Riverside’s Raeburn Carriage House built in the middle of an orange
grove.
I still get the opportunity to see some incredible homes. And this year,
on May 2, I will have the pleasure of watching hundreds of friends and
acquaintances go through the Harbor High Home Tour and see an eclectic
mix of what this unusual area has to offer.
There is a Craftsman built to authentic specifications, which has
museum-quality collections; a beach cottage done to the nines; a
Masculine Retreat with a 270-degree view of the Back Bay; a Castaways
feel-good cottage; a relaxed but polished California Dream in Newport
Heights; and a garden with a natural stream that runs through it.
Top that off with an oceanfront lunch venue and you have a home tour that
promises something for everyone.
Chairman Leonie Lumpkin is “thrilled with the diversity of this year’s
tour. The mix of homes, gardens and styles are very different from one
another and each has a unique character all it’s own. There is something
for everyone, including a few surprises. No one will be left feeling that
some style was not well represented.”
I’ve been lucky enough to take a sneak peak at a few of this year’s tour
homes. Diversity is the buzzword. I enjoy any style done well and though
these homes are all very different, I enjoyed each one because of the
integrity of design.
The owners have passion for their preferences and I applaud their
efforts. Here is a mixed-up list of a few of “my favorite things”: a
large, round dining room table set next to a cozy fireplace; a custom
mosaic on the bottom of a pool; a billiard table done in perfectly
coordinating colors; a room where you can really write on the walls;
80-year-old bonsai that has never been touched with an instrument other
than a human hand; and a natural stream that runs to Cherry Lake.
By the end of tour day, more than 200 volunteers will have shared their
time and effort; eight families will have graciously turned their lives
upside down for at least a day (though we know the preparation takes
weeks); 1,000 ticket-holders will have enjoyed a day of diverse design,
good food and the opportunity to help a local high school become a better
springboard for the many talented children that attend.
Tickets are $40 and can be purchased through The Butera Collection in
Westcliff Court, Ann Dennis Design in Stonemill Design Center and through
the Home and Garden Tour ticket hotline at (949) 262-5290.
All in all, I’d say it’s an event you just can’t miss. And for me, it’s
also a family tradition.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs Saturdays.
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