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Appliances Travel

Top kitchen trends from Eurocucina Milan 2014

I’ve spent many hours at Eurocucina today, the kitchen section (I say section, but it’s bigger than most standalone trade fairs) of Salone del Mobile in Milan. I thought I’d share the top trends I noticed and some photos from day one.

I should preface this by saying the combination of swarms of super-keen visitors and lighting designed to create atmosphere and mood, don’t make for the best photos I’ve ever taken!

  • Timber and timber veneer were everywhere, mostly muted cool greige tones which I found surprisingly warm and interesting. For me, this was the most obvious and overarching kitchen design trend at the fair.

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The new timber kitchen is modern and sleek and just a touch industrial. Although the timber finishes tend to be pale, the look isn’t Scandi as you might expect.

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I love the texture and warmth in these kitchens.

DSC_0083-processedTimber and stainless steel was a popular combo.

  • There’s also very little gloss. It’s all about the matt surfaces on cabinetry.
  • Many kitchens incorporated some kind of open shelving. This makes the kitchen feel like more of a dressed room than ever before and not just a functional space. Seeing as it’s the heart of most homes these days, this makes absolute sense!

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  • Large pullout drawers for storage, replacing cupboards, are still big, with many featuring lights which automatically come on when opened.

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  • Touch-open cabinet doors are here to stay with very few doors with handles seen.
  • I saw a lot of glass fronted cabinets (and poor staff constantly polishing fingerprints off them!).
  • Cabinet doors folded up or back on themselves. I loved some of these smart features.

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This looks like a splashback until it lifts up to reveal the storage behind. Neat.

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  • Low hanging multiple interesting pendant lights over kitchen benches and dining tables were popular; another way to dress the kitchen, as mentioned above.

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  • Where I saw a few pops of colour against the timber it was almost always red.

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  • Bench tops were super slim in many cases; just a few mm.

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  • I spotted many gloss white appliances, like ovens, and some black ones too, making a change from steel. Isn’t it funny how appliances (and electricals like TVs) go through colour trends like this? The white works well with the timber, I must say.

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This is my first ever trip to Salone del Mobile and Eurocucina. It is huge and rather mad, especially on opening day. You can feel the buzz of excitement around and there are people from all over the world everywhere. There is a lot of ground to cover. Literally! It was an exciting day, getting a look at what will no doubt become common trends in Aussie kitchens in the not too distant future. Tomorrow, I’ll be chatting to two experts from Freedom Kitchens to get their take on what’s going to be big.

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I’m in Milan thanks to Freedom Kitchens and Caesarstone Australia.

Categories
Designers Interviews

Interview: Luxxbox’s Jason Bird on taking his designs to the US

Luxxbox owner Jason Bird has already achieved more than many designers could ever dream. He’s designed stools for Google’s headquarters in California, had his table featured in sci-fi film Prometheus, and most recently been announced as a top five finalist in New York’s Battery Park Draw Up A Chair competition.

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But for Jason, who started his Brisbane-based business in 2006, success has come after lots of hard work. Leaving the comforts of working for someone else and taking the plunge to start up on his own.

“I spent a good deal of my early creative years designing for other companies,” explains Jason. “I had a lot of ideas and it was time to start doing my own thing. So I took a risk and opened a showroom in order to have a direct dialogue with the user. We gained some national and international attention and it has grown from there.”

South Chair arrives in New York
The South Chair: A finalist in the Draw Up A Chair competition

Designing furniture, lighting and objects, Jason’s manufacturing and industrial design background sees him bring a high level of understanding when it comes to materials and processes. It is these skills that Jason believes are central to the Luxxbox style: “I like to challenge and be challenged, so it’s often about how to utilise materials and processes in unique combinations and formats; this often informs the design. I like to use colour and material combinations as well, and generally create well detailed and non-traditional forms.”

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The Google Tingle stools

Having already reached a broad audience Australia wide, Jason has now set his sights on Luxxbox conquering the US market. Yet rather than just shipping abroad, he’s gone one step further, establishing a manufacturing department in California.

“Australia is so used to importing furniture products that we probably don’t realise that 25-to-40% of the price is in freight, not to mention the carbon footprint,” says Jason. “Other markets do not import as much and are not happy with the cost, logistics and lead time associated with importing large furniture. So in order to expand in the US we really needed to think about how to do this without such issues. So we developed the strategy of distributed manufacturing, taking a select group of our products and manufacturing them in the US.”

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The Brainwash Table featured in sci-fi film Prometheus

In the next few years, Jason hopes to not only continue manufacturing in the US, but to begin doing so in Europe. He also hopes to open design studios in both continents.

But for now it’s business as usual, with Luxxbox currently working on a number of new collections, with a specific focus on exterior seating and lighting. Luxxbox not only has its showroom, but also Objx, a shopfront that stocks the brand as well as other Australian and international designers.

For more information visit Luxxbox online.

Categories
Interiors Addict

How to successfully add a touch of country to your modern home

By Angela Lavender

I love nothing more than discovering homegrown designer goods in the most unexpected and hidden places. All over the country, artisans are making things by hand, finding inspiration in the beauty that surrounds them in regional Australia.

Handmade ceramics by Dimity Kidston
Handmade ceramics by Dimity Kidston

But the big question is, how do we go about balancing these unique, more relaxed pieces of furniture and homewares with the features and designs of our contemporary homes?

Categories
Interiors Addict

The best of the best paper light fixtures

By Krissy Bradfield

I love paper – it has so many uses. Books are made from paper, as are magazines and junk mail. We are surrounded by paper used in all sorts of ways – except most of those are kind of uninspiring. But there are people out there – artists — who look at a ream of paper and think ‘I’m going to turn that into a paper chandelier.’ And they do. They release their creations out into the world where people like me gawk at them for hours, wondering however did they do that? And what magic protects it from catching on fire?

Thank goodness there are innovative thinkers out there who aren’t stymied by such questions. They just get out there and give the humble piece of paper a new lease on life.

Here are 10 of the most beautiful examples of paper light fixtures that I’ve seen. They are complex, intricate and the culmination of hundreds of hours of work.

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Categories
Designers Kitchens The Block

Lysandra from The Block on designing a kitchen to stand the test of time

By Lysandra Fraser

Many people are at a loss when it comes to defining their style. I’m not afraid to admit that Alisa and I had no idea what the difference between contemporary and modern styles were. We would often get asked to define our style and we would reply with “the Alisa and Lysandra style”. Some people know what they like but are afraid of getting the terms wrong, so they struggle to be able to describe verbally what style or look they want. I believe that you don’t necessarily need to have a degree, or even have experience, to be able to put a room together, just a good eye for detail and a passion for design.

Alisa and Lysandra's kitchen on The Block Sky High
Alisa and Lysandra’s kitchen on The Block Sky High

When it came to designing our kitchen and bathrooms on The Block, we were very conscious about what they would look like in comparison to the changing trends, 10-to-15 years down the track. Kitchens and bathrooms cost a lot of money to change, so I believe that if you think carefully about your choices at the very beginning, you could have a kitchen/bathroom for 10-to-15 years without the need to upgrade in 5-to-10, when most kitchens and bathrooms would seem dated.

Categories
Interiors Addict

Young designer wins lighting competition

Young Sydney designer Seaton McKeon has won the chance of a lifetime to see his lighting design put into production by Danish brand &tradition.

great dane northern lights winner

McKeon’s Press Pendant will be sold worldwide through the design company, and will be available in Australia at Great Dane Furniture.

Categories
Bathrooms Designers Expert Tips

Top 10 design tips for a really great bathroom

From using epoxy grout to avoid mould, to not having a freestanding bath unless you really have space, to embracing shallow basins and making good use of lighting, Darren Genner knows a thing or two about creating stunning bathrooms, and he shares his tips with us today.

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1. Find a designer you like/love, employee them to design and create a plan and then stick with it. It is not as expensive as you may think. Remember, designers have the experience as they do it day in, day out.

Categories
Interiors Addict

An Issey Miyake table lamp for less than $300?

Yes, it’s true! Lamps by legendary Japanese fashion designer Issey Miyake are now available in Australia through Artemide and some of them may even be in your budget!

The Hoshigame table lamp is $286
The Hoshigame table lamp is $286

The “IN-EI” range — Japanese for “shadow, shadiness, and nuance”– combines strong 3D geometry with an exceptional illumination capacity to diffuse light. Issey’s artistic vision, applied via a new 3D mathematical process, fuses the Japanese tradition of light with his unique ability to translate tradition into modernity. What’s more, they’re environmentally friendly.

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Interiors Addict

Hand turned timber lamps, made in Sydney

I love the warmth of timber and its natural quirks and imperfections, so these Australian hand turned lamps from Wildwood Designs really caught my eye.

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“Each piece is unique to us and has been lovingly hand turned by our local wood turner who was thrown out of TAFE on the first day of a wood turning course because he turned up with a telegraph pole,” laughs Wildwood’s Juliet Barr. 

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Interiors Addict

Ruben + Kosch launch crowdfunding campaign to get lighting design manufactured

Australian design firm Ruben+ Kosch have launched a crowdfunding campaign to help fund and promote their debut product Cliques, a lighting system which only illuminates when its separate pieces (or people!) are connected to each other.

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Made from high quality, recyclable plastic, the energy-efficient Cliques are powered by a single Lithium ion battery which supplies approximately 12 hours of continuous light. Recharging can be achieved by plugging the unit into any 5V USB port such as a computer, iPhone charger or solar panel charging system.

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Interiors Addict

Bright new design talent at next week’s Furnitex

Some of Australia’s boldest and brightest young designers will unveil the furniture of the future when the VIVID (Vibrant Visions in Design) competition returns to FURNITEX next week.

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Held from 18-21 July and co-located with DECORATION + DESIGN at the Melbourne Exhibition Centre, VIVID will see almost 50 of our most promising emerging furniture designers compete for awards in Student, Concept, Commercial and Green categories.

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Interiors Addict

Win Matt and Kim’s $3,800 dining table from their winning room on The Block

Every week, you ask me where you can buy things you’ve seen on The Block’s Sunday night room reveals. Well today I’m giving you the chance to win Matt and Kim’s gorgeous dining table, worth almost $4,000, from last night’s winning room!

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Categories
Interiors Addict

Beacon upping their lighting game

Good, affordable lighting can be hard to come across in this country. If you want to buy online, even harder. I’ve heard Bunnings have some cool stuff going on at the moment, which I must check out, and I’ve been pretty impressed with Beacon too, having seen a lot of their stuff on The Block. What do you think of their latest limited edition Stockholm range, which is only available online? It’s all made from natural timber.

These  natural wood pendants are $795.

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Categories
Interiors Addict

Industrial lighting from Fat Shack Vintage

Lighting can make all the difference to the look and mood of your home. And interesting and affordable lighting can be one of the hardest things to source in Australia. If you like a touch of industrial, look no further than Melbourne business Fat Shack Vintage.

Their vintage style filament bulbs, from $17.50, are best sellers.

Edison Bulb - Large Round Squirrel Cage Filament from Fat Shack Vintage

If you’re a little more energy conscious but don’t want to compromise on style, they have some options for you too, like the diamond halogen bulb ($45).

Diamond Light on pendant cord from Fat Shack Vintage

Categories
Interiors Addict

Great balls of light!

Artisan printmaking meets timber craftsmanship in this new range of sustainable lighting. Quince founder Michelle Koop teamed up with a local Melbourne craftsman to extend her lighting range with a collection of ball table lamps in touch-me timbers and her own textile designs.

Each table lamp has a ball-shaped solid timber base in sustainably harvested Victorian ash, which has been handcrafted to Quince design specifications and finished in Danish oil for a contemporary edge. The spherical bases are the perfect accompaniment to Michelle’s hand printed shades in her signature borrowed-from-nature muted palettes and motifs.

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Interiors Addict

Add a splash of colour with these fun lamps

On first glance I loved them, then I hated them, now I think they’re a great fun addition to a room for less than $30! What do you think?

The Paint Spot table lamp is new from Beacon Lighting and costs $29.95. They currently have an amazing offer on where you get 50% off any second lamp or chandelier you buy. See the website for details.

Categories
Interiors Addict

Interiors Addict’s big Freedom giveaway!

Doesn’t this winter weather just make you want to stay home all cosy with cashmere throws, gorgeous rugs and moody lighting? Perfect weather for nesting! And thanks to Freedom I have two awesome prizes for your home to give away this week. Yay!

First prize is this amazing giant ikat canvas print which is one of my favourites from their current collection. Not all of us have a spare few grand hanging around to buy art (one day, when I grow up!) but we still want something great on our walls to add interest and colour and make a statement. This one’s BIG and at $599 it’s affordable. But you’d rather have it for free, right?

Categories
Interiors Addict

30% off floor stock lampshades at Dearwood

Pop down to William Street in Sydney’s Paddington if you get a chance, and check out the lampshades at boutique wallpaper studio Dearwood. They’re making way for new designs so there’s 30% off lampshades until 19 November.