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Interviews

The furniture nerd and the publisher: the ladies behind The quintessential Magazine

Yesterday I had the pleasure of meeting the two lovely ladies behind a new and very gorgeous online publication, The quintessential Magazine.

Leanne (left) and Tracy

Leanne Carter-Taylor is the woman behind quintessential duckeggBLUE, the shop packed with gorgeous found industrial and antique furniture and objects in Sydney’s Balmain. Tracy Lines is ex creative director of Inside Out magazine and lifestyle publisher at Murdoch Books. When you meet them and feel their wonderful enthusiasm for this project, you quickly realise why the magazine is as impressive as it is. Because it isn’t just another online magazine, or a well disguised catalogue, it is much more that. Its functionality, although web-based, is much more like an app, and feels like one on iPad. And it is full of quality content (written by people like Inside Out founding editor Karen McCartney) and beautiful photos by Dan Himbrechts (styled by John Mangila), unbelieveably, all shot in the store (or the garage). It’s amazing it has all come together since August.

Leanne is a self-confessed furniture nerd and makes no apologies for it. She travels the world four times a year, sourcing the covetable finds her shop is full of. Each piece carries a handwritten label with an astonishing amount of information about its history, story and where she discovered it. She has a photographic memory for the finer details of everything she collects but when it comes to the everyday stuff, not so much! The daughter of a furniture maker, she grew up in England being taught to respect furniture and never to sit on the arms of the lounge. Her love for old, pre-loved things and their unique history is seriously infectious.

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Interiors Addict

New Inside Out mag hits news stands tomorrow

The new look Inside Out magazine hits news stands tomorrow and here’s my sneak peek copy. On first glance, the new design is modern and fresh. Glad to see they kept the iconic masthead but introduced a glossy cover with nice new fonts.

So what’s new?

  • a dedicated renovation section (and judging by the number of people who watch The Block, I’d say that’ll be popular!)
  • a bumper shopping and news section
  • a brand new entertaining and food section

It’s definitely more Real Living than Belle and I get the feeling they’re trying to appear less design-snobby and more accessible. The only thing missing is a mention of Interiors Addict in the must-read blogs section! 😉

It’s new editor Claire Bradley’s second issue and it will no doubt take a bit of time to get more of an idea of the new look and feel. Love to hear what you think when you pick up a copy.

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Interiors Addict

Karen McCartney’s picks for Temple & Webster

Temple & Webster’s new editor at large, the founding editor of Inside Out magazine Karen McCartney, has curated some fab homewares for a new sale starting today.

Everything in the picture is for sale at Temple & Webster today

Karen has written two books on iconic Australian houses which are in tomorrow’s sale, alongside everything in the photo. Brands include I Need Nice Things, Pony Rider, Hamamist, Kulchi, Pure Linen, This Design and Living and Aura.

Categories
Interiors Addict

Sunday Snippets: the best of the week in interiors

Is it really that time again?! I ran the City 2 Surf in Sydney this morning (anyone else?) and this comes to you from the couch where my legs and I are currently in a world of pain! Anyway, back to this week’s best bits…

  • Jaclyn Carlson from Life InStyle gave us a roundup of last weekend’s Melbourne trade fair where neon was all the rage. See the pix here.
  • At a time where everyone’s saying print is dead (trust me, as a journalist for the day job, I hear this all the time) it was great to see magazines like Belle and Luxury Home Design show huge circulation increases in the latest readership figures.
  • Speaking of magazines, Inside Out founding editor Karen McCartney has joined the team at online homewares store Temple & Webster as editorial consultant. Not to mention the first issue of Inside Out came out since Claire Bradley replaced Richard Waller as editor, and it was a cracker in my opinion.
  • I shared the top three bathroom trend predictions.
  • I started a new regular feature called Folded Corners and kicked off with telling you what I’m coveting from the latest issue of Real Living magazine.
  • Homewares store Whiteport published an interview with me on their blog where I talked about how I juggle blogging with my job as editor of a business magazine. You can read it here.
  • These sustainable and very beautiful lamps were popular with readers.
  • I had a good whinge about my spare room and how spare rooms in general are so often awkward and under-utilised spaces. You’ll be pleased to hear I made a start on transforming mine this weekend with a lick of fresh white paint. How’s your spare room looking?!
  • On Etsy Tuesday I shared some cute nursery artwork inspired by Mid Century furniture.
I have a real treat for you tomorrow with a beautiful apartment project by Melbourne interior designer Christopher Elliott. In the meantime, check out the last project he shared with us here.
I hope you all have a great week!
 
Categories
Interiors Addict

Luxury Home Design and Belle magazines see circulations leap

It has been an excellent year for many magazines in the homes category with Luxury Home Design’s circulation rising a whopping 36.7% and Belle’s by 29.4%. Well done to LHD managing editor Kate St James and Belle editor-in-chief Neale Whitaker. Who said print was dead?!

The latest Roy Morgan research also shows circulation increases for Home Beautiful (19.9%), Country Style (17.4%) House & Garden (11.9%), Real Living (3.1%) and Better Homes & Gardens (0.4%). Inside Out, which recently got a new editor, dropped 9.2% and Vogue Living dropped 18.1%.

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Interiors Addict

The best of last week in interiors

  • On Tuesday I was all kinds of excited to publish my interview with Kelly Hoppen, who I have long admired. Her show Superior Interiors aired in Australia for the first time that night on the Lifestyle Channel. Did you tune in? I would have but I don’t have Foxtel (there’s already not enough hours in the day for all the reality TV I watch!).
  • Loni Parker of the popular online magazine Adore Home announced she has quit her graphic designer job to concentrate on her real passion full-time. Good for you, Loni! The big news is she will launch an online store with the next issue of the mag this Friday. I have written a home profile in there so make sure you check it out!
  • The much anticipated Maison InStyle trade fair was postponed with no new date yet.
  • The new editors of Inside Out magazine were announced as Claire Bradley and Lee Tran Lam after Richard Waller was let go the week before.
  • I confessed how my own impatience has led to me making many  bad interiors decision!
  • On Friday I met Jamee Huntington from In A Designer Home. Have you checked out her online store? It’s selling all kinds of fabulous brands like my faves Armadillo & Co and Dinosaur Designs.
  • Last night Dale and Sophie finally won a challenge on The Block. Did you like their hallway and bedroom? I did. Our friend Darren Palmer was guest judging again too. Who is your favourite judge? I’m really only tuning in on Sundays now for the room reveals as the midweek challenges bore me (I know, I have mentioned this a LOT but it’s just such a shame The Block enjoyment can’t be spread right across the week!).
  • Belle magazine’s super stylist Steve Cordony has finally joined Twitter. Hoorah! Follow him @stevecordony.

Here’s to another fabulous week, addicts!

Categories
Interiors Addict

New Inside Out editors announced

NewsLifeMedia today announced Claire Bradley as Richard Waller’s replacement on Inside Out magazine. Bradley has been appointed editor and Lee Tran Lam, recently retrenched from her deputy sub-editor position at the magazine after five years, is being brought back as managing editor. It quashes rumours the magazine might be about to close after Waller was let go last week.

Chief executive Nicole Sheffield said: “Inside Out is an important magazine for  NewsLifeMedia and we have exciting plans to reenergise the magazine and broaden its appeal. I am delighted to announce this new editorial leadership.”

As editor, Bradley will be responsible for driving the magazine into a multi-platform brand (read: much more online!).  She has worked in the Australian magazine industry for more than 10 years. Most recently she edited The Telegraph’s sunday magazine.

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Interiors Addict

Inside Out editor Richard Waller let go

I was sorry to hear this afternoon that Inside Out editor Richard Waller, whose work I have long admired, has left NewsLifeMedia today. The company, which has also apparently let go Vogue editor Kirstie Clements, has yet to comment. Read the full story in The Australian here.

Categories
Interviews Styling

“Interior designers are scientists and stylists are magicians,” says Inside Out’s Vanessa Colyer Tay

Vanessa Colyer Tay, who has been style editor at Inside Out for four years, is happy so long as she’s constantly evolving and being inspired. I’ve long been a fan of her work, and while she’s not as self-publicising as some stylists, her work is well known and respected, and that says it all.

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Interiors Addict

Craft Queen Makes Bunting Cool

English rose that I am, I’ve always loved the traditional fabric bunting with florals and polkadots. That said, it doesn’t exactly complement the look I’ve got going on in my Sydney apartment these days! But Tamara Maynes, whose handiwork you may know from the pages of Inside Out magazine, has put a very cool modern twist on bunting with her gold leather version. LOVE! You can buy it here.

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Interiors Addict

Homelife.com.au has a new look

Homelife.com.au, brought to us by Inside Out and Country Style magazines, relaunched with a new look today and I really like it. Nice clean look, plenty of practical tips, blogs and how-tos. I love both these magazines and, as an editor for my day job, I appreciate the importance these days of having a good online presence to complement your print magazine. Print isn’t dead if you get your other channels right too. Check it out, it’s well worth a look. I especially like the Pinterest-like style book that lets you collect your favourite images from around the site.

www.homelife.com.au

Categories
Interiors Addict

Melinda Ashton Turner launches colour blog

Interior stylist Melinda Ashton Turner has returned home to Sydney after 11 years in London with a fabulous new blog to share. She had the idea for The Colour Field while working as style director for Inside Out UK and has finally brought it to fruition.

The Colour Field is a weekly blog deconstructing a room’s colour scheme along with quotes from prominent industry figures as to what their favourite colour is and why,” she says.

We all know colour is something many people struggle with in their interiors. Sadly, you’re about as likely to get it horribly wrong as you are to create something that really works.

Melinda’s stunning styling has appeared in the top interiors magazines internationally. Originally training as an interior designer, Melinda has been working as an interior stylist and art director since 1990. Her impressive background includes roles such as style editor on Vogue Living and decoration editor on Homes & Gardens UK. She’s worked on advertising campaigns for Harrods and Wrangler and as a consultant to brands like Jo Malone. So yes, she knows a thing or two about this industry!

Find out more about Melinda here and visit the blog here.

Categories
Furniture

Don’t buy disposable fakes, save up for a piece of furniture you’ll treasure

David Harrison is a respected interiors writer and stylist who regularly reports on the Milan Furniture Fair for Inside Out. He was once the Australian importer of Isamu Noguchi lights from Ozeki & Co Japan and Tendo Mokko Japan. He also distributed Carl Hansen in NSW for several years and imported vintage American pieces. In this guest post, he shares why he doesn’t think you should buy replicas.

“As an avid collector of vintage 20th Century furniture for the last 15 or more years, I have seen the rise of replica furniture from an occasional offensive dot on the design landscape to becoming an epidemic. While Anne-Maree Sargeant has spoken about most of the issues that make copying of a designer’s IP ethically and morally wrong, I would also like to point out how it also effects the manufacturer and the retailer of originals.

When a designer comes up with a concept for a new furniture or lighting piece they need to spend months, sometimes years of their life getting it to a stage where a manufacturer will take on the design for mass production. The designer is generally not paid for this development time unless they are commissioned by the manufacturer to design a specific object.

Most designers will present their design to several manufacturers, going from meeting to meeting and making new prototypes and will continually refine the design as a result of feedback from potential manufacturers and to streamline the manufacturing process. As I said, this can take years. If eventually a company decides to proceed and manufacture the design then the designer will be paid a royalty fee of a percentage of profit of every unit sold. As for musicians and writers, the fee per unit sold is minimal and the only way to make money is to achieve large volume sales.

A large percentage of Australian designers will struggle to get more than one item into production every couple of years. Not a large money earner as you can imagine. Very successful international stars may have 10-to-50 items in production at any one time but they also have to run a studio with assistant designers and office staff to facilitate the amount of design work. It’s by no means a cash cow.

The manufacturer has to tool up for production and depending on what the design is, this could cost anything from $50,000 to several million dollars. Often the manufacturer then takes the design to trade fairs around the globe along with their other new designs to the trade and general public, at great expense the company.

This is where the replica guy comes in. Secretly taking photographs at this point enables a replica manufacturer to avoid all the time-consuming and expensive development phases. All the manufacturing and material bugs have been resolved by the original designer and manufacturer – all the replica guy has to do is copy it. No payment to the designer, no license with the original manufacturer. It is design theft, there is no other word for it.

The replica manufacturer will then alter the design to suit the cost criteria (i.e making it much cheaper) so material quality, design details and skilled labour are all compromised. So long as the general appearance remains close to the original design the replica guy wont care how long it lasts or whether the design integrity has been maintained. Fake versions will for instance replace quality tanned leather with cheap processed leather which is tanned with toxic chemicals, sanded and painted rather than naturally tanned and dyed. Fakes will be steel plated with the thinest amount of chrome which will corrode easily and use cheaper timbers that are unsuitable to the task – all because it’s cheaper. This will be done in countries where labour laws do not control the workers conditions – again because it’s cheaper. Yes, the end result is much cheaper for the retail consumer but the chair, table, light or clock will be a pale imitation of the real thing.

Replica makers are ultimately taking revenue away from the designers and manufacturers who invest so much in the creation of these items. Take this money out of the system and these companies cannot sustain releasing new designs and the world of design will be heavily affected. All the original manufacturers spend large amounts of money promoting the original product to alert the general pubic of its existence and this too is stolen by the replica sellers, benefiting from the popularity of a new design while taking very few risks.

Even if the designer is long since dead, original manufacturers pay royalties to the estate or the family of the designer and must always seek approval before changing any aspect of the design. This is how it should be so that great designs are not tampered with to suit fashion or economics.

People need to appreciate design as an art form, it isn’t just an industrial process. As with quality art, most people can’t afford to buy paintings or sculpture whenever they feel like it. Sometimes you have to be happy with just looking at interesting art and furniture that is outside your price range rather than opting for fakes. If you’re passionate about a particular piece, save up for it. In the end, a piece that is saved for will become a treasure, not a disposable piece.

What the replica sellers call the ‘democratisation of design’ relies on the ignorance of the consumer to the issues and the general desire for instant gratification. Real democratic design is where the designer sets out to design something that can be made in large volume for a price that is affordable with various decisions being made to ensure that the outcome is a good compromise between design, quality and price. There are many furniture companies from all over the world striving for this mix: Blu Dot, Hay, SCP, Normann Copenhagen and NIls Holger Moorman are just a few of the ones to look out for.

The replica seller is just exploiting a loop hole in the law to line their own pockets. Don’t buy fakes. Buy the real thing.”


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Interiors Addict

Bringing the outdoors indoors (or was that the indoors outdoors?). Oh, never mind…

I picked up soooo many tips from Vanessa Colyer Tay at last week’s Freedom Style Council and I’ve been feeling guilty about them sitting in my notebook not being shared with you all, so I’m back! VCT is the style editor for Inside Out magazine and she shared her insights into the life of an interior stylist (the bit I was more interested in), which I then shared here last week.

Now, I wasn’t expecting to be all that interested in this indoor/outdoor living stuff. No offence but I live in a two-bedroom apartment with a modest balcony which I’ve had dreams (but no inclination) to turn into a cosy nook for summer, be that with a book and cup of tea in the daytime or a glass of wine and my boyfriend in the evenings. But after VCT’s tips I’m a whole new level of inspired! Look out, balcony!

So, here are her top tips for creating outdoor/indoor harmony:

  • Make the journey between the two spaces (indoor and outdoor) as seamless as possible.
  • Use indoor-like furniture that feels grounded and permanent, outdoors.
  • Link colours between inside and outside, through plants, furniture or accessories.
  • Decorate indoors with materials reminiscent of outdoor surfaces, like rattan and wood.
  • Natural accessories are the little black dress of decorating. They always look good. Even though styles change over the years, they’ll always find a home. (This is so true! IA)
  • Be brave with accessories. Move them around. Nature is wild and unpredictable. Your decor can be too!
  • Display botanical prints, art or silhouettes of nature. A large statement piece of floral art may be all you require.
  • Bring one or two plants inside your doorway for a seamless journey.
  • Use mirrors to reflect outdoor spaces.
  • Plant greenery outside your window.
  • Use no window treatment at all or simple window treatments which are light on the eye.
  • Use plants in styled displays. Look out for interesting vessels and mix unusual plants together. (Add a ribbon to a jam jar to make a striking, cheap vase!).

Ready to tackle your own balcony, yard or garden now? It’s not long until you’ll be using it!

The new issue of Inside Out magazine is on news stands today. I’ve had a sneak peek at the cover and it’s all kind of fluro and pastel gorgeous!

Categories
Interviews

Jason Grant, living his dream

Jason Grant left his prestigious role as style director for Real Living magazine last year and hasn’t stopped working since. It’s a good job he loves his work so much it feels like play.

One of the most positive and passionate people I’ve interviewed, while he may insist he’s been given a lot of ‘lucky breaks’ there’s no doubt people warm to his infectious enthusiasm and his natural talent for what he does speaks for itself.

He just spent eight weeks styling the new Freedom catalogue and the results are divine. No doubt Jason’s work has something to do with the fact I want to buy almost everything in it! “Working on Freedom’s summer catalogue was a great experience,” he said. “It was one of the biggest jobs I have worked on and the end result is very pleasing.”

There’s plenty of other commercial work too. He styled a home organisation catalogue for Officeworks and will launch his own range for the stationary store next month. He released his first range of paint colours (“a very exciting collaboration”) with Murobond earlier this year. “I love working with them as they believe in me and understand me creatively. The ability to transform a room or a furniture piece with paint cannot be underestimated. I love to paint (everything)!” A second range of colours will be released later this year.

While Jason still does plenty of work on Real Living, going freelance has opened the doors to more variety. “It’s a magazine I’m very proud to work on but being a freelance stylist means I can work across multiple titles and have even more variety of work.”

He has a passion for his work which you just couldn’t fake. “I do work very hard and don’t really switch off. Work is play. I guess it comes down to the fact that I don’t really suffer from a case of the daily grind.

“Yes, I do love my life. I work every day with amazing people creating beautiful images for publications. I guess I’m living my dream.”

The generosity and faith of other creative people who spotted his talent gave Jason his start in the interior styling industry. “I guess I’m very lucky making contacts with people in the industry early on that believed in me. Glen Proebstel and Karen McCartney (of Inside Out) are two people that gave me a chance. Starting out working in a small capacity for Inside Out magazine, my career grew, eventually taking a big leap moving to Sydney to be the style director at Real Living.

“I guess it’s a combination of enthusiasm, hard work and lucky breaks. I believe you can’t buy style. You either have it or you don’t. In life I believe you should live what you love and love what you live. I like to make a list and make it happen, to dream big.”

Jason is quick to heap praise on other interior stylists and the list of people who inspire him is long! “I believe people fall into leaders or followers, innovators or imitators,” he says. “I’m very lucky that I get to work with so many amazing, talented people. The people who inspire me are confident and have their own point of view. They are kind, creative and happy to share. Most of all they are passionate about what they do.”

He adds: “I’m inspired by likeminded, creative, hard working people such as stylists Sibella Court, Lara Hutton, Megan Morton, Kirsten Bookallil and Glen Proebstel, photographers Paul Barbera, James Geer, Prue Ruscoe and Felix Forest and fashion designers Lisa Gorman, Fleur Wood and jac + jack.

“Internationally I love Else Crawford and Abigail Ahern, Jonathan Adler, Tom Ford, Marc Jacobs, Todd Selby and Martha Stewart.”

Jason also respects people who are experts in their chosen field like green crusader Liane Rossler (formerly of Dinosaur Designs), “super cool florist” Simone Gooch, modern day man Greg Hatton and “walking 20th Century furniture encyclopedia” Dean Angelucci.

So how does Australian interior design compare to the rest of the world? “Australian style is unique and exciting and defined by the beautiful light we have here. We have world class designers in all categories, be it fashion, art, architecture or interior design. I think Australian style is relaxed and unpretentious and in tune with nature.”

Last but not least, most successful interior stylists seem to be women or gay men. Can straight men style? “Hmmm
 I’m struggling!” he jokes. “But I can say that (Australian artist) David Bromley has one of the most beautiful homes in this country and his personal style is very impressive.”

In part 2 tomorrow, more stunning photos of his work and Jason’s must-read guide to the best shops and websites. Read his blog here. See my top picks from Freedom’s new range here.

Portrait by Murray Harris

Categories
Interviews Styling

Interview with stylist Glen Proebstel, part 1

Words can’t express just how big of a fan I am of Melbourne stylist Glen Proebstel’s work. If you haven’t already heard of him (shame on you!), spend a few minutes getting lost in photographs of his wonderful work and you’ll soon grasp why. Style director of Inside Out magazine and co-owner of props hire business prop.d, Glen is in demand for editorial and advertising work across the country. He’s a busy man so I was over the moon when he agreed to be interviewed by Interiors Addict about his work. In part one of this two-part interview, learn a little bit more about the man and his styling style. More beautiful photographs and insightful answers to come tomorrow


Tell me how you got into styling. It doesn’t seem that all that many people set out to become stylists, it’s always a happy accident!

That premise rings true. The only styling I was aware of when I was working as a visual merchandiser only existed in fashion or hair. I had no idea there was such a thing as an interiors or props stylist. In the late 90s I was styling and merchandising for a boutique homewares store in Sydney, Empire Homewares. It was there that I was asked by then food editor, Sue Farlie-Cunningham if I would be interested in styling for Inside Out magazine, which had just launched. I was fortunate enough to be given the role as on-staff stylist and from that point my eyes were opened to the world of interior styling and photography. I was thrown head first into a world full of sourcing props, building sets, scouting locations and attending media functions. A fast learning curve indeed and I wouldn’t have had it any other way.

Describe your style. Does this follow through to your own home?

My style has taken many years to develop and find a place where I feel comfortable. Coming from a retail environment and VM, everything had to be clean lined, linear and sharp. I found it challenging to break my old habits of grouping objects and only working with ‘new’ objects. I was conscious for many years that I needed to change and evolve my look. This is ‘in built’ with any stylist. You are constantly evolving and developing your look as fashion and trends change. The current phase that I am going through uses lots of texture and layering. I love natural fibres and colours and I find working with these textures, comforting and natural. Fashion colours come and go and you can accommodate sets or interiors to reflect these changes, but you need a good base to start from, something to always come back to. This same aesthetic applies at home.

You group things together beautifully. Displaying collections of your treasured possessions is becoming more and more popular but a lot of people just don’t have the eye to do it well. Do you have any advice for them?

It is an art indeed, but not a skill only reserved to stylists and collectors. Over the years, I have found this to be the best rule of thumb: always start with a colour palette in mind. Instinctively, my eyes flit around market stalls and antique shops picking up on things that jump out at me. Pieces that resonate or have a sense of history, a story to tell. From there, I see how it fits into my ‘base’ colour palette which consists of greys, linens, mud browns, suggestions of white and touches of black. This way, when you begin to group or cluster objects on a shelf or in a display, using this limited colour palette appeases the eye and allows you to edit back where required.

In part 2 tomorrow: Melbourne vs. Sydney, how to get into the industry, who he admires and more


 

Categories
Interviews

Interview with Inside Out editor Richard Waller

Interview with Inside Out editor Richard Waller


I know myself how busy us magazine editors can be, so I was flattered when Inside Out editor Richard Waller took the time to answer my questions for Interiors Addict. He joined the magazine from Vogue Living a year ago. Here he talks about home envy being an unavoidable part of the job, describes his own renovation project, and shares why Inside Out is Australia’s best selling premium end interiors magazine.


What makes Inside Out Australia’s best interiors lifestyle magazine? Well, it’s very kind of you to say that we are the best! I can think of a few other magazines in our category that might consider themselves the best! What I would say is that you aren’t alone in that opinion because Inside Out still is Australia’s best selling premium-end interiors magazine, outselling our category competitors, Belle and Vogue Living.
In terms of points of difference, I think we offer a compelling blend of information and inspiration; brains and beauty. By that, I mean that some other mass-market-geared magazines do well on the reader-friendly DIY/information side of the equation, but offer little in the way of inspiring imagery. Other titles score very high on the ‘house envy’ factor, but don’t offer as much in terms of telling the reader where and how to acquire the things they champion and feature. I like to think that each issue of Inside Out offers equal serves of inspiration (aka ‘house envy’) and information (how did they do that/where can I get it from?). This is something that our founder editor Karen McCartney started and it’s something I intend to continue and build upon. I’ve only been editing it for just on a year now, and I’m excited at what lies ahead.


How does it differ to
Vogue Living?
Vogue Living is still very dear to my heart and I treasure the five or so years I spent working on that magazine and the firm friendships I made there. I think David Clark is an editor almost without peer in this marketplace. He has such a great eye. The magazine has changed a lot in the time I worked there. Increasingly, Vogue Living is less and less what I would term a traditional interiors magazine and is now more of a “super lifestyle” title, particularly over the last year or so when its focus has shifted to encompass travel and entertaining components. Each issue is a great escapist read.


What do you love about your job? So much! Above all, I love the team of highly talented people that I work alongside every day and the act of making the magazine with each and every one of them. I also love the talented and inspiring people – photographers, writers, designers, architects, decorators, artists and retailers – that my job gives me access to, and the opportunity to then share those with our readers.


What’s your own home like? You must suffer from home envy when you look at all the beautiful photos in your mag? Acute ‘home envy’ comes with the territory. Every day, the team and I see things that we would love to call our own but I’m getter better at not giving into temptation! I have a very great capacity to appreciate differing decorating and architectural styles and disciplines, but at home, my own aesthetic is pretty unwavering. Besides which, I renovated a terrace house only a few years back, so I have to live with how it is for a quite a while yet! So, at home, there’s an emphasis on calm natural materials and a natural palette and lots of natural light. So it’s travertine floors throughout on the ground level, which leads out through bi-fold doors to a small pool and courtyard area with the same large tiles (for that seamless “inside-out” look). Upstairs, it’s matt-finish oiled French oak parquetry. There are plain white walls throughout, with some nice Aussie art and a mix of contemporary design, a few rugs and a few antiques. I suppose I have a few of the usual mid-20th century clichĂ©s (a cream leather Barcelona chair – the first bit of serious furniture I ever bought when I was living in the UK over a decade ago; two felt-covered Swan chairs and an Egg chair; six Series 7 dining chairs around an oval marble dining table), but what are design clichĂ©s except things that work and function well?

The July/August 2011 issue of Inside Out (pictured) is out now.