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Santa Barbara Beach Yoga is giving “sun salutations” new meaning with its roster of inspired alfresco classes.

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Wouldn’t it be great if you had a chef to prepare food tailored to your nutritional goals? “People trying to put on muscle should eat differently than people trying to lose weight,” says Kevin Lunn, who hatched the idea for QUOKKA, a meal-delivery service in Santa Barbara and Los Angeles, with his friend Hunter Rusack. Just fill out a questionnaire or meet with a nutritionist, and your meals are delivered to your door or available for pickup at various locations. To ensure that the food tastes good, the avid athletes enlisted Barbareño’s chef Julian Martinez—who also owns CrossFit Santa Barbara—as a partner. From $100/week. quokkakitchen.com. -Erik Torkells

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Fall Santa Barbara Magazine Fall Santa Barbara Magazine

Seaside Debut

To kick off Santa Barbara Magazine’s summer issue and newly redesigned look, guests gathered at the Rosewood Miramar Beach’s private residence for croquet and canapés. With decor and design from Bon Fortune Events and a cheerful rose and rosé cart courtesy of Rose Story Farm and Margerum Wine, friends of the magazine sipped and mingled under the palms at Miramar’s luxe slice of paradise. J.B.K.

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Spring Santa Barbara Magazine Spring Santa Barbara Magazine

Miramar Reborn

At last, the long, long, long, long wait is over. The Rosewood Miramar Beach Montecito hotel has opened…

At last, the long, long, long, long wait is over. The Rosewood Miramar Beach Montecito hotel has opened with a flourish in its iconic oceanside setting, the culmination of developer Rick Caruso’s 12 years of patience and financial investment.  Yes, the Pacific panorama is mesmerizing, but don’t be daunted by the shiny newness of the surroundings. Just give in to the seductive feeling you’ve been invited to a grand mansion or an elegant country club. The welcome mat is out for celebratory occasions as well as casual get-togethers and parties on the vast lawn. Locals have already discovered that the Manor Bar—with its old-school Rat Pack atmosphere—is the place to hang out in what is arguably the ultimate roadside attraction. Rates: From $800/night. 1759 S. Jameson Ln., Montecito, 805-900-8388. Joan Tapper

rosewoodhotels.com/en/miramar-beach-montecito

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Arts Santa Barbara Magazine Arts Santa Barbara Magazine

Color Vibe

Artist Jane Gottlieb’s Santa Barbara home, like her art, is saturated with color.

Baret Boisson in her Carpinteria studio.
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 Jane Gottlieb; the multihued living room includes Saporiti furniture and a portion of Gottlieb’s Murano glass collection;Brancusi Head, Paris, France, 1989, archival hand-painted Cibachrome print, 30 x 40 in. an outdoor view of Gottlieb’s colo…

 Jane Gottlieb; the multihued living room includes Saporiti furniture and a portion of Gottlieb’s Murano glass collection;Brancusi Head, Paris, France, 1989, archival hand-painted Cibachrome print, 30 x 40 in. an outdoor view of Gottlieb’s colorful residence

Artist Jane Gottlieb’s Santa Barbara home, like her art, is saturated with color. “My house reflects my art,” she says. “It makes you happy because color is classically uplifting.” Indeed, color is everywhere—from the walls (adorned with her artwork) to the furniture (colorful pieces designed by Italian manufacturer Saporiti)—and includes her significant collection of multihued glass (primarily Murano). Gottlieb acquired the residence 21 years ago when she relocated from her native Los Angeles, where she had transformed several homes according to her signature color palette.

Her love of vibrant hues was inspired by a visit to the Yucatán when she was 30 years old. “The Mexican color really spoke to me,” says the artist, “and it really changed my art and my perspective on everything.” Originally a painter, Gottlieb began hand painting her own photographs (Cibachromes) in the early 1980s. Her exhibition of color-enhanced car photographs at L.A.’s Petersen Automotive Museum was up for three years, a true coup, and helped launch her career, which has included international exhibitions and many one-person shows.

The advent of digital photography and Photoshop transformed Gottlieb’s work; now she prints her full-toned digitally enhanced photographs—some taken decades earlier—on aluminum. She currently has 100 pieces of her work on loan in six buildings at UCLA and her work was exhibited last year at UC Santa Barbara’s Art, Design & Architecture Museum. –L.D. Porter

JANEGOTTLIEB.COM

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Fall 2018 Santa Barbara Magazine Fall 2018 Santa Barbara Magazine

Saddle Up

Supermodel and designer Erin Wasson leads the luxury cowboy reboot with Lucchese

Nili Lotan leopard-print maxi dress, $695

Nili Lotan leopard-print maxi dress, $695

 

Supermodel and designer Erin Wasson leads the luxury cowboy reboot with Lucchese

By Gina Tolleson | Photography by: Adam Secore, Wynn Myers for Lucchese | Styled by Natalie Joos

WHO Erin Wasson, 39, supermodel, designer

WHAT Known for her provocative rock and roll meets surfer meets Lone Star style, Wasson never thought she’d have the opportunity to work with the grande dame of the cowboy boots—Lucchese, which is based in her home state of Texas and an ever present brand/sponsor at the Santa Barbara Polo & Racquet Club. It’s a true soles-up design partnership between Wasson and Lucchese, not just a trendy collaboration. “When you understand the Western world, it’s a luxury beyond,” says Wasson. “This is their first ‘fashion’ project and the most important thing is the quality, materials, process, and knowledge of how this is being made.”

I wanted to create a collection that incorporates Western silhouettes with fashion-forward subtleties. I had this sort of ‘Ranch Tropez’ concept when I started designing—a little grit and a little glam. Perhaps a way to live life!

WEAR “I wanted to create a collection that incorporates Western silhouettes with fashion-forward subtleties—the gold zipper, patent leather detail. I had this sort of ‘Ranch Tropez’ concept when I started designing—a little grit and a little glam. Perhaps a way to live life!” 

TEX-CALI “Being from Texas but living in California for 15 years has certainly become a part of everything I do design wise. Mostly I wanted to make boots that felt timeless wherever you are.”

MUST-HAVES The patent leather bootie, a 17-inch-high midnight blue ostrich boot, a black-and-white crocodile boot, and a 1960s mod boot with a rounded toe.


Erin’s  S.B. BLACK BOOK

Allora by Laura, 805-563-2425, allorabylaura.com, for great pieces and my Wasson Fine jewelry collection.
A drive and hike to Knapp’s Castle and a swim at Arroyo Burro County Beach.
I love to browse Chaucer’s bookstore, 805-682-6787, chaucersbooks.com.
Great tapas and cocktails at Loquita, 805-880-3380, loquitasb.com, and The Nugget, 805-969-6135, nuggetbarandgrill.com, reminds me of Texas—cowboys and stiff drinks.
Vintage finds at The Blue Door, 805-364-5144, thebluedoorsb .com, housewares at Upstairs at Pierre Lafond,  805-565-1503, upstairsatpierrelafond.com, and cool furniture at Garde, 805-845-8384, gardeshop.com.
 
 

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Garden, Special Issue Santa Barbara Magazine Garden, Special Issue Santa Barbara Magazine

Hope Renewed

The stories of the Florestal estate and Hope Ranch itself have been intertwined since the beginning.

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Written by Joan Tapper | Photographs: Christy Gutzeit | Original Florestal Estate, Courtesy of Marc Appleton

The stories of the Florestal estate and Hope Ranch itself have been intertwined since the beginning: It was 1923 when New Yorkers Peter Cooper Bryce and his wife, Angelica, bought 52 bluff-top acres, including a mile of beach, in the new development in which he was an original partner. They hired George Washington Smith to design a Spanish Colonial-style home (constructed in 1925) that would come to be surrounded by beautiful gardens. There were lawns and Mediterranean gardens, courtyard fountains, allées of olives and magnolias, magnificent palms, even a funicular that carried beachgoers down to the sand.

Noted architect Marc Appleton, the Bryces’ grandson, grew up in Arizona, but his family would regularly make the two-day trip across the Mojave Desert to arrive “at this incredible place overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Florestal was magical,” he remembers, “and my siblings and I always looked forward to visiting and exploring it.”

After Peter Bryce died in 1964, Angelica lived at Florestal for another 16 years; then the estate was sold, passing through several owners over the next couple of decades. A few years ago, Appleton, who now lives in Montecito, got a call from longtime clients Alison and Geoff Rusack announcing that they had acquired Florestal. By this time the house “was in very bad shape,” the architect says, and “the grounds looked like a municipal golf course—all concrete paths and lawn. None of the original formal gardens were left.” Undaunted, the new patrons were “keen to restore the residence and landscape, and that is what we have achieved.”

The Original Florestal Estate

The Original Florestal Estate

Appleton’s plan superbly blends the original design with areas that reflect more contemporary usage. Today, the grounds once again include an entry courtyard, great lawn, rose garden, and olive allée, as well as the lake and a lake pavilion, a pool, and a bocce court. 

Last October, in a gesture that speaks to the special place Florestal occupies in Hope Ranch history, the estate and the neighboring Bidwell property played host to a 1930s-style garden party that benefited the nonprofit Hope Ranch Beautification Fund. Says Geri Bidwell, the proceeds go “to help restore and replenish the post-drought landscaping needs of the community” as well as the roadsides along Laguna Blanca School and other common areas of the ranch. Some 300 guests attended the wine tasting and dinner, which was highlighted by Appleton’s lively slide show and history of Florestal. 

“Hope Ranch is a community with more than a century of commitment to making it a special and unique place to live,” notes Appleton, “so it’s gratifying to witness the current enthusiasm among residents.”

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Design Santa Barbara Magazine Design Santa Barbara Magazine

Outside the BOX

Green building can be beautiful, sustainable, and affordable.

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“Green building can be beautiful, sustainable, and affordable.”

It may look like a normal contemporary home from the street, but one of the city’s hottest new builds is one that’s given a second life to shipping containers. Those big metal boxes that transport everything around the world usually end up in a landfill, however, five of them went into shaping this Santa Barbara foothills house. Homeowners Dani and Bret Stone, a fashion stylist and environmental attorney respectively, wanted to set an example of something that could be stunning and sustainable at the same time, not to mention cost effective. They worked with AB Design Studio, builder Don Barber, and McFadden Design Group to create a 2,400-square-foot custom concrete-and-steel structure of stacked containers. Every part down to the original doors are used but painted in welcoming hues. “We used 15 shades of gray,” says designer Sarah McFadden. “There was no way I was going to do white, and there was no way I was going to do color.” The subtle shades and shapes McFadden wove into each room make all the difference. Small rectangular cutouts and windows give the eyes resting points throughout, while the natural corrugation of the container (now painted gray) gives a completely unique backsplash in the kitchen. “It’s the details of the container that add contrast,” she adds. Proving this new type of building doesn’t have to be cold and industrial, the interiors are filled with warm textiles, bright artwork, and creative lighting. Adds Dani: “Green building can be beautiful, sustainable, and affordable.” –Written by Jennifer Blaise Kramer –Photographs by Jason Rick

ABDESIGNSTUDIOINC.COM | MCFADDENDESIGNGROUP.COM

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Summer 2018 Santa Barbara Magazine Summer 2018 Santa Barbara Magazine

Island Itinerary

Blue skies and ocean breezes on the American Riviera

Santa Cruz Island

Santa Cruz Island

Welcome aboard the Santa Barbara Sailing Center’s newest addition, Montecito, a 27-foot Catalina Yacht.

Welcome aboard the Santa Barbara Sailing Center’s newest addition, Montecito, a 27-foot Catalina Yacht.

Captain Martin Santos

Captain Martin Santos

No need for planes, trains, or automobiles for a summer adventure—sail to the Channel Islands with these exceptional tours. The Santa Barbara Sailing Center, 805-962-2826, sbsail.com, has a slip-worthy inventory of yachts and experienced crew. For larger parties (up to 149 people) and luxury service, Channel Cat Charters, 805-898-1015, channelcatcharters.com, is a floating fantasy for special occasions and weddings. For a bespoke island-hopping trip, Captain Martin Santos of Adventure Boat Charters 805, 805-450-3483, abc805.com, curates half- and full-day packages—sight-seeing, surfing, fishing, and hiking to sleeping under the stars and luxe camping. Gina Tolleson


Did You Know

Island Packers is celebrating 50 years of providing transportation, education, and research support for California’s Channel Islands. The family-owned business transports about 100,000 passengers annually and provides opportunities for individuals to learn more about the islands and local marine environment. 805-642-1393. Isabel Bassi islandpackers.com


We Want… Glow in the flow with an ISLE Glider wood paddle board ($945, islesurfandsup.com). For rentals, tours, camps, and private lessons, check out The Paddle Sport Center, 805-617-3425, paddlesportsca.com

We Want… Glow in the flow with an ISLE Glider wood paddle board ($945, islesurfandsup.com). For rentals, tours, camps, and private lessons, check out The Paddle Sport Center, 805-617-3425, paddlesportsca.com

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Polo 2018 Santa Barbara Magazine Polo 2018 Santa Barbara Magazine

Polo 411

Welcome to the insider’s guide to polo in beautiful Santa Barbara. It is fast, riveting, elegant, and utterly entertaining, but it can also be confusing to be field-side and not understand the game.

Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.

Welcome to the insider’s guide to polo in beautiful Santa Barbara. It is fast, riveting, elegant, and utterly entertaining, but it can also be confusing to be field-side and not understand the game. Here’s the breakdown.


Basics

The object of the game is to move the polo ball downfield, hitting the ball through the goal posts for a score. There are two teams of four players each and two referees, all on horseback. The teams switch directions after each goal is scored so that neither team has a wind, sun, or field advantage. After each goal is scored, the teams come back to the center of the field for a “bowl in,” similar to a face-off in hockey. The polo field is 300 yards long and 160 yards wide (approximately the size of nine football fields), making it the largest field in organized sports.

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Chukkers

A polo match lasts about two hours and is divided into six periods, called chukkers. Each chukker runs seven and a half minutes long. A bell or horn is sounded at the seven-minute mark to let the players know 30 seconds remain. If the ball goes out of bounds or is scored during that time, the chukker ends. The team with the most goals at the end of the six chukkers is the winner.

Divot Stomp

During half time, spectators are invited to go onto the field and participate in the traditional divot stomp to replace clods of turf kicked up by the horses during play, helping to smooth the field for the next half. The divot stomp is often done with a glass of bubbly in hand.

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Player Positions

Each of the four players is given an area of responsibility designated by a jersey number. The forward is #1; the most defensive player is #4, or the back. (There is no goalie.) The middle players are #2 and #3. The #3 is usually the highest-rated player on the team and the de facto captain. This is the player who leads the offense and coordinates the defense.

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Teams & Players

Each team is a mix of professional and amateur players. At the high-goal level of play—such as the teams competing in the Pacific Coast Open—there is typically one amateur player and three professionals. In medium and low-goal polo, the teams are a mix of amateur and professional players. These team are unique in a sense because the teammates can change depending on the makeup of the team and the handicap of the tournament
being played. 

Handicaps

Polo handicaps result from players ranked yearly by their peers. The United States Polo Association has a scale of -1 to 10 goals (10 being the best) that are then assigned as the player’s handicap. Team play is handicapped on the basis of ability and can change from tournament to tournament. If a tournament is a 16-goal tournament, the four players’ handicaps cannot exceed 20. Low-goal polo is considered 0 to 8 goals. Medium-goal polo is considered 8 to 16 goals. High-goal polo, or professional polo—that most exciting and rare of the sport—is 16 to 26 goals in the United States.

Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.

Attire

In Santa Barbara, laid-back luxury reigns supreme. Match attire can vary among tournaments, with the high-goal season hosting dressier matches. When in doubt, you can never go wrong with a classic sundress or khakis and a button-down shirt.

 

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Polo 2017 Santa Barbara Magazine Polo 2017 Santa Barbara Magazine

One for the Books

On a warm summer evening last season, more than 300 guests gathered at the Santa Barbara Polo & Racquet Club for a celebration of the club’s Polo magazine in partnership with Santa Barbara Magazine.

Photographs by Blue Gabor and Steven Simon

On a warm summer evening last season, more than 300 guests gathered at the Santa Barbara Polo & Racquet Club for a celebration of the club’s Polo magazine in partnership with Santa Barbara Magazine. Featured guest Nacho Figueras spoke and signed copies of his new novel, High Season (Hachette), while a well-dressed crowd sipped Veuve Clicquot champagne, Summerland Winery vintages, Jardesca summer cocktails, and dined on passed appetizers from Los Agaves. Near the champagne tower, Revelry Event Designers created outdoor living rooms right on the field, complete with leather sofas, lanterns, and throws. As the sunset gave way to stars, DJ Fab moved people off the grass and onto the dance floor.

 

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Polo 2017 Santa Barbara Magazine Polo 2017 Santa Barbara Magazine

Leading Lady

Five things to know about power attorney and polo player Leigh Brecheen

Five Things to Know About Power Attorney and Polo Player Leigh Brecheen

Leigh Brecheen on Zorro at the Engel & Völkers Polo Stadium in See by Chloé chiffon blouse, $460, Allora by Laura.

There simply isn’t another place like the Santa Barbara Polo & Racquet Club. The weather, the people, the level of competition, the physical beauty—it is without peer.
  1. How long have you played polo? I have been riding all my life but started playing polo in 1984 at a lively clinic lead by Corky Linfoot and SBPRC’s now-deceased 10-goaler Bob Skene. I still have friends from that original clinic.

  2. What’s your connection to the SBPRC? My great uncle William Riley McKeen had a home in Montecito in the 1920s and ’30s, so Santa Barbara has felt like home to me since the first time I ever drove up. My sister—sculptor Laurie Brecheen Ballard who now resides on Padaro Lane—was the first female nonspouse-playing member of the SBPRC in the late ’70s.

  3. Your polo style—on and off the field. My style on the field is dominated by navy blue wraps and horse blankets with red or yellow trim. I believe in science and safety, so I do wear an eventing vest, glasses, and a face mask.  Off the field, I strive to be casually elegant. Slightly underdressed but well put together in the classical manner.

  4. Must-haves every woman should have at a polo match? Hats, a friendly attitude, a willingness to learn about the game, and an appreciation of the players and the horses.

  5. Trends you love or hope come back? Good manners! I love pants tucked into boots and fun bright tops with long sleeves to protect me from the sun. Also a certain degree of understatement (which seems to have deserted us in the current era). I guess I am a preppie at heart.


Must Have…

Lisa Sands’s equestrian take on the computer bag ($469).

lisasandsdesign.com


Sunday Essentials

 

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Polo 2017 Santa Barbara Magazine Polo 2017 Santa Barbara Magazine

Flavors of Argentina

Agustin Mallmann adds a South American touch to a Santa Barbara party

Agustin Mallmann adds a South American touch to a Santa Barbara party

Chef Agustin Mallmann.

Written by Joan Tapper
Photographs: Belen Sanguinetti

Mallmann in his element.

As the polo club welcomes its international players, Santa Barbara also heralds the arrival of up-and-coming chef Agustin Mallmann, who spends half the year in Argentina and half the year in Santa Barbara, where he was born. Trained under his uncle, famed South American TV culinary star Francis Mallmann, the 24-year-old went out on his own a couple of years ago. 

“It was amazing to work in Francis’s kitchens for six years,” says Agustin, who has adapted his uncle’s wood-fired cooking to his own cuisine: He uses the plancha (a cast-iron griddle) heated over embers, and a wood-fired oven to create Argentine-flavored dinners that are uniquely suited to the Santa Barbara lifestyle. “The technique ties to polo-style events,” he says, often outdoors, a little rustic but with superb meat and fish served on fine plates with the best silver and glassware. “I try to buy everything at the farmers markets and get the fish at the Santa Barbara harbor,” while the meat sometimes comes from the clients’ own ranches.

Asado with chimichurri.

His ideal summer dinner, he says, starts with appetizers seared on the plancha—shrimp with portobello mushrooms and scallops with lemon zest, olive oil, and cilantro. He follows those with salmon cooked whole on the grill accompanied by basil aioli, and prime rib-eye prepared over embers and served with Argentine chimichurri sauce. The side dish features a criolla of chopped green peppers and red onion mixed with arugula and dressed with olive oil and red wine vinegar. What to drink? Begin with sangria or a caipiroska—a version of caipirinha made with vodka—and move on to a nice white and definitely a Malbec, which pairs well with the meat. 

The plancha.

For dessert, there’s panqueque dulce de leche, a creamy caramel-filled crepe rolled on the plancha and served with vanilla ice cream and fresh mint. “The contrast of the warm crepe and cold ice cream is wonderful,” says Agustin.

Agustin created one such beachside party here last summer for polo player Paco de Narvaez and his wife, Rocio. “This summer,” he says, “I’m hoping to show more people what I have to offer. The food will be awesome—that’s a given. But people will enjoy the whole experience.” agustinmallmann.com

 

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Style Santa Barbara Magazine Style Santa Barbara Magazine

Cottage Industry

A longtime fan of Santa Barbara, interior designer Madeline Stuart made her dream of having a weekend home here a reality

A longtime fan of Santa Barbara, interior designer Madeline Stuart made her dream of having a weekend home here a reality when she found a 1930s bungalow for sale in the hidden enclave of El Caserio, a storybook neighborhood near the Presidio. After buying the historic property, she transformed the one-bedroom cottage with lots of white paint and casual furnishings into a sophisticated yet simple Spanish-style retreat that serves as a welcome counterpoint to her weekday Hollywood Hills lifestyle. Says Stuart: “Within minutes of arrival, my anxieties have eased, my blood is no longer boiling, and I settle in for an all-too-short weekend of farmers market shopping, cooking, reading the New York Times, and engaging in slothlike behavior that wouldn’t be possible if I’d stayed in L.A.”
MADELINESTUART.COM Jennifer Blaise Kramer

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Madeline’s S.B. Must Do’s

Walking the beach with my husband, Steve Oney, and our Parson Russell terriers, Beatrice and Mr. Peabody.

Takeout from Lucky Penny, 805-284-0358, luckypennysb.com.

C’est Cheese, 805-965-0318, cestcheese.com, for Garrotxa cheese and marinated olives.

Helena Avenue Bakery, 805-880-3383, helenaavenuebakery.com, for sourdough and olive bread.

Brophy Bros., 805-966-4418, brophybros.com, for peel-and-eat shrimp.

Taqueria El Bajio, 805-884-1828, on Milpas for adobada tacos.

Driving Alameda Padre Serra just for the fun of it.

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Polo 2015 Santa Barbara Magazine Polo 2015 Santa Barbara Magazine

The Rock ‘n’ Roll Goaler

New York fashion branding exec turned Buellton transplant Sara Rotman turns heads and takes the reins for Darkhorse polo.

New York fashion branding exec turned Buellton transplant Sara Rotman turns heads and takes the reins for Darkhorse polo

Sara Rotman preps for a match with her Darkhorse polo team.

Written by Gina Tolleson
Photographs by David Lominska, Darryl Estrine, Walter Chin

THE PLAYER I live for competition, so normally I play the 12 and eight-goal tournaments at the club, but this year is going to be a little different for me. Having just purchased a ranch, I have been spending most of my available time with my husband converting it from a largely ignored parsley field to a viable horse facility. It’s been quite a labor of love and has come a long way—we currently have irrigated turnout available, an arena, and a track—but needs another six months or more to be a fully functioning polo facility. With all the time spent putting in fencing, a track, arena, polo field, and barns, my polo at the club will be limited to club chukkers and cheering on my friends.

THE LOOK My style is pretty much all-American classic with a rock ‘n’ roll twist. My daily uniform is a T-shirt and pair of cropped jeans made special with statement jewelry (one item only), stiletto pumps, and great jacket. I’ve favored Saint Laurent
this season as Hedi Slimane’s current tastes remind me of my East Village music scene days. I also love classic items like a French striped T-shirt and short shorts for Sunday polo, but I always pair the simple stuff with a great shoe. And only polo players should wear white jeans to a polo match. Just sayin’.


Must-Haves

  • Neutrogena Healthy Defense SPF 50. Put it on in the morning and reapply often. Nothing says rookie like a sunburned face and arms. 

  • Darkhorse polo jeans ($145, darkhorse polo.com). If you can get your hands on a pair, buy ’em. You’ll thank me.

  • An ample supply of the 2011 Clos Pepe Pinot Noir Vigneron Select ($67, clospepe.com). Drink it often and with friends.

  • A new Ford F350 Dually to pull my polo trailer. Who knew big trucks could get me so excited?


SARA’S S.B. BLACK BOOK

…in her Manhattan MODCo office.

It’s hard to get a New Yorker to admit there’s good Italian food anywhere outside of NY, but I genuinely love S.Y. Kitchen, 805-691-9794, sykitchen.com, in Santa Ynez. It offers a casual, elegant atmosphere, amazingly fresh local produce/farm-to-table food, and wonderful local wines. • Les Marchands, 805-284-0380, lesmarchandswine.com, in the Funk Zone has become my second home. I’d like to say it’s because of its proximity to my branding company MODCo’s newest office location, but I think it has more to do with the great local and European wines by the glass. • The Channel Islands. Get there any way you can. Find a friend with a boat, grab a charter, or go whale watching in a big group, but get yourself to one of the most magical places on earth. My husband and I go fishing off the coast of Santa Rosa whenever we can and it always leaves me with a smile on my face for days. • Jenni Kayne, 805-309-0550, jennikayne.com. It’s a sophisticated store—classic, modern, and impeccable.  

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