Categories
Interiors Addict

New property book reveals expert’s secrets to selling for more

Next week sees the launch of a fantastic book for anyone looking to sell their home for more, from renovation guru Naomi Findlay, one of our Reno Addict resident experts. What’s more, all profits from the book will go towards building a school in Cambodia. We have 20 books to give away too, but more on that later.

People pay thousands for Naomi’s renovating and home staging courses but you can grab all the best bits for yourself for just $29.99! Sell Your Property for More Money reveals top secrets to staging your home for sale. With Australian property prices generally rising this year, successful home staging opens up opportunity for owner occupiers or investors to increase their sale price substantially with small amounts of effort.

Just quietly, Naomi shared all her tips with me when we sold our apartment last year, for a block record no less! And I was proud to write the foreword for this book.

With the Australian property market in such good health and the RBA expected to keep interest rates on hold for the foreseeable future, more Australian families are considering selling their home for a variety of reasons. But getting the most for your property isn’t just down to the agent you pick. Popular TV shows such as Selling Houses Australia and The Block give a graphic illustration of just how much proper home staging can add to the value of a home.

It’s essential that vendors put time and effort into presenting their property in the best light, but many don’t know where to start or think it’s too hard and expensive. Contrary to popular belief, it is easier than they might think and some of the smallest changes can go a very long way. And Naomi is well qualified to tell them. Not only does she own successful staging company Silk Home, she also runs the International Institute of Home Staging. She’s renovated over 100 properties and staged more than 1,000 through her businesses.

“There is one thing in common that all vendors have—they want to get top dollar for their property. Achieving that is what is perceived to be the hard part,” explains Naomi. “Sell Your Property for More Money reveals the tips and tricks that will turn your property from average to amazing. The advice is relatively simple to follow. A successfully styled home will have buyers emotionally connecting before they start to consider the home from a functional or structural perspective. It could add tens of thousands of dollars to the value of your home.”

Naomi, who is the creator of the Rapid Renovation Formula, says real estate agents and property stylists will also find the book useful.

It includes tips on decluttering, the rooms that need to be accentuated during sale, understanding which areas need to be upgraded or renovated, styling tips including what to do with furniture and artwork, and opening up space. There is also has a handy section on commonly asked questions, gathered from Naomi’s numerous stage appearances and client staging projects.

All profits from the sale of Sell Your Property for More Money will go towards a Rapid Renovation Formula-sponsored school in Cambodia that is set to break ground in 2018 in conjunction with United World Schools.

Order your pre-launch signed copy online.

WIN

For your chance to win one of 20 copies, enter your details below and tell us in 100 words or less why you need this book! Entries close at midnight on Friday 18 August 2017.

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Categories
House Tours Interviews

Bahar Etminan shares her home’s glamorous transformation

Photos by Susan Papazian

When Bahar Etminan viewed her Art Deco apartment in 2013, she immediately fell head over heels, and it’s a good job too, as it needed a lot of love! After consulting her friend and mentor, real estate agent John McGrath (it’s not what you know, right?), she made a full price offer. “I literally fell in love with my home.”

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The glamorous but grounded working mother, who owns fashion, beauty and lifestyle site rescu.com.au, just published her first book. Rescu Me is subtitled ‘the makeover guide for a life more fabulous’ so it’s fitting there’s nothing ordinary about her chic Sydney home. But not before it had its own makeover!

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The block of six 1930s units had been owned by one family since they were built and eventually sold off one by one over five years. “My apartment was nearly original 1930s condition and was being used as a group flat. It needed to be stripped out, rewired, re-plumbed, repainted, new floors, gas in the fireplace and a bathroom update.” Two months later, she and daughter Lilly moved in. “The transformation has been remarkable without losing its Art Deco charm. I wanted to leave the period features absolutely intact but make the apartment more comfortable for modern life.”

A lover of vintage, Bahar has collected her furniture over the years. “Each piece is special and has dazzled me at some point. Even modern pieces I have bought have a vintage vibe. I’m not a minimalist type of person so modern and new don’t suit my style. I also bought the apartment when my daughter was three, so I was looking for a family home; a place that was comfortable, livable and not too precious.”

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Her favourite pieces are two cabinets she bought with the guidance of friend Jason Parlett from an antique shop in Glebe. “He had them totally restored and painted black for me. We go ‘trinkateering’, a term we coined for going shopping for trinkets! Some trinkets are bigger than others!” Other treasured possessions are her impressive bedhead and side tables from D’Cotta; new but with a vintage feel.

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As Bahar works the eclectic look so very well, I couldn’t resist asking her for her tips: “I think colours and shapes have to work together even if periods and fabrics are not so matchy-matchy. I think where you place things can also really make a difference. I had the apartment feng shui’d by a master and she taught me a lot about the importance of where seats, beds and objects are placed. Luckily, I didn’t have to move much but I did tweak a few details and I think it made a difference to the flow and how we use each space.

“I like to mix up a few grown up pieces with things that feel feminine and fun. I also like to flip the rules on what should go where. I have a zebra print hide on the floor of my formal dining room and black wingback chairs in my sun room, which overlooks the harbour. I have a mix of cane, wood and velvet in the living room but the colours and the shapes all work.”

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While Bahar doesn’t apologise for her home being feminine, she has been careful not to go overboard. “I decorated the home for my daughter but I like earthy tones, black and wood so there is nothing chintzy. My daughter’s favourite colour is blue and I never used to have anything blue at all, but now I have blue art, blue in my upholstery and blue decorative objects here and there. I think it’s wonderful to create an environment that reflects places you’ve been, people you love and how you see yourself.”

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Vintage poster art is clearly a weakness, with Bahar loving the “vibrancy, joyfulness and instant glamour” it brings to a room. She also loves photography and recently bought two Slim Aarons photographs.

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Lilly’s room goes to show that a child’s room doesn’t have to be full of plastic or garish colours to be fun and inviting. “I wanted her to have a beautiful room she’d enjoy playing in and felt fun and chic. Her room is actually quite dark so I’ve tried to lighten up the furnishings and added lots of colour.”

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The rare deco chair was an eBay find, the ceramic wings a first birthday gift (which Bahar secretly wants on her own room) and the vintage poster, bought for herself years ago, then put it in Lilly’s nursery when she was born. “It’s a girl riding a motorbike. The decor will grow up with her. I never did have a traditional nursery of pink and white.”

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On the subject of living with little people when you have lots of nice things, perhaps unsurprisingly, Bahar doesn’t believe in child-proofing your life. “Lilly understands what she can and can’t touch, which rooms are for play and which rooms are to keep tidy. I would say that if you can afford a play room where all the bright and crazy toys can go, I’d do that. The toys make me crazy!”

Living on the same street as the Prime Minister, Bahar and Lilly certainly feel very safe with bonus round the clock security! “We have a lovely little beach across the road, two beautiful parks, two yacht clubs and absolute peace and quiet. I do sometimes miss the buzz of cafes and shops at my doorstep. Having previously lived in The Elan, The Wharf at Woolloomooloo and Rockwall Apartments, I do also sometimes miss having concierge and the facilities of a modern apartment complex like a pool and lifts.”

While Bahar believes you should buy the best bed you can possibly afford and it’s worthwhile splurging on a beautifully made couch, decorative objects can be collected along the way and there’s nothing wrong with a few bargain buys in the mix.

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Rescu Me is published by Harlequin and available from all good book stores and online. It’s full of practical insight and advice from the best experts in health, relationships and wellbeing, finances and career, fashion and beauty.

Categories
Interviews Styling

Take 5 with Kara Rosenlund

Each week we shine the spotlight on some of Australia’s best designers, artists and stylists and have them share with us what’s making them tick; anything from the best advice they’ve ever received to their favourite holiday destination. Today we chat to Kara Rosenlund, photographer, stylist and author of Shelter — How Australians Live.

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1. What is your favourite cafe? 
The Sourced Grocer in Teneriffe, Brisbane. It is quintessentially QLD with a mix of indoor and outdoor dining, and I can never go past the smashed avo on toast.

2. What is your favourite holiday destination? 
Satellite Island, Tasmania, which features in my new book, Shelter — How Australians Live. I just love its remoteness. When I go on holidays I want to feel alone and have a moment to be at one with my thoughts.

3. What’s the best advice you’ve ever been given? 
Cut once. Measure twice.

4. What’s your go-to recipe? 
It’s a chicken and leek pot pie. The recipe is from artist Anita Mertzlin, whom I met when visiting her home for Shelter, hidden away in the foothills of the Great Dividing Range. There is lots of thyme which gives the dish an incredible flavour and it makes you look like you’ve tried harder than you really have!

5. What is your piece of furniture you own? 
A glass display cabinet which is an old Australian piece I picked up in rural Victoria whilst on the road. It has pride of place in my home and is filled with my ceramics. It’s a piece which has already travelled many miles.

Categories
House Tours Styling

Sibella Court’s former Society Inc. in Paddington up for sale

Anyone with even a vague interest in styling will have heard of Sibella Court and The Society Inc. so there is bound to me much excitement at the news that her former shop in Sydney’s exclusive Paddington has been listed for sale this week. Always thought you’d love to live inside the pages of one her books? Well, now you kinda can… if you have a spare $1.6million.

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The terrace at 27 Alexander Street was the part-time home and former shop of the celebrity stylist, known the world over for her eclectic style. Having recently moved to a much larger warehouse space for her work in St Peters, listing the Paddington property on Air BnB for a short while, it is now up for sale.

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The space is Sibella through and through and personally I would love to see it bought by someone who embraces that rather than renovates it into something slick and new-looking! But as I’m not in a position to buy the two-bedroom, one-bathroom home set over two floors, I’ll have to let the lucky buyer decide!

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It’s in a lovely, leafy, quiet corner of sought after Paddington (on a block that straddles the address of 18 Stewart) and open inspections take place tomorrow (Saturday 12 September) from 11.30am-to-12 noon. It is being shown to buyers decked out in quintessential Sibella vintage finds and collectibles from her travels and will appeal to those who love her quirky look. Frankly, it would have been criminal to clear out this magical space and stage it for sale in the mainstream way.

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The Victorian high ceilings are strung with old naval rope and ladders, while the floors and staircase are painted to brilliant effect (no doubt with colours from her own range for Murobond). Those who relish found pebbles and driftwood will adore the designer bathroom, which feels ‘live’ from the pages of one of Sibella’s many design books.

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Outside there’s private a courtyard, laundry terrace and on the street, garden beds planted with strawberries, geraniums, nasturtiums, and blossom.

I am full of envy for whoever snaps up this enviable, unique pad in a wonderful Sydney location!

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As well as being an interior stylist and author, Sibella, who became a mum last year, is also a product designer, historian and creative director. Her hospitality spaces include Hotel Palisade, Old Joe’s, The Pines, Mr Wong, Palmer & Co, El Loco, MsG’s & The Fish Shop. Last week, her new television show, Restoration Australia, aired on ABC.

Sibella has spent much of her life exploring the globe for inspiration. Formerly a homewares stylist in New York, she has a knack for discovering new artists, designers and products for her much loved shop, The Society Inc. (now in St Peters). Her wanderlust can be seen in all the personal spaces she inhabits and in her many things accumulated over 20 years of shopping!

27 Alexander Street is being sold by Shannan Whitney and Darren Pearce of BresicWhitney, a lifestyle property group that responds to the energy and emotion of inner Sydney. Over the last five years, it has sought to break the mold as a residential property group, by welcoming a new conversation about inner-city living.

View the property listing.

All photos by Aimee Crouch for BresicWhitney

Categories
Decorating 101 Designers Expert Tips Homewares Styling

How to arrange cushions by Greg Natale

By Greg Natale

While some think of the humble cushion as an inexpensive and fairly inconsequential styling accessory, it has an honourable history as a substitute for chairs across the palaces and great houses of the early Middle Ages. Only the very wealthy could afford cushions thanks to the expensive dyes and fabrics of the day. As their intricate patterns were also painstakingly handcrafted using fine threads and complex knotting, cushions became pieces of art in their own right.

Historical cushion cover 1590 Interiors Addict
An English cushion cover circa 1590. Photo: Metropolitan Museum of Art

However these days, cushions are an easy and attractive way to add colour, pattern and contrast to any room and of course, they can also be replaced without fuss whenever you’re after a new look.

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But cushions mean more to me than just that. As I point out in my new book, The Tailored Interior, they’re an important aspect of layering and styling that create cohesion and flow in a room. To be honest, I can’t even imagine a sofa without cushions – it simply doesn’t look finished! So here are a few suggestions to help you get your cushion size, shape and styling right:

Size. Over the years, I’ve found that 500mm (20 inch) square cushions work best for sofas and beds. Keep them the same size for a cohesive result. Look for feather and foam inserts for a lovely firm feel and covers with concealed zips for a seamless effect.

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Quantity. I recommend four cushions for a two-seater sofa and six cushions for a three-seater. Divide them into two matching sets as visual bookends for a resolved and balanced look.

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Positioning. Sit them on their flat side, placed one behind the other. Whatever you do, don’t position them on a point to form a diamond shape! Leave that look to the Travelodge!

Combinations. Consider other elements of your design and go from there – for example, a pop of colour works for an otherwise largely neutral base. I also like to mix organic and geometric patterns for a really dynamic arrangement.

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Fabrics. Of course you can select more sumptuous fabrics for indoors, but remember to rely on hard-wearing ones to keep your outdoor cushions fresh. As a fan of detail, I also love a bit of piping or trim to add contrast and personality.

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Anyone who knows me well knows that as a child of the eighties, a lot of my early memories came from what I saw on our family’s television set. I was obsessed with the American series Dynasty and consider its set design instrumental in inspiring me to become an interior designer.

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In the introduction to The Tailored Interior, I mention that I thought Alexis Carrington’s all-white apartment was the height of glamour. Fittingly, as it turns out, it’s the pops of pink in her cushions that really help make her apartment sing.

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Like all soft furnishings, cushions can be minimal, frivolous, classic or elegant, but whatever your taste, they’re a wonderful low-investment, high-return styling accessory.

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So have some fun with them. Play with colours, patterns and textures and dare I even say it … throw cushion to the wind!

– The Tailored Interior by Greg Natale, Belle Coco Republic’s Interior Designer of the Year 2014, is now available at all good bookstores or online at Bookworld. It reveals Greg’s secrets on how to achieve your dream design look with complete confidence as well as all the places Greg shops for his fabulous cushions.

All photography from The Tailored Interior by Anson Smart. See photos from our reader book signing with Greg.

Categories
Designers Expert Tips House Tours

Greg Natale on reinventing the modern man cave

By Greg Natale

The concept of the man cave isn’t new. The term’s been used for more than 20 years and the American TV programme Man Cave is now in its 14th season. In its earliest form, the man cave tended to be largely unused space, like a garage, basement or spare bedroom, which became an incubator for a man’s random collection of gadgets, ephemera and memorabilia, usually with little regard for aesthetics or cohesion.

However if my clients are anything to go by, there’s a new breed of Australian male with an altogether different brief for the modern man cave; one that comes from a more refined set of tastes, pastimes and pursuits and one that has more in common with a gentleman’s club than a sports club.

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A guide to choosing & arranging cushions by Greg Natale

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This means that I’m increasingly being asked to help redefine as well as redesign the sophisticated, contemporary man cave and I’m relishing the fresh and inspiring creative opportunities that now presents.

In the foreword of my new book, The Tailored Interior, the great US designer Jonathan Adler likens the rooms I design to a bespoke suit from Savile Row, in that each is clean, simple and always tailored to the occupant’s requirements. And how I approach the modern man cave is no different.

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The starting point is always to find your inspiration. We’re sentimental creatures and most of us have at least one piece of furniture or a collectable that we’re not willing to part with. In the case of the man cave that’s often even more the case as a consequence of longstanding interests and hobbies. One of my clients is a horse lover, so his study’s concept incorporates layers of equine references, but in a way that’s as curated as it is created.

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Of course I’ve designed all sorts of beautiful sanctuaries for my clients. Some are intended simply as relaxing retreats, others dual purpose business/recreational dens and ones that are just for fun, like the very popular home cinema (think Gold Class!).

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An increasing trend in man caves is to showcase the wine cellar. No longer tucked away from view down a set of rickety stairs, a wine collection is now often front and centre as a connected cellar with custom joinery.

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After the concept’s defined, the next step is layering, which becomes the most fundamental component in decorating. For an environment that’s intended as a sanctuary, layering becomes particularly important because of the way it adds warmth, comfort and interest to an interior. It also stamps the client’s personality on a room with various elements working together to ‘tell the story of you’.

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While each client brief is unique, men do often lean towards a darker, rich palette for walls, with opulent textures like suede, leather and timber. It is a luxurious cocoon of sorts, after all.

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While the man cave has historically been the one room in the house that was pardoned from design principles and aesthetics, my male clients also appreciate that they can have an amazing space created for them that is uniquely theirs but one which remains a harmonious design continuum with the rest of the home. Which has got to be a win-win for everyone!

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–Greg Natale is Belle Coco Republic Interior Designer of the Year 2014 and was recently named the inaugural recipient of the Editors’ Medal at (inside) Interior Design Review’s 2014 Interior Design Excellence Awards. His first book, The Tailored Interior, is available at all good bookstores or online via Bookworld.

Photography of Greg’s work by Anson Smart.

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Designers The Block

Photos: Our Easy Luxury event with Darren Palmer at West Elm

Photography by Alex Jackson

We had a lovely time at our latest reader event with Darren Palmer at West Elm Bondi last week. Please click on the below images to see them larger.

There was a large queue of people getting The Block judge’s book, Easy Luxury, signed by the author himself. Some kept theirs while others put them aside for Christmas presents! We then had our usual vignette styling challenge, with one reader, Jess, winning a box of goodies from West Elm.

Huge thanks to Darren and Murdoch Books, the team at West Elm, Williams-Sonoma for the catering (especially the legendary peppermint bark and chilled mulled wine!) and all the readers who attended.

To be first to know about our next event, please make sure you’re signed up to our newsletter. The next 7 Vignettes Instagram challenge starts on Monday 1 December. We’re giving away a $50 voucher every day for seven days, as well as one overall winner prize of $250, thanks to our sponsor Domayne.

Categories
Styling

Video behind the scenes of Mr Jason Grant’s second book, Holiday at Home

That sun-drenched feeling of a perfect holiday shouldn’t have to go away when you get back home. Taking inspiration from road trips, beach houses, boutique hotels and long lazy summers on the coast, Sydney stylist Mr Jason Grant shows you how to style your spaces to capture that holiday feeling in your own home in his forthcoming second book, Holiday at Home. I’m looking forward to picking up some tips on the return from my own travel adventures!

Holiday at Home, out in September, published by Hardie Grant
Holiday at Home, out in September, published by Hardie Grant

A follow-up to last year’s A Place Called Home, it’s brimming with inspiration and tips for making your outdoor spaces feel like your own private resort, laid back entertaining, using colour to create those vacation vibes, and upcycling found and secondhand items. Out early September, Holiday at Home is your creative guide to turning your living spaces into your own little patches of paradise.

We’ve been lucky enough to get to share this video behind the scenes with you today:

If you follow Jason on Instagram, you’ll know he loves the beach. Born in Tasmania, but growing up in Melbourne where his career began, it seems he found his spiritual home in Sydney’s Bondi. Fascinated by colour and nature from a young age, he is always looking for new ways to express his creativity.

Jason has styled for many Australian and international magazines including Inside Out, Belle, House and Garden, Real Living, Vogue Living, Elle Decoration and Livingetc and has his own range with Murobond Paints.

Stylist and author Jason Grant
Stylist and author Jason Grant

The sunny images in this book are by Lauren Bamford, a Melbourne-based photographer, specialising in food, lifestyle, interiors and documentary.

The book is published by Hardie Grant in Australia. It is also being published by Rizzoli in America under the alternative title Away at Home. We’re looking forward to getting our hands on a review copy to share with you very soon!

Keep in touch with Jason’s blog.

Video music and editing by Keith Mason, cinematography by Lauren Bamford.

Categories
Bedrooms Kids Rooms

Inside Be My Baby author’s daughter’s nursery

Today, Be My Baby author Laura Greaves shares her daughter’s animal-themed nursery. We love how colourful and fun it is!

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Mark and Laura Greaves, who live on Sydney’s Northern Beaches, knew they were having a girl when they started decorating but, far from reaching for the pink and frilly, they went for something a little more eclectic. “All white, minimalist kids’ rooms are not for me,” Laura says. “I initially wanted the room to have a dog theme, but as it came together that expanded and evolved to include all types of animals; it has a bit of a zoo vibe now I think!

“It was also really important to me that the room be tactile and enticing for little fingers to explore, so there’s a whole range of different textures from the fluffy sheepskin rug to the smooth wood and velvet upholstery on the rocking chair. One of her favourite things is lying on her change table and running her hands over the raised polka dots on the curtains.”

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Laura didn’t want to spend too much on the basics (I”’d rather blow my budget on adorable clothes for her!”), so she repurposed and upcycled a few things. The chest of drawers, for example, was once bathroom storage, and the vintage rocker was a wedding anniversary gift to Laura from husband Mark. He bought it on Gumtree, then restored and reupholstered it himself. Impressive or what?

Laura already had two “fur children” and she splashed out on a custom mobile depicting Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retrievers Tex and Delilah! The plain Ikea wardrobes’ doors will soon be papered with her latest purchase: Thibault’s Best in Show wallpaper.

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“It’s funny because, in my book, the heroine has to pull a nursery together out of nowhere when she suddenly finds herself having to care for her best friend’s baby – she borrows a lot of stuff and comes up with a few, er, creative design solutions! I always thought I’d be a bit haphazard myself when it came to creating my baby’s nursery, as the rest of my house is what I like to call accidental chic, so I was a little surprised to find I had quite a specific vision from the word go.”

Although the pair knew they were having a girl, they didn’t want anyone else to know! “I knew people would want to see the nursery as it came together, and I didn’t want to give away her gender by having lashings of pink everywhere! The few pink accents I did have in the room before she was born I would stash in the cupboard whenever anyone came over! Green is my favourite colour and I knew even before we found out the baby’s sex that I wanted a green cot, so the colour palette developed around that.”

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Just not interested in any of that that “pink is for girls nonsense,” Laura thought it more important that the room be filled with things she loves, and that she thinks her daughter will love, regardless of gender associations. “If she adores princesses and party dresses as she grows up then that’s fine by me, but I don’t ever want her to think she has to conform to some narrow idea of what femininity is.”

Laura says the room feels warm and inviting, and also interesting. “There’s quirky details everywhere you look. It feels like a very personal space to me. Although at the moment it’s mostly a reflection of my personality, I’ll encourage her to put her own stamp on her bedroom as she grows up. The nursery is also very light and spacious, which I love. That’s one of the advantages of living in an Art Deco house: huge windows!”

Where to buy:

  • Mocka Aspiring Cot in green, $169.95 (currently out of stock). Also available in white and can be converted to a toddler bed with a conversion kit.
  • Debbie Kendall Enlightened Hound (dog-inspired typography) prints via Etsy.
  • Custom dog mobile, made by Miranda Rommel and based on the pair’s dogs Tex and Deliliah, from Fiber Friends Online.

Laura’s first book, Be My Baby, was published by Destiny Romance this week. Available via Amazon, Kobo and Google Play.

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Categories
Interiors Addict

Online shopping fix: Collected

I’ve long been a fan of Collected by LeeAnn Yare, a real-life and online New Zealand homewares store. The great news is they’re now shipping to Australia!

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Above are some of my favourite finds. Number one has to be the cross metal wall cabinet ($99). Absolutely love it and NEED IT in my bathroom!