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Table lamps Australia: From iconic to the affordable

More than simply a light source, a chic table lamp can be just the finishing touch a room needs. From iconic designs such as the Atollo and Tom Dixon’s Bell, to more affordable iterations, here’s our pick of the table lamp bunch.

Tom Dixon Bell table lamp in brass: Drawing inspiration from space helmets, this iconic lamp is one of the British designer’s most recognisable creations. The stylish design is available in chrome, copper and light black. $896.

Tom Dixon bell table lamp

west elm Modern Totem table lamps: Modernist ceramics meet functionality in this stylish and affordable statement-making lamp range that features bold, sculptural lines. From $149.

west elm

Trit House Zeke table lamp: Combining terrazzo, metal and glass, this design is the perfect addition to a modern interior. $90.

Trit House lamp

Atollo 238 table lamp, black: Designed in 1977, Vico Magistrett’s Atollo lamp is a cult classic that combines geometrical shapes (a cylinder, cone and hemisphere), for a bold yet refined aesthetic. It’s available in black, white and brass. $818.

Atollo lamp in black

Kmart rattan table lamp: With a five star rating and almost 50 online reviews, this rattan lamp is the perfect complement to a luxe coastal setting. Even better is its price! $29.

Kmart rattan table lamp

Kelly Wearstler Linden lamp: While the price tag is hefty, this design by American interiors maven Kelly Wearstler is fast becoming a modern design icon. It’s available in high gloss black or matte white. From $1199.

Kelly Wearstler

Dyson Lightcycle task desk light: One for the worker bees, the latest light from Dyson is not only sleek in design, but it’s engineered to support your body clock by auto-adjusting to surrounding light levels. The light also protects the eyes from glare and low optical flicker (two well-known causes of eye strain) and it switches off two minutes after you move away from it, cutting your carbon footprint and energy bills too. Slide-touch dimming and colour temperature controls let you completely customise the light to your preferences. $799.

Dyson

Australia’s first Tom Dixon designed apartments!

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Appliances

Review: The new Dyson V8 cordless vacuums

As a fan of the previous V6 Dyson cordless, I couldn’t wait to give the new and improved version, the V8, a spin. And after weeks of rigorous use (who said neat freak?), I’m totally in love. The latest design has rectified anything that was slightly letting down the old version.

dball

While it’s a still lightweight 2.6kg, the digital V8 motor, which can spin at up to 110,000rpm, boasts powerful fade-free suction. “We’ve spent more than a decade and over £250m developing our small and powerful digital motors,” says James Dyson. “Our latest generation motor sits at the heart of the Dyson V8 cord-free vacuum. It’s the result of 18 months research and development and 500,000 hours of testing.” That’s a lot of testing!

What I love most about the cordless Dyson is how easy it is to quickly clean my entire apartment without having to worry about plugging and unplugging or dragging a heavier vacuum from room to room. The motor and battery are positioned near the hand which shifts the centre of gravity, making the cleaning end of the vacuum much lighter, so it’s easy to clean up top and down below (I love using it on ceiling cobwebs!). What I used to find frustrating was how the V6 battery could die before I’d managed to do the whole place (I like a challenge but 20 minutes wasn’t cutting it). Not anymore! This version will keep going for up to 40 minutes (that’s double the V6) which is massive for a powerful, cord free machine. It’s also quieter, which is a consideration when you live in an apartment.

As important as the motor is the Dyson cleaner head technology. A direct-drive head removes ground-in dirt (at our place that means toddler crumbs and sand, for example) and pet hair from carpets, while a soft roller head removes large debris and fine dust from hard floors simultaneously. I haven’t had a chance to try them all, but I can tell you the mini motorised tool makes vacuuming my navy velvet sofa (which shows every last bit of fluff) a walk in the park! The new design quick-release catch makes it even easier to swap between attachments. It still has the ‘Max’ function, a turbo boost if you will, for tougher jobs, but bear in mind this uses the battery up quicker.

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My other pet hate about the V6 was how awkward, and sometimes messy, it could be to empty the machine into the bin. This has also been fixed. Hooray! The Dyson V8 features a new bin-emptying mechanism. As the bin is emptied, a rubber collar slides down the shroud, scraping dirt off. This enables you to hygienically drive out trapped dust and debris in a single action, with no need to touch the dirt. Great news for asthmatics and people with allergies, in particular. The bin also has a bigger capacity which means you have to empty it less often.

Another new feature I appreciate is the battery runtime indicator, so running out of power no longer comes as a nasty surprise!

The Dyson V8 Absolute vacuum includes the direct-drive cleaner head and the soft roller cleaner head, in addition to the mini motorised tool, the combination tool, crevice tool and mini soft dusting brush. RRP $849. The Dyson V8 Animal vacuum includes the direct-drive cleaner head in addition to the mini motorised tool, the combination tool, crevice tool and mini soft dusting brush. Recommended retail price is $749. Available at major electrical retailers and www.dyson.com.au. Both machines include a 2-year hassle-free warranty on parts and labour.

FUN FACTS

  • Dyson sold its first cord-free vacuum, the handheld DC16, in 2006. So 2016 marks 10 years of Dyson cord-free technology.
  • In 2016, Dyson will produce 8.8 million digital motors – that’s approximately one every 3.5 seconds.
  • 376 robots are used to assemble Dyson digital motors, as even the most dextrous human hand isn’t precise enough: the smallest manufacturing tolerance is +/- 3 microns, which is approximately a quarter of the thickness of a human hair.
  • Dyson has committed to a £1.5bn investment in future technology and will launch 100 new products around the world in the next four years.

–Disclosure: Dyson gifted me a vacuum for the purpose of this review. Positive coverage was not guaranteed, these are my own honest views and these words have not been approved by the brand.

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Appliances

Review: The Dyson Cinetic Big Ball Vacuum

Those of you who are regular readers will know I’m a total neat freak and I love nothing more than to take the latest cleaning products or gadgets for a spin. No really, this stuff excites me! I also have a long time love affair with Dyson, having grown up in Wiltshire, England, where James Dyson opened his first factory. As a local newspaper reporter back in the day, one of my most exciting assignments was to cover the launch of the until then top secret Dyson washing machine. I’ve been a Dyson fan since I bought a reconditioned one on first moving out of home (my trainee reporter salary didn’t quite stretch to brand new) and have been one ever since.

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I bought the handy Dyson V6 Animal last year and it gets a serious workout. I love how portable, flexible and lightweight it is. But at the end of the day, a battery charge only lasts a max of 20-odd minutes and you really can’t have it all. So while this will always be the go-to in my house for a quick vacuum, it’s got nothing on this powerful new beast, the Cinetic Big Ball.

Of course, like all Dysons, it looks pretty cool. While some people say that doesn’t matter, I think it’s an added bonus. And it’s not just aesthetics, it’s clever design too, which will always be a winner with me. While some barrel vacuum cleaners can be cumbersome and frustrating, Dyson engineers set out to solve some common problems with this one: “The problem with some barrel vacuums is that they can go off on a tangent and topple, leaving you to walk back over the floor you’ve just cleaned to right the machine. We challenged our engineers to refine the barrel format, to solve this problem and others. The Dyson Cinetic Big Ball barrel is the vacuum that self-rights when toppled. Further advances include hygienic dirt ejection and an articulated handle,” says James Dyson.

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It’s the only vacuum with no maintenance and no loss of suction, as there are no filters to wash or replace and no bags to buy. It self-rights when toppled because its components are put together in a spherical array, with the heaviest nearest to the floor. Placing them inside a curved body with a low centre of gravity means that whenever the vacuum is displaced, gravitational forces will automatically return it to its upright resting position. It can turn on the spot and follow you effortlessly around the home. This is great for a clumsy person with little patience (that’s me).

As the bin is emptied, a silicone collar slides down the shroud. This scrapes off trapped dirt or debris, driving them out. There’s no need to touch the dirt or reach inside the bin (something I often have to do with the Animal if I’m honest. And yuck!).

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As well as being a neat freak I’m also in total denial about having a stylish home and a toddler. Case in point: our newly purchased cream wool rug which shows every speck of dirt. The extreme suction (it’s so powerful, it takes some getting used to, and the toddler is scared of it, but again, you can’t have it all!), removes everything and leaves it looking all perfect, fluffed up and like new. Hoorah! (And did you know almost every small spill can be removed with baby wipes? It’s true.).

There are so many more cool features to this machines, like the attachment with anti-static carbon fibre filaments to help remove dust from hard floors. And an active base plate automatically adjusts the cleaner head height, raising and lowering to seal in suction across carpets, rugs and hard floors.

If you’re a true Dyson fan like me, you’ll know that back in the seventies, James Dyson revolutionised wheelbarrows by replacing the wheel with a ball. So it’s kind of like coming full circle really.

Available now from all major retailers. RRP from $699. For more information.

Fun fact: The Dyson Cinetic Big Ball barrel was in development for more than 2.5 years and more than 50 design engineers produced more than 1,000 prototypes of it.

Disclosure: Dyson gifted me with this vacuum for the purposes of this review. Positive coverage was not guaranteed.

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Appliances

Review: Hoover Mode 5000PH

When signing the lease for our little abode, we were pretty over the moon as it had just been renovated and never lived in. However, after a week the new wool carpet was driving us mad, it was shedding like crazy! There was fluff everywhere, on everything, all the time!

hoover mode lifestyle

For what felt like forever, we thought our only hope was to save up for a Dyson. We decided to go ‘looking’ at what vacuums were out on there in our price range and no word of a lie, in the first shop within an hour of leaving the house, we came home with a new Hoover Mode 5000PH.

This Hoover is life-changing (well, for us clean freaks anyway). By all means it’s still not a cheap vacuum and we went in with every intention of spending half the money that we ended up shelling out. But after the demo, we were sold!

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Appliances

Dyson Hot + Cool AMO5 Air Multiplier review

The Bang & Olufsen Beosound 9000, Smeg coloured refrigerators and the Dyson Ball vacuum cleaner: all appliances (well, two and a sound system) that are iconic designs in modern industrial design. Dyson will be hoping to add to that list with the Hot + Cool AMO5.

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Dyson’s Air Multiplier fans were launched a few years ago with their iconic bladless design but now comes the AMO5 model which adds a bit of magic that Dyson likes to call heat. I could write a few pages on this and give you a blow by blow rundown of what essentially does the job of a pedestal fan and fan heater in one but that would waste both my time and your time. After all, if it is any more complex than a few paragraphs you really shouldn’t be investing in it. So as briefly as possible (the briefer the better for Dyson), here we go.

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Interiors Addict

The new Dyson Hot + Cool fan heater

The new Dyson Hot + Cool fan heater is the fastest way to heat or cool your room evenly year round. Let’s face it, many dust-gathering fans and bulky heaters are UGLY. This, like all things Dyson, is altogether more streamlined and aesthetically pleasing (especially the white version).

It can be set between 1 and 37 degrees to heat a room. When it hits the desired temperature, it monitors the room temperature by measuring the surrounding air. If a drop is detected, the heater turns back on to maintain the set temperature. Clever eh? James Dyson says: “Other fan heaters rely on inefficient motors or dust friendly grills. As the heat rises, you’re left with a partially heated room, and a worrying burning smell. Dyson engineers have developed a heater that produces no smell and heats the whole room.”

It took a team of 22 engineers – including experts in thermo dynamics and fluid mechanics – over three years researching, developing and testing Dyson’s patented Air Multiplier technology for its application in a heater. And that’s why it costs $549.

I have a soft spot for Dyson having grown up down the road from its original factory in Wiltshire, England, where I attended the launch of its washing machine 12 years ago. I’m sure this product will be altogether more successful!