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Designers Furniture Interviews Kids Rooms

Making heirlooms rather than disposable furniture

When most people struggle to find the furniture of their dreams they settle for second best, but for husband and wife team Lee Gratton and Emma Clark, that was never an option.

Gratton Design
Lee and Emma

Rather, Lee, an old school woodworker by trade and Emma, a journalist turned interior designer, saw a gap in the market and decided to fill it.

Having worked under the title of Gratton Design since the end of 2010, the Melbourne duo assist architects and designers with cabinetry and custom furniture for private homes and the hospitality industry, but it was not until late last year that they launched their own ranges.

Gratton Design 1

“We love making custom furniture pieces for clients and have a million sketchbooks filled with designs, so were very excited to finally produce our own range,” explains Emma. “The furniture range began with one stool that Lee made out of leftover bits and pieces. We refined the shape and materials until it looked great and was comfortable to sit on. We then made a complementary round table in a few sizes, which led to a coffee table and full-size dining table. It was a pretty organic process.”

Gratton Design 2

But the furniture range, or adult range as Emma likes to call it, is not the only one; they also have a kids range inspired by their very own kid, son and chief product tester, Archie.

“The kids furniture came about after we couldn’t find an attractive and practical kids table and chair set that didn’t cost a million dollars but wasn’t the same mass-produced stuff that everybody has,” said Emma. “So we made our own!”

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Timber fanatics, the furniture range is made from FSC-certified Victorian ash, recycled Australian hardwood, and American walnut. Entirely handmade at their Melbourne workshop, the pieces are designed for functional, small-space living that can handle daily wear and tear but still be a showpiece for your home.

The kids range similarly has the inevitable wear and tear in mind, made from birch plywood with easy to clean laminated colour tops. They come in a range of colours, with the aim to not only be a fun place for kids to play and eat but also be an item that complements your décor.

Gratton Design 3

For Gratton Design the future looks bright, they hope as the years go by to still be working with architects and clients in making their one-of-a-kind customs but also continuing with their own ranges.

As Emma most succinctly puts it their mission is clear: “To encourage people to choose locally-made timber furniture that will last for 100 years and end up as a family heirloom, rather than mass-produced disposable pieces.”

Gratton Design’s furniture range is stocked at Curious Grace and the kid’s range is stocked at Little Darcy and Curious Grace. For information on custom furniture and bespoke pieces contact Gratton Design.

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Homewares

Online shopping fix: Seekers Keepers

Seekers Keepers’ aim is to bring customers pieces that are unique and beautiful, but have not already flooded the homewares market.

seekers keepers

Originally hailing from the UK, founder Sophie Wilson wanted her online store to replicate the small boutique high street shops she was so fond of.

“I wanted the Seekers Keepers line to reflect that independent uniqueness,” explains Sophie. “So the products are all sourced from independent Australian designers or from designers who are creating their products in Australia.” For Sophie, it’s all about picking beautiful, hand crafted, colourful items that will bring individuality into your space.

But Seekers Keepers is much more than just an online store, Sophie also offers a Sydney based face-to-face interior design service, which includes creating mood boards, technical perspective drawings, styling and sourcing soft and hard furnishings.

For more information and to shop online, visit Seekers Keepers here.

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Homewares

Designer Japanese sake and tea cups

Famous for their exquisite dinnerware, Noritake are now bringing Japanese ceramicists Miyama, to Australian shores.

Noritake Miyama Sumi Sake 3

Miyama – winner of five Good Design Awards – have produced a delicate Sumi Sake Set (above) in the highest quality porcelain. Comprising of a carafe and two cups, the Sumi Sake Set takes its elegant design from the earliest traditional shapes, creating a seemingly contemporary aesthetic with long straight lines and an ultra-smooth finish.

Miyama Sumi Sake SetFor those looking for larger tumblers, ideal for herbal teas, Miyama also produced a Minamo Tumbler Set featuring a textured surface in a soft blue glaze.

Miyama MinamoThe Miyama Sumi Sake Set from Noritake retails for $98, while the Minamo Tumbler Set retails for $70.

Shop online.

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Designers Styling

Transforming runway fashion into beautiful interiors

In a novel approach to design, Dulux has partnered with Australian fashion labels Romance Was Born and Gorman, to create four interiors inspired by their latest collections.

Dulux Australia Interior, Inspired by Gorman's 2014 AW Collection, Room named Harvest, Image credit Mike Baker
Harvest, inspired by Gorman’s Winter Harvest collection

Led by Dulux stylist Bree Leech, the project, United by Style, saw its interior design team create rooms that transformed the fashion colours straight from the runway, into the home.

Gorman AW14 Look that inspired Dulux interior named Harvest
A dress from Gorman’s Winter Harvest collection

“The latest collections from Gorman and Romance Was Born embrace colour wholeheartedly,” explains Bree. “These rooms take their cues from that amazing use of colour and demonstrate how effective paint can be in creating mood and character in a space.”

One of the rooms, named Harvest, was inspired by Gorman’s Autumn 2014 collection Winter Harvest. Based on nature, the collection features prints with a range of magical symbols, winter vegetables and botanicals. Following on with the theme, the Harvest room champions moody paint colours that draw on the natural shades of the land and sea.

Dulux Australia Interior, Inspired by Romance Was Born's 2014 AW Collection, Room named Portal, Image credit Mike Baker
Portal, inspired by Romance Was Born’s collection Dream On

Another of the rooms, Portal, was interpreted from Romance Was Born’s Autumn 2014 collection Dream On, which embraced a psychedelic and hyper-colourful palette. The room follows suit with a vibrant interior, showcasing strong graphic lines contrasting against curved, organic-shaped furniture.

Romance Was Born AW14 Look that inspired room named Portal
A dress from Romance Was Born’s Dream On collection

To check out the other rooms by Dulux visit United by Style.

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Competitions Designers

IDEA 2014 entries are open

Entries for Australia’s largest independent design awards program, The Interior Design Excellence Awards (IDEA), opened this week.

idea2014Launched by Inside magazine in 2003, the program celebrates the best of Australian interior and product design across 11 categories and five special awards.

Open to both emerging local designers as well as the country’s leading architecture and design firms, the entries are judged by a panel of design industry professionals, including Paul Chung, associate director at DesignInc and Clare Cousins, founder of Clare Cousins Architecture.

Projects completed in the last 12 months are eligible to enter. Early bird entries are open until the end of March, with all entries closing on 25 May.

More information.

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Homewares

Neon Vintage cushions bring Africa to you

Bold and edgy homewares brand, Neon Vintage, has launched a new range inspired by African safaris and tribal textiles.

neon vintage

The Love Zambezi Collection features a range of cushions that were created in collaboration with international artists: Ashley Goldberg (USA), Jennifer Sanchez (USA) and Sarah Bagshaw (UK).

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Zula Cushion – Yellow

Designed around the world, the digitally printed cushion covers are handmade in Brisbane by Neon Vintage’s Kirsten Millbank.

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Zambezi Cushion

Founded in 2012, Neon Vintage’s core philosophy is to produce distinctive high quality collections, inspired by vintage 80s textiles and vivid tribal cultures.

Shop online.

Photography by Briony Masters.

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Designers Homewares Interviews

Up and coming ceramicist Hayden Youlley on starting your own art business

For Hayden Youlley, being a ceramicist wasn’t always on the cards.  It wasn’t until his second year at the College of Fine Arts (COFA) that he first started working with clay. And he was hooked.

Hayden Youlley 6

“I realised straight away that it appealed to me in many ways,” Hayden says. “It’s the only medium I have found that I can use to design, prototype, realise and manufacture products myself.”

Graduating in 2011, Hayden has now come a long way since those first years at COFA. Founding his own company, Hayden Youlley Design, he has now been full-time self-employed for two years.

Hayden Youlley 5

His first studio output, which remains a best seller, was the Paper tableware, in both white and colour. A functional dinnerware range that uses a simple creased paper motif, it is cast by hand in porcelain. Transforming the fragile and creased paper into something robust, permanent and precious, the random distribution of creases creates a complex pattern of light, shade and texture.

For Hayden, the Paper series is much more than a design, but a mark of how far he has come: “I still have the first prototype cup sitting on my desk in my studio. It is tiny, not well finished and the paper detail is so faint it is almost unnoticeable, but it showed so much potential that I instantly knew I wouldn’t be able to stop working on it until I had realised the idea fully.”

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Bringing a design to life is never easy, however thanks to an ArtStart grant from the Australian Council, Hayden was able to get the monetary support he needed.

“The ArtStart program was established to give financial assistance to recent art and design graduates to help them make the transition from studying to having a professional career in the arts,” explains Hayden. “That support allowed me to try new ways of marketing — like trade show events, professional photography and a professional redesign of my website — that were otherwise financially prohibitive. I finished 2013 having grown noticeably and substantially as a result.”

With the financial backing, Hayden Youlley Design has continued to grow. The new Tessellate series, a set of functional porcelain bowls that can stand alone or be clustered together, is now on the market. Some exciting collaborations are also in the works, including a Paper lighting series and a cutlery range.

Hayden Youlley 2

Hayden hopes the future sees him continuing to design and create from a shared, multi-disciplinary warehouse studio.His dream studio would have a street front gallery and a space for the public to take casual classes, buy handmade objects and watch designers and makers in action.

For a list of stockists visit Hayden Youlley Design here.

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Bedrooms Homewares

New bedding brand Elson bridges the gap between dull and loud

With the aim to suit both men and women and bridge the gap between dull and loud, brand new bedding brand Elson offers simple sophistication with a fashion edge.

Arrowed print accompanied by Sandy Beige sheets and pillows.
Arrowed print accompanied by Sandy Beige sheets and pillows.

Just launched, the Autumn/Winter inaugural collection encompasses three graphic designs as well as a complementing tonal range of coordinating sheets and pillows.

Hounds print paired with Grey Dusk sheets and pillows.
Hounds print paired with Grey Dusk sheets and pillows.

Made from 300 thread count cotton sateen and available in both king and queen sizes, the bedding is sure to add some much needed life to a tired room while being subtle enough to not steal the show.

Checked print teamed with Smokey Green sheets and pillows.
Checked print teamed with Smokey Green sheets and pillows.

For founder Broc Munro that was exactly his aim, adding boldness and style without being too OTT: “I simply started Elson through not being able to find bedding that worked for me. It was always too loud, floral, plain or white and not what I was looking for. The Elson design aesthetic offers stylish, modern design and colour palettes with a focus on simple but chic prints.”

To shop online or find a local stocklist visit Elson.

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Homewares

Online shopping fix: All That I Need

Selling retro and vintage inspired pieces, All That I Need will help give your home some old school fun.

all that i need

Inspired by a 50s, 60s, 70s theme, founder Jacinta Erdogan is a lover of mod fashion, Twiggy and The Beatles along with anything bright and fun that comes from the past.

“I’m always attracted to bright products,” explains Jacinta. “I love the 60’s and everything that comes with the era – homeware designs, prints, clothes, accessories etc. I refuse to sell products that I myself wouldn’t be happy to receive.”

Selling kitchenware, home décor, bathroom accessories, outdoor products and jewellery, All That I Need aims to sell fashionable Australian and New Zealand sourced pieces that won’t break the budget.

Shop online.

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Art Interviews

Gabrijela Iva Polic: the new face of the Sydney art world

Gabrijela Iva Polic is one to watch. After graduating from the College of Fine Arts last year, she’s already been invited to take part in her first exhibition, after giving up her former life as a customs officer.

Forever hope forever joy

Entitled Sydney Who and held at The Hughes Gallery in Surry Hills, the exhibition will showcase up and coming artists of Sydney. Gabrijela is ecstatic to be involved: “From someone who just graduated from art school five minutes ago with no exhibition history, to work with an established gallery that has been standing since 1969, I was and am, seriously chuffed and honoured.”

This beautiful part of you becomes this beautiful part of me

Though it’s no surprise Gabrijela is getting recognition, her work very unique and distinct, it is rich in vivid colour and intricate patterns. Inspired by the shape of organisms that live off and grow from one another, her abstract shapes seem almost lifelike.

I have been made by the Philia machine WEB

Love is a common theme for Gabrijela and her central inspiration: “I’m so inspired by love and everything that comes with it: the passions, the longing, the sadness, the bursts of joy. All of it and more.” Philosophy and the workings of the natural world are also heavy influences.

Yet it is not just the subject matter which is unique, Gabrijela’s use of materials is also worth noting. “The canvas works are predominately paintings, however if you get up close and personal you will notice quite a lot detailed of penwork,” she says. “The works on paper are quite often mixed media and on my new works I have been stitching into them with these beautiful metallic threads.”

They are covered in diamonds which only I see WEB

Being an artist wasn’t always on the cards. For seven years, she worked as a customs officer, later juggling study and work and then finally taking the plunge and changing careers.

“Eventually I decided that the only way I was going to get good enough to make painting a full-time thing that actually worked was to hang up my customs boots and paint every day,” she explains. “I followed my heart and it was the best decision I’ve ever made.”

Find out more about Gabrijela and her work here or buy slected works from Penny Farthing Design House online. Sydney Who is at the Hughes Gallery in Surry Hills in May and June.

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Designers

Decor + Design unveils its new look and name

After ten years of success as Decoration + Design, the leading design event is having a transformation, unveiling its new look and name — Decor + Design — at this year’s Furnitex.

Furnitex 2013

The event, which attracts thousands of local and international visitors each year, will be held at the Melbourne Exhibition Centre from 10-13 July.

“Our industry is all about the latest trends and new products, and we are all constantly reinventing ourselves to ensure that we are current and relevant to our audiences,” explains Joel Cooper, Group Exhibition Director of organiser Informa Exhibitions. “Decor + Design has been renamed to acknowledge the show’s wide appeal to a market that includes interior design, architecture, trend experts and stylists, with diverse exhibitors across the furniture, furnishings and design world.”

One of the biggest highlights of the events will be VIVID – Vibrant Visions in Design — a competition offering aspiring designers a unique launching pad into the furniture industry. Emerging designers will present work in Commercial, Concept, Student and Green categories, with awards being announced on opening day.

For more information visit Decor + Design and Furnitex.

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Interiors Addict

Online Shopping fix: Auburn & Green

In a world where everything is mass produced, Brie Manley, founder of Brisbane’s Auburn & Green is determined to fight the trend.

Auburn & GreenWith a love of antique and vintage furniture, Brie restores and redesigns tired pieces, transforming them to beautiful one-offs.

Auburn & Green 2Auburn & Green started from a love of gorgeous things and a desire to help people make their space individual and personal to them.

“I love pops of colour, a mix of the old world and the new,” explains Brie. “I’m passionate about sourcing and redesigning quality antique and vintage pieces, and providing people with a product that no one else will have.”

Auburn & Green 3For Brie, her main drive comes from the excitement she gets when she finally finds that piece she’s been looking for. Through Auburn & Green she now hopes many more will get that feeling.

Shop online.

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Designers

The Odd Collective: giving emerging artists licence to print

Book designer and signwriter Sarah Anderson and Matt Johnston, took a big leap when they decided to open The Club of Odd Volumes. With a digital fabric printer as their only tool, they began designing a range of homewares and fashion, as well as custom prints for anyone looking to make one-offs.

Matt and Sarah
Matt and Sarah

It was there that they really hit their stride, realising there were a lot of emerging artists looking to print small runs but with nowhere to do it. And their second business, The Odd Collective, was formed.

With a unique model, The Odd Collective is an online store that showcases 20 artists’ designs on a range of homewares and apparel. Four times a year, half the artists rotate and another 10 fill their place, allowing customers to keep buying from those they love and at the same time being able to check out the work of new artists.

Jasmine Dowling - Count stars not sheep pillowcase
Jasmine Dowling – Count stars not sheep pillowcase

“We wanted to aim our services at serious artists so decided to cap how many creatives are involved,” explains Sarah.

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Designers House Tours

Highgate House’s studio: Brisbane’s best looking workplace?

Upon first glance, Highgate House’s studio could be your dream home. The recently revamped premises of the interior design practice are really something else!

Highgate House Studio 3

But for owner interior designer Leigh Boswell, working in anything but the best was not an option: “I couldn’t imagine not working in a beautiful environment. I am very proud of the studio I designed. Not only does it look good, it’s extremely practical with large work benches for design work and plenty of storage space.”

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Homewares

Online Shopping fix: Ayech

With its mix of lights, wallpaper murals and cushions, online boutique Ayech is a one-stop-shop for all that’s new and fresh in the homewares world.

ayech

Following a career as a photographic stylist, founder Helen Jaman had spent years searching high and low for the perfect pieces to match her clients’ visions.

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Designers

Shaynna Blaze launches first rug collection

In collaboration with The Rug Collection, interior designer and The Block judge Shaynna Blaze, has launched her first ever rug collection, Textured Coast.

Shaynna Blaze
Shaynna Blaze

Inspired by the texture and colours of the Australian coast, the six-piece collection is a mix of neutral tones and calming greys, aiming to add depth, texture and warmth to any interior.

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Expert Tips

A guide to downsizing for empty nesters

Downsizing is never easy, from prioritising what to keep to storage optimisation; a life change that is supposed to make things simpler can be riddled with challenges. An empty nest is very rarely empty of stuff; in fact, quite the opposite!

Downsize with Style

Interior stylist Bettina Deda, author of the new book Downsize with Style, has created a foolproof five-step process to help start the next chapter of your life:

Step 1: De-clutter and tidy up

Start to tidy up and de-clutter your family home. Take inventory. Allocate each item to one of these piles: things to keep, things to donate, things to sell and things that go straight into the bin.

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House Tours The Block

Dan and Dani sell first property since The Block

Two-time Blockheads Dan Reilly and Dani Wales know a lot when it comes to renovating and selling homes. But this time there are no TV cameras and they’re selling their very own apartment.

Dan and Dani in Apartment

Situated in the Melbourne suburb of Richmond, it is the first property they have renovated since being on 2012’s The Block and 2013’s The Block All Stars.

Outside

The pair purchased the one-bed apartment just before they had their TV debut, which saw them juggle renovating The Block house and moving in. “It was such a hectic week as we were working on the master bedroom and en suite on The Block whilst trying to move into our apartment at the same time,” explained Dan.