Categories
Homewares Shopping

These custom folding screens bring Versailles beauty Down Under

Sydney duo Edwina Volz and Tara Veness came together over their shared love for resurrecting auction house and antique store finds. Now, they have channeled that passion into En Tissu, a Sydney company creating luxurious French folding screens.

“Folding screens are steeped in history, yet they are still  just as relevant today, especially suited to open plan living and work spaces,” says Edwina. Their versatile design opens up numerous possibilities, from room partitions to video call backdrops.

Having been collected by the likes of Coco Chanel, folding screens can also be a stunning centrepiece. “We love that French screens indulge the fabric and allow it to become like an artwork,” says Tara.

Edwina and Tara’s designs reference the history of folding screens, from their sleek ancient Chinese origins to the romantic curves of French paravents (a screen against a draft or the wind). The simple, clean lines of these designs allow for your choice of fabric to take centre stage, so you can be sure the screen will fit right into your home.

En Tissu screens are fully customisable with a wide range of fabrics, panel shapes and decorative finishes on offer. Consumers and designers can also specify their own fabric. Each screen is made to order, with prices starting from $2,200. 

For more information

Categories
Expert Tips Homewares

The expert’s rules and tips for choosing curtains

There’s no doubt shows like The Block have made curtains (especially sheers) cool again and someone reaping the rewards is Valley Vogue’s Belinda Sinclair. However, she argues they’ve never been out of fashion in her 15-year career!

Belinda Sinclair of Valley Vogue

Belinda was offered a traineeship at a custom curtain and interiors store in the Hunter Valley straight out of school. “I was there for nine years, the last three, being on the road looking after the measuring and quoting which I loved.”

After a break from working and having two children, Belinda and her husband decided she should give starting her own curtain business a go (“Let’s just say I wasn’t a good stay at home mum, but that’s a story for another day!”) and Valley Vogue was born in 2o11. Towards the end of of 2013, she went into a shared studio space in Newcastle’s King Street with long time friend and interior designer Melissa Webster of The Gather Collective. They’ve been there ever since.

“I have been working with curtains for 15 years now and in that time I don’t think curtains ever went out fashion as such. Shutters and blinds did take over a little in the early 2000s. Since curtains, in particular sheers, have been given more focus on shows like The Block, people have gone back to appreciating the value of fabric on their windows to soften a space.”

And what about ready-made curtains? Do they have a place? “I’m not a fan but then why would I be?” she jokes. “Having said that, there are some nice ones out there and if that’s what best suits your budget then go for it. The biggest thing is them being well fitted, not like a pair of three-quarter leg pants that aren’t actually supposed to be three-quarters! Have them touching, always touching, or just off the floor, just!

Linen or linen-look sheers are very popular at the moment. “Taking the curtains to ceiling height and, where possible and functional, wall to wall, is in. This not only adds height and makes your space feel bigger, it looks amazing.”

So, what should you expect to pay for custom curtains? That’s like asking how long a piece of string is! “With custom curtains, the main component or cost is that fabric. I always tell my clients you can spend $30 a metre or $330 a metre. Or more!”

Belinda’s top tips for choosing curtains

  • Check the fabric you select in the lighting it will be in. Check it against the paint, the carpet any other major furnishings. Colour can go very wrong and be very changeable, particularly when it comes to white.
  • Ask for more then one quote from your potential supplier. Select the fabric you absolutely love and then ask them for a quote on a cheaper but comparable fabric (if there is one!) so you have a fall back option.
  • Make sure you find a consultant on your wavelength and who you trust. Ask them about their after service (some don’t have one and won’t fix or adjust anything, even if it needs it!).
  • If you don’t understand something, ask. We will will often send an image of the curtain heading we are suggesting or that was discussed as this is where the lingo can be confusing and you need a visual.

–All photos of Belinda’s work. Belinda services Newcastle, the Hunter region and Sydney.

Find out more about Valley Vogue.

Categories
Bathrooms House Tours RENO ADDICT

Interiors Addict bathroom reno: the big reveal!

Photography by Jacqui Turk

Today, I’m finally sharing the ‘after’ photos of our bathroom and WC reno. For those of you who have been following on Instagram, I’m sorry it has taken a while! Of course, the reno took more like eight weeks than four, but as I have learnt, there will always be something to cause a delay! In fact, I have learnt so much from my first reno that I’ll be sharing a series of posts about this but today is all about sharing some beautiful photos of our bathroom and WC, which we are delighted with!

jensbathroom_jacquiturk-5

There was never any doubt in my mind that I wanted white subway tiles and marble pennyrounds in our new bathroom (more on the WC next door later). While I dabbled with other combos (and there were so many to tempt me!), I found I kept coming back to this. Then it was a choice between the beveled subway or the more organic, perfectly imperfect kind. As you can see, we went for the beveled and I’m so in love with the texture they provide. A large tub was also a non-negotiable, being a Pom and a seven-baths-a-week kinda girl.

jensbathroom_jacquiturk-12

Our apartment bathroom isn’t huge, as you can see, and there wasn’t really a better layout than the one we started with. The ‘beautiful’ beige original bathroom didn’t have much going for it but the layout was a good use of space. This also saved us moving any plumbing, which kept costs down. Keeping a largely white colour scheme and introducing a frameless shower, all gave a sense of space and improved flow to the room.

jensbathroom_jacquiturk-21

You can have too much white though, so I knew feature tiles would be important. To create the niche where we could put my much-loved pennyrounds, we had to build across what was an alcove in the shower, losing a little depth from the shower cubicle, but it was absolutely worth it! Using these expensive tiles in small areas like the niche and behind the basin, is a great way to create a more high end and interesting look without spending a fortune (let’s face it, labour is expensive enough and you need a lot of different trades for a bathroom!).

Speaking of trades, I am so happy I chose to go with one company to project manage the entire job and coordinate all the trades. I think I would have had a nervous breakdown without Integriti Bathrooms. Not only did they look after all the logistics, it was brilliant to have one point of contact to discuss any concerns or changes with.

jensbathroom_jacquiturk-6

Another way we broke up the white was with the stunning custom-made timber vanities from Ingrain Designs in Melbourne. I discovered these guys from their work on previous series of The Block. Everybody who has seen the striking grain on these pieces has been just wowed. Not only does the bathroom vanity have super useful soft-close drawers, the shaving cabinet above is an exercise in simplicity meets quality. When you open it, it’s timber inside too. No plastic in sight. Such understated luxury! I’m so delighted to have something made by hand by a small (growing!) business in Melbourne from Australian Marri timber. Because it’s floating, it gives the illusion of more floor space. It also means we can store a basket of Seb’s bath toys under there (when we aren’t having photoshoots!).

jensbathroom_jacquiturk-14

jensbathroom_jacquiturk-13

Although we could have, I am a big believer in not squashing a freestanding bath tub into a too-small space. I think it looks silly plus, think of trying to clean behind it! I’m really happy with how this inset bath from Kohler turned out. I deliberately chose an oval bath to soften all the hard angles in the room and to give a bit of a a look of a freestanding one. What do you think? It is so deep and long (1700mm) and comfortable to relax in with the perfect incline for lying back and reading a magazine.

Now when it came to taps, I can’t say this is my dream tapware but it’s high quality and won’t date quickly. We made this choice with resale in the not too distant future in mind. If I had my way we’d be talking brass, no question! But sometimes a girl’s got to be practical. The bathroom basin was a last minute change, picked up from Bunnings for a mere $149! I’m really happy with it.

jensbathroom_jacquiturk-11

While the bathroom was deliberately simple, allowing the vanities to shine, I didn’t want to lose the decorative cornice we have throughout the apartment, which had to be removed when we built the wall across for the shower niche. Integriti Bathrooms tracked down a place in Melbourne with the moulds to make new cornice for the entire room, which matches perfectly. I really love these little details. To make the cornice pop, I was brave with my choice of a rather dark charcoal, Dulux Tea House, for the paint.

We kept the WC next door separate rather than knocking them through because when you only have one bathroom, it’s a practical choice! At least someone can use the toilet while someone else is having a bath, for example! We wanted to keep the look and feel the same so we used the same floor, wall and feature tiles and commissioned a tiny custom vanity, again from Ingrain. The fact that this had to be a cupboard with a door rather than drawers because of a lack of depth, just meant we ended up with one beautiful piece of timber which is the star of the show. Finding a basin to fit this tiny vanity however was a serious struggle. In the end we went with a very small, very expensive Gabicci one from Candana, but it really is a beauty!

If I had my time again, I’d put a lot more thought into the basins, their size in relation to the vanities and the positioning of the taps. The mirror was deliberately round to soften all the hard angles, and I really love it. It’s just a touch different and modern.

jensbathroom_jacquiturk-4

The tiny vanity fits an amazing amount inside, including 12 toilet rolls! Magic as we had zero storage before!

jensbathroom_jacquiturk-3

To finish it all off, the white plantation shutters were a must. I’m not sure there’s really any other option for bathroom window coverings in my opinion! I did consider leaving the sash windows ‘undressed’ being that they’re lovely features but, in contrast to the perfect finished rooms, they suddenly looked a bit old and sorry for themselves after years of repainting, not always very well!

Despite being a seventies apartment, our place doesn’t look like one and has a lot of lovely classic details like French doors, sash windows and moulding on all the doors and built-ins. This was another reason a super modern bathroom wouldn’t have worked here, not that that’s really our style anyway. I think we have achieved (if I don’t say so myself) the perfect timeless balance.

So, there we have it! I hope you like our reno! If you have any questions or comments, please drop them below. As I said, this will be the first of several posts about the bathroom and what we learned from the process.

SUPPLIER DETAILS

Labour and project management: Integriti Bathrooms

Tiles: Di Lorenzo Tiles

Bath, rain shower, tapware, towel rails: Kohler

Hand shower: Methven Aio Aurajet from Reece

Vanities: Ingrain Designs

Plantation shutters: DIY Online Blinds

Bathroom basin: Bunnings

WC basin: Candana Bathroom Ware

WC mirror: Life Interiors

Exhaust fan: IXL

Accessories: Brass crabs from Mr Pinchy & Co, candle by Gascoigne & King, tree stump stool from Two Girls and a Container, body wash and hand soap from Bondi Wash.

Categories
Art Designers Homewares Interviews Styling

Lawrence St Makers, opens on Sydney’s northern beaches

Something of an artist’s co-op, Lawrence St Makers is a gallery space that opened recently on Sydney’s northern beaches, showcasing the work of local artists, makers and collectors.

IMG_0747
Established in December 2015, Lawrence St Makers is the brainchild of artist and curator Kareena Zerefos, metalsmith and jeweller Toby Eagle and Bjorn and Sandra Brunger, the furniture-making husband and vintage-collecting wife team behind Maker & Collector.

IMG_0852
“We are united through a belief in simple living. In supporting local and shopping small and in the hand-crafted, the custom made and the consciously curated,” says Kareena Zerefos.

IMG_0656
Having opened just in time for Christmas, Kareena was overwhelmed by the response from the local, northern beaches community – a place that is also her hometown.

“Growing up around here, I dreamt of having a space that brought together and supported fellow artists and makers. Since opening our doors I’ve had the privilege of meeting so many talented people, and I’m excited to be able to show their work on our walls over the coming months,” says Kareena who is busy working on the their next exhibition.

IMG_0887

Opening in February, the showcase will feature the work of local artists Mia Taninaka, Carly Casey, Ben Brown, Jaimee Paul, Jack Bussell and Jordan Monaghan plus other talent from across Australia including Natalie McComas, Courtney Brims, Jeremy Piert and Katie Shriner.

2016-01-17 09.08.34 1

Click here for more.

Categories
Art Designers Furniture

Lump Sculpture’s new store specialising in custom designs

Showcasing their stunning range of unique metalwork, award-winning Lump Sculpture have opened a new concept store in Melbourne’s Abbotsford.

Screen Shot 2015-03-30 at 2.29.23 pm

Featuring a selection of their designs, including planters, decorative paneling, screening products, light feature panels and sculptures, there’s also space for artists to consult with clients on individual projects.

Screen Shot 2015-03-30 at 2.29.08 pm

While Lump’s manufacturing will continue at their Fairfield studio, the new store will be a fresh face for the designers of specialty outdoor products. “Opening this space will allow for a more creative collaboration between the designers and clients,” says Lump director Timothea Jewell. “The Lump team is excited at the opportunity to consult with clients on custom design projects in a creative environment. This showroom will allow for original and individualised projects to be realised.”

Screen Shot 2015-03-30 at 2.28.55 pm

The Abbotsford showroom will showcase all of Lump’s finishes and designs, from its painted faux and natural-rust finishes to its new Shard Planters. Lump’s metal screens will also be showcased via a new system for sliding screens. The sliding track system, which can be used horizontally or vertically, is suitable for both indoor and outdoor use and is also available for purchase.

Screen Shot 2015-03-30 at 2.28.40 pm

Lump Sculpture Studio’s new showroom is open to the public Monday to Friday, 10am-to-5pm, at 235 Johnston St, Abbotsford. For more information.

Categories
Furniture

Husband and wife behind Plank and Trestle build tables to last

In a world that is filled with mass-produced products, husband-and-wife design duo Lana and Mike Hall have a refreshing aim: to craft each piece of furniture as if it were for their own home.

Coastal Collection - White Sand
Coastal Collection – White Sand

“We don’t want our tables to be two-year mass-market wonders that are replaced when their paint chips and their shine fades,” explains Lana. “We want our tables to last generations and the workmanship and attention to detail we devote to each table really shows this. We think in a world filled with mass-produced furniture, it’s important to take time to appreciate pieces that are made and designed with integrity, passion and skill.”

Coloured Collection - Black Beauty
Coloured Collection – Black Beauty

As the masterminds behind Plank and Trestle (Lana designs, while Mike builds), they are, as far as they know, the only Australian company devoted solely to the design and manufacture of trestle tables. Having been obsessed with trestle tables for many years, it wasn’t until Lana bought her first home that she suddenly became aware of how hard it was to find one. Either a cheap mass-market overseas make or an ultra expensive designer piece, there were no options in the middle for high quality, wow-factor tables that were still reasonably priced.

Enter husband Mike, who after they got married built a beautiful bespoke trestle table as a gift. “After Mike built that first table, without realising it I started focusing all my down time on designing different types of trestle tables and talking through with him how they could be made. Unbeknownst to us, it was completely out of our hands and we had no choice. In 2011, Plank and Trestle had been born!”

Traditional Collection - Natural Pine
Traditional Collection – Natural Pine

With four collections available (and more in the works) there is a trestle table to suit all households. There’s the Coloured Collection; the Duets Collection ( with contrasting table top and legs), the Coastal Collection (made from recycled whitewashed timber) and the Traditional Collection, which is a basic timber Scandinavian design. These collections can be teamed with three styles of trestle legs and can be custom-made even further, via size, texture or colour. And in Lana’s mind, there’s no request too hard!

“As each trestle table is made by us in our workshop, we have complete control over how it is made and can adapt our tables to any of our clients’ needs. Over half of our business is custom-making bespoke trestle tables for clients who want a specific size for a particular space or havea design in mind that they can’t find anywhere. Custom-makes are lots of fun because it is where we can get really creative! We love the colours some of our clients ask for – I dream of a neon trestle table order coming through one day.”

Duets Collection - Red and White
Duets Collection – Red and White

With their business continuing to grow, Lana and Mike have big dreams for the coming years, hoping to create more collections, grow their retail offering and hire their first employee. “Our immediate priority is to get some down time to work on our new ranges as we have three or four on paper in the design stage. By next year, we also hope to transition Mike out of the day-to-day trestle building by employing some talented local (NSW South Coast) craftsmen to help us meet our weekly orders (hint hint, anyone who wants to build trestles with us!).”

For more information.

Categories
Bathrooms

Bathroom furniture goes bespoke with striking customisable vanities

Bespoke bathroom furniture has officially arrived at Reece, with the introduction of the new Issy range of customisable vanities. Gorgeous or what?!

nXbV-OBagALqs31T9SeyseA17ZJoo36U9IJC94eYDlM,FB-ZTn-Hz4lRh37I1OEhxvjXa8E7uXjrGGRWs7vcicI
Issy Glide

Designed and manufactured in Australia, the made-to-order collection gives customers complete freedom to create a vanity that perfectly suits their style and their bathroom space, customisable down to the millimetre! Created in partnership with leading Australian furniture designers Stephen Royce of FORMED and Geoff Wormald of Open Sky Design, the Issy range has two distinct collections, each creating a striking new aesthetic for the bathroom.

Issy B4
Issy B4

The B4 is made from solid surface Corian and sustainably grown Victorian Ash. Available in three timber finishes — Wenge, Walnut and Oak — the drawers feature German designed Blum BLuMOTION soft close runners and adaptive cushioning for the gentlest of closes. The B4 comes in four standard sizes as well as custom produced options to perfectly suit your space.

Issy Glide
Issy Glide

The second collection, Glide, combines strong, clean lines with fluid organic surfaces. Making a seamless minimalist statement, Glide is pared back to the essentials: clean, organic lines, handle-less drawers and a strong yet refined monochrome palette of white, silver and charcoal. With the flexibility to customise length, colour and basin and tap configuration, Glide provides a blank canvas around which to create the ultimate bathroom.

The Issy range is available now. For more information visit the Reece website here.

Categories
Furniture

Custom made Australian tables inspired by Scandinavia

Handcrafted in Australia but inspired by the gurus of design, the Scandinavians, the custom made tables by Marbre&Bois have a special emphasis on simplicity and balance.

RTIST-Studio-Table-1-2

The Frankie Table is available through RTIST Agency in Melbourne’s Prahran, and is the first from the new and exclusive range of Marbre&Bois tables. The concept behind Marbre&Bois is simple (if you speak French), with the name translating to ‘marble and wood,’ the high quality materials used in creating this bespoke piece.

Priced from $2,500, the Frankie Table is custom made to order and features a rounded rectangular Calacatta marble surface with an elegant Tasmanian oak finish.

For more information.

Categories
Homewares

Online shopping fix: The Eye Spy Milk Bar

Behind the handmade wooden homewares, the custom-made and personalised pieces and the range of inspiring prints for your walls, is father and daughter duo Ray Leetham and Katy Thomas.

the eye spy milk bar

As the masterminds behind online boutique The Eye Spy Milk Bar, Ray makes all the wooden homewares and Katy adds the finishing touches, which often feature a little paint and glitter job! Katy also designs all of the prints in Melbourne, loving the fact that she gets to keep the whole design and manufacturing process local. “In a world where so many things are made overseas, it’s refreshing and unique to bring the handmade element to life,” explains Katy. “Our aim is to create a range of fun homewares at an affordable price. We take everyday items and look to inject a splash of colour, a personalised element or a mix of interesting patterns and textures.”

A keen collector and design enthusiast, for many years Katy had been taking orders from her friends for her Dad to make a range of custom-made homewares. The interest continued to build to such an extent that she decided to launch The Eye Spy Milk Bar Etsy store last year, to house the collection of her Dad’s handmade homewares and make taking orders that little bit easier.

il_570xN.485088339_68d7

With many of the pieces custom-made, all products can be configured to fit a customer’s exact requirements or personalised for the perfect gift. “A customer might have specific requirements for a bedside table and we love creating something to fit. We don’t like to work in mass-produced quantities, but focus more on creating and designing custom-made pieces or a limited run of each piece.”

With many of The Eye Spy Milk Bar’s homewares perfect for weddings and events, you can also hire some of them for a special day, including wedding signs, benches and ladders. Most items ship Australia wide, with larger pieces being delivered within Melbourne’s metropolitan area. Shop online.

Categories
Interviews

Vintage signage inspires custom made artworks

Vanessa Hile has been making custom-made artworks for the last two years and it’s the challenge of turning her clients’ ideas into reality, that keeps her coming back for more: “It’s like someone telling you they’d like the chorus line of Yellow Submarine by the Beatles in a picture but also a cane toad. It might not mean anything to anyone but the client but that’s what makes this so unique.”

tumblr_mokisxnX211svyyjbo1_1280
It’s too Early

The idea to start creating custom artworks, came after Vanessa created a piece for her husband, entitled It’s too Early. Inspired by their backpacking trip to Colorado, it not only acted as a reminder of the good times but was also the catalyst for friends asking for their own unique artistic mementos. Now, the rest is history.

Vanessa has a very strong aesthetic with a prominent emphasis on typography, as she says: “New fonts are like fashion to me.” Vintage advertising and signage are synonymous with her look, mimicking the old advertising style where images were hand drawn rather than using photographs.

VanessaHile_headshot

It was the trip to Colorado and the surrounding states of the US and Mexico that saw her art shift from realism painting (she has been painting for 20 years!) to her current style of signage art. “My travels through the US and Mexico left me with photo albums of painted signs, paint peeled walls and old relics of neon signage. Mexicans all tend to be experienced signwriters and will paint their restaurant menus on the side of their shop fronts with great flair. The mad colour combinations and gimmicky icons in composition with the type styles used, can spur on great ideas.”

tumblr_mokizcSGOp1svyyjbo1_1280
Too Easy

But her trip wasn’t the first time Vanessa was inspired by typography, having worked as a graphic designer for 17 years and studying signwriting in Newcastle. She was also part of the founding Real Living magazine team, where she was art director and a finalist in the 2006 MPA awards for Designer of the Year.

Her graphic design skills remain hugely relevant, with Vanessa sketching her artwork ideas on the computer after her initial consultation with clients. “I use my computer to work up type relationships and try different colour combinations just as I would with my graphic design work. But once I know where I’m going with it, I work up the lettering with chalk and get into it.”

tumblr_mwjhbm0ioB1svyyjbo1_1280
The Royal Hawaiian

While Vanessa has now created many artworks in her signage art style, her favourite is The Royal Hawaiian (above), a piece she made for a close girlfriend to remember their trip to Hawaii back in 2003. “We stayed at this hotel for just the one night and went down to the hotel bar after nightfall. We drank Mai Tais talking to some US Marines. It was an unplanned, amazing night. We talk about how we wish we could do that again. It just has that feel good effect on me.”

It really sums up all of Vanessa’s pieces. While they look good, it is their ability to evoke emotion, to create a feeling of nostalgia and sentiment, that truly make them one of a kind.

 For more information.

Categories
Interiors Addict

The Sofa Maker lets you design your dream lounge online

A new concept in custom-made furniture, The Sofa Maker, lets you create your sofa online, cutting out the middleman and giving you direct access to the craftsmen who make it.

TidyFred_3seater_Oak_large

We formed the project around a really simple idea,” says Shelley Mason, co-founder of The Sofa Maker and owner of Sydney interior design store Project 82.

What if we could create a website that cuts out the middlemen – giving customers maximum input into the design process and direct access to the craftsmen who build their sofa? Would scrapping the showroom, cutting transportation costs and providing a purely online product make it possible to offer customisable, handcrafted sofas at an amazing price?”

thesofamaker

It turns out the answer is yes. You simply visit The Sofa Maker, create your sofa and their craftsmen will build it to order. The website lets you choose every aspect of your sofa from the style to the size, fabric and wood stain, where applicable.

Categories
Interiors Addict

Customised, Aussie made sofas, delivered within four weeks!

What’s not to like? Project 82 has launched a custom sofa service. With a focus on stylish, affordable and well-made sofas, you can choose from a range of styles then customise your sofa by selecting one of their high-grade commercial fabrics. They can even work with alternative fabrics if there’s a special project at hand.

Supporting Australian-made, Project 82 works with a reputable Sydney-based commercial manufacturer that ensures their custom sofas are produced locally. This means they can be made, ready and delivered nationally in as little as four weeks.

To find out more, visit the Sydney showroom at 82 Fitzroy Street, Surry Hills, call 02 9360 1471 or email [email protected].