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Interviews

Wholesaler profile: Boyd Blue

Wholesalers don’t often get the limelight but they’re an essential part of the interior design process, often sourcing product from all over the world, presenting designers and decorators with an already edited selection to pick from.

Few wholesalers have the variety, customer service and merchandising skills of Queensland’s Boyd Blue. Shelley Boyd started the company 13 years ago with a vision to create a one stop shop for designers and decorators with “beautiful customer service” and products that differed to what every other wholesaler was offering. And that’s still the case today.

“I love working with professional designers who know what they want,” says Shelley. ”I have tried to build a business that offers exceptionally good service. We really do care about our clients and try to make their job as easy as possible. I am constantly travelling the world sourcing an eclectic mix of products and without companies like ours our clients would have to source from retailers.”

Everything Boyd Blue sells is handmade, another real point of difference, and Shelley loves natural fibres and materials. Handmade grass weave wallpapers, sisal rugs, mirrors, lamps and hand forged iron accessories are among the treasures she imports. “I am really proud of the fact that we are supporting small communities in a variety of countries and keeping these old traditional ways of manufacturing alive,” she says.

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Interiors Addict

Guest post: Pretty little sustainable things

If you’ve always thought that an environmentally sustainable interior would only suit an alternative lifestyle, you’re wrong. With a growing variety of beautiful interior products conducive to a better environment and to human health, sustainability is the next big chic! Here are some of my favourite and most recent ‘must have’ discoveries – enjoy!

At first glance, you’d think the pieces in the Samara range from Nicoya were made from wood – look again! These distinctively designed pieces are hand crafted from a unique combination of discarded materials, rattan and palm twigs, moulded and finished with a polished resin. This handmade collection equates to minimal energy waste and environmental impact as no machines are used in the craftsmanship, low allergy resin is used, and the pieces are made to Fair Trade principles. The philosophy behind the range is about providing well designed, unique, high quality, hand crafted furniture created from sustainable organic materials. LOVE IT!

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Interiors Addict

15% off at Freedom, until Sunday

From today until Sunday inclusive, there’s 15% off everything full price at Freedom, PLUS their spend $1000 and get a $100 voucher promotion. This means you too, readers. Just go here and print off the voucher. Easy.

 

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Interiors Addict

West Elm and Pottery Barn to open in Australia

VERY exciting news today! Well loved American home furnishing and kitchen brands West Elm, Pottery Barn, Pottery Barn Kids and Williams-Sonoma are all opening in Sydney next year. I know MANY of you will be delighted to hear this because shipping heavy goods from the States just isn’t an option. Now all we need is Anthropologie…

West Elm

The stores, which will all open under the same roof at Bondi Junction’s new Exchange Building, are the first company-owned retail stores outside of North America as part of retail giant Williams-Sonoma Inc.’s global expansion strategy. Who said Australia gets everything last?

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Interiors Addict

The new IKEA catalogue launch

I have always LOVED new IKEA catalogue time. How exciting is it? It doesn’t matter if you need something new for your home or not, it’s always a great display of smart, innovative, stylish design at affordable prices. From the days when I first discovered IKEA and kitted out my entire apartment with it (yes, it was like an IKEA showroom in the nineties) to these days, when I mix the odd IKEA piece in with vintage and other more expensive items, I love it! The IKEA catalogue, to a design or interiors lover, is like a really good bumper issue of your favourite magazine.

It’s not just the products, it’s all the styling inspiration too. I’m not alone either. They print around 5 million copies in Australia. Wow. It’s also the second biggest publication in the world after the bible. Love that stat.

The new one’s out on Monday but I already have one! Ner-ner-ner-ner-ner! It was launched to media at IKEA Tempe last night, alongside the new textiles collection, which is set to become an even more important part of the brand’s offering.

A large space was wonderfully styled to showcase the new textile designs and the array of possibilities to create with them, from curtains to cushions, napkins, decorations, kids’ play tents and more. This table setup was particularly divine.

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Interiors Addict

Buy an entire room, have it delivered to your home and styled for you, at the click of a mouse

Online homewares retailer Temple & Webster introduced a new concept at the weekend with its first Complete Room Series sale event. At the click of a button you can buy everything you see in this dining room set-up, have it delivered to your home, and even styled by its team. Whether you’re a bit clueless about decorating, you’ve just moved into your first home or you’re just plain lazy, this could be the easy answer you’ve been looking for!

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Interiors Addict

Cute wooden stools in any colour you like. Discount for Interiors Addicts!

After 3 years of designing and crafting bespoke furniture for Queensland interior designers, Green Cathedral have just released their first range of furniture – The Babanees.

The range consists of 2 styles of stools, a bench seat and kitchen table with other items still in construction. These cute, handcrafted stools are available in any colour you like. They’re $180 each in stock colours or an extra $20 for any custom colour you like.

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Interiors Addict

A touch of Dutch in Australia with HK Living

Dutch interiors label HK Living is now available in Australia and the response has been overwhelming.

It’s has been brought here by Ursula and Hans Van Schoonhoven, who have been showcasing the best of Dutch design at their store House of Orange in Armadale, VIC, for years.

Retailers are falling over themselves to stock HK Living in their stores, with 40 signing up in the first fortnight. Hans says: “The reception has been unbelievable. I’ve never encountered anything like it.”

The stylish couple are having a really good July because their beautiful home is also on the cover of the current issue of Real Living magazine.

The collection is described as “pure, rustic and beautiful”. We’re lucky to have a sneak peek at these photos, shot in Amsterdam just the other week. The products aren’t even all in the country just yet but they will be soon and they’re available for pre-order.

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Interiors Addict

Passionate about style and colour?

Sydney homewares and furniture store PAD (Passionate About Design) is holding a workship about style and colour on 26 July.

This course will be all about defining your personal style, showing you how to mix new and vintage pieces and discussing how to translate inspiration from a particular era or place. You will also explore the use of colour throughout your space, look at how to find your muse and create your own personal colour palette.

You can then get a 10% discount on all purchases made on the night. Spaces are limited to 10 so be quick!

Time: 7pm-9pm

Place: PAD – Passionate About Design | 287 Young Street | Waterloo

Cost: $95

To register: call 02 9698 8150. 

Read my interview with Olga and Kellie from PAD here.

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Interiors Addict

6 for the price of 5 Wishbone chairs at Cult

Ah, the Wishbone by Hans Wegner! My favourite chair of all time! They come in so many fabulous colours these days. If you’ve been thinking of investing in the real deal (NOT replicas) then Cult have just the deal for you with 6 for the price of 5.

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Interiors Addict

My trend report in Luxury Home Design magazine, out today

I was delighted to be asked to write a trend report for Luxury Home Design, which is out today. I picked metallics, and by that I mean accessories and furniture in gold, silver, copper and bronze tones.

Let’s face it, silver and gold will never go out of fashion, but copper (or rose gold) hues seem to be making a bit of a comeback. Yesterday I featured those gorgeous gold and silver objets from Mr Pinchy & Co and I’m currently lusting after the brass, stainless steel and copper homewares from Georg Jensen’s Ilse collection (yes, it is my birthday on Sunday!).

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Interiors Addict

Bold colour and pattern in new Orson & Blake OB Collection range

The latest items in Orson & Blake’s OB Collection (their showcase wholesale range) will certainly make a statement. Now in its 20th year, the Sydney store is working on getting its entire range available online, including big ticket items like sofas, so people Australia wide can enjoy them.

Edit and Cosi Casa are now brands within the Orson & Blake  store and they’re continuing to add more diverse and eclectic furniture and homewares ranges.

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Interiors Addict

At PAD “it’s all about finding pieces you’ll love for a lifetime”.

Two old friends with backgrounds in fashion, interior decoration and styling have brought their many skills together to create the most wonderful shop, loved by professionals and consumers alike.
At PAD (Passionate About Design), in Young Street, Waterloo, it feels more like a series of rooms than shop displays, and that’s the whole idea. The co-owners are buyer, merchandiser and interior decorator Olga Lewis and interior stylist Kellie Murray. Third owner Chris Yang works in finance but loves interiors and spending time in the store.
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Interiors Addict

Raft range lands in Australia at Great Dane

The new Raft Series from NORM Architects has just arrived on Australian shores at Great Dane.
Inspired by the maritime through a beautiful combination of natural roughness and the functionality of metal structures, the series comprises of a stool, barstool and table available in black with black ash or white with natural oak.
 

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Interiors Addict

Completely customised bed heads

We’ve become used to designing our own shoes, jewellery, pretty much everything these days! Now the same goes for bedheads and Emily Lochran’s The Fabric Frame has some lovely options.

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Interiors Addict

Fabulous perspex furniture at trade prices!

Remember that fab perspex furniture I shared with you the other week? Well, you all seemed to absolutely LOVE the concept so I’m hoping you’ll be as excited about this news as I am. CAJA, for this month only, is offering any piece you’d like from its range at TRADE PRICE if you like its Facebook page. Simple as that!*

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Interiors Addict

Guest post: My Milan Roundup

Priyanka Rao, the founder of design-your-own flatpack furniture company, Evolvex, travelled to Italy for her first Milan Furniture Fair this year. Here she reports back for Interiors Addict.

This year’s Milan Furniture Fair saw designers push the boundaries of colour, technology and form. There was a mix of vintage inspired to minimalist to futuristic to just downright crazy. For those of you who have never been, the fair is not just the main exhibition halls (of which there are 20), but also fringe events like the Zona Totona, Ventura Lambrate, MOST and Design Village that take over the trendy districts of Milan. I was lucky enough to find accommodation right in the midst of the fringe events. Needless to say my eyes and my feet were enemies by the end of the week. Here are some of my highlights.

There were a lot of bright colours mixed with darker greys. This year’s colour had to be yellow (and yellowy tones) – perhaps a sign we should all just cheer up out of the doldrums of the current economy!

The Young Designers exhibit at the Salone Satellite looked at new materials and manufacturing processes.

Raul Lauri (from Spain) lights made from coffee grounds

Australian Tate Anson’s clock was made from one piece of wood, with each piece carefully steambent to create the intricate form

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Furniture

The perspex boxes that are like tapas for furniture

When I first saw Georgia Ezra’s perspex, customisable furniture, I fell in love with it immediately and had to find out more. Little did I know the young designer behind the CAJA brand would also turn out to be a trapeze artist! Seriously cool, no?

Georgia, 25, studied at UNSW and graduated with a Bachelor of Interior Architecture, first-degree honors. The following year, she moved to Melbourne for her first job, where she completed many award-winning designs, one of which (Suds Launderette) was shortlisted in the 2011 IDA Awards. Then in November last year she went out on her own and started up G.A.B.B.E Interior Design, a multidisciplinary practice, which prides itself on a creative approach. “I always explore ways to look outside the conventional box,” she says. “I concentrate largely on custom made design, placing incredible attention to detail.”

Being a trapeze artist, she says the colours, costumes and choreography of Cirque de Soleil inspire her. She is also influenced by the 10 months she spent living in Spain. “I am absolutely influenced by European culture. I draw Inspirations in all my designs – interior and furniture. I am incredibly passionate about textures, colours and art.”

Her original perspex bookcase design, Camouflage, was inspired by the illusion of books piled one on top of the other with no support system. “As the books are consciously organised in a shifted manner by a hidden system, there is a sense of structured and controlled chaos. The image of the stacked books draws a strong sense of visual aesthetic and thus it was felt necessary to house the books by a perspex box, framing the beauty of the ordered book spines,” she explains. “As the product is constructed for the placement and stacking of books, it mainly acts as a bookshelf. The size, form and thickness of the perspex structure allow it to take on other functions too.” An artwork and display unit in itself, the unit also works as seating, bedside tables or occasional side tables.

Going out on her own brought with it “a whirlwind of thoughts” about how to extend and push her CAJA furniture line. It was then Georgia came up with the idea of adding mix and match lids to the perspex boxes. “An important element that I wanted to transpire was a sense of versatility and client ownership. I specifically wanted the buyer to be able feel that they could take part in the design of their own unit and have the freedom to mix match and change their piece to reflect their style, lifestyle, space etc,” she says.

“I was fascinated by the mix between the sleek and modern appearance of perspex and the warmth and exciting quality of the wood and bright lid colours. I was even more fascinated by the idea of inserting varying homewares into these lids – the beauty of their profile – which is exposed through the perspex, and their aerial plan – looking down. There is a sense of illusion as the inserts hang from the lids.”

Her Spanish influence led her to name the range El Tapar, meaning lid. “The word tapas stems from the noun el tapar and so each lid option and insert almost serves as an individual tapas option,” says Georgia.

She loves working with perspex. “The beauty of it is the space and/or the books placed in the unit direct the aesthetic of the furniture. If you place it in either a contemporary or a traditional house the unit will ultimately take on the style which surrounds it. In addition, the style, subject and colour scheme of the books used in the perspex absolutely direct and shape its appearance.” One client wanted a grey, yellow and black room, so Georgia filled two side tables with National Geographic magazines! “It looked sensational!”

The young designer, whose target markets are homeowners and event planners, has had a fantastic reaction so far with some impressive CAJA stockists on board such as top3 by design and fenton&fenton. The most popular design is from the El Tapar range (Lid Option 4/5 – with the vase insert).

Being an Australian made product is incredibly important. “I strongly believe in supporting local trade and having full quality control on manufacture. Incredible effort has been made to select the best manufacturers of each of the different parts that make up the whole that will provide me the quality and standard that I require.” She adds: “When you have a beautiful product where the details have been successfully translated all the way through from design to the final product, this coming together is far more important to get 100% right. As a result the client will walk away with a unique product of an incredibly high standard.”

While CAJA Design is still just Georgia, she is excited about the potential to grow and expand, and if the positive reaction continues, I’m sure she’ll be hiring before too long.

Find a full list of stockists at the CAJA Design website. Georgia will be at Design Made Trade in Melbourne in July. What do you think of this new concept?