Categories
Before & Afters Design Designers House Tours Interiors Addict Real Renos RENO ADDICT

Dated 90’s Port Macquarie home given stylish refresh

Another fabulous ‘before and after’ by interior designer Kathryn Trentini, this 90’s-era Port Macquarie brick and tile home was given a modern makeover recently with excellent results. The initial project brief was simply to renovate the family bathroom alongside the ensuite and refresh the other areas with paint. However, once the work started, the brief soon expanded to include the living spaces, primary bedroom and other soft furnishings throughout such as window treatments, paint throughout and furniture too.

AFTER living room
AFTER living room
BEFORE living room
BEFORE living room

“I didn’t reconfigure any of the spaces. The modernisation of the property really came through an update of the home’s finishes which was done room by room over a 12-month period,” says Kathryn, who eventually assisted with furniture procurement too.

AFTER main bathroom
AFTER main bathroom
BEFORE main bathroom
BEFORE main bathroom
AFTER main bathroom
AFTER main bathroom

The main bedroom was overhauled with new carpet, a new upholstered bedhead and a fresh fit-out in the walk-in-robe. The nearby ensuite and main bathroom received the makeover treatment too; dated tiles and tapware were replaced with neutral, modern selections. “The owner couldn’t stand the bathrooms and wanted them changed before even moving in. The renovation gathered momentum from there,” says Kathryn.

BEFORE main bedroom
BEFORE main bedroom
AFTER main bedroom
AFTER main bedroom
BEFORE ensuite
BEFORE ensuite
AFTER ensuite
AFTER ensuite

The home’s various lounge and sitting rooms were refreshed also – primarily with wallpaper, paint and fabulous new furniture. “The owners were struggling with what to do with some of the rooms, including the one that I turned into a tech-free sitting room at the front of the house,” says Kathryn.

BEFORE no-tech lounge
BEFORE sitting room
AFTER sitting room
AFTER sitting room. Kathryn persuaded the home’s owners to make this a tech-free space.

After Kathryn thought she had wrapped everything up, she was asked to work on the kitchen as the final piece of the puzzle. “I thought the project was complete, but I was eventually asked to do a part renovation of the kitchen because the owners loved how everything else had turned out,” says Kathryn who worked alongside a cabinet maker to come up with a unique design solution that retained the existing granite benchtops. 

BEFORE kitchen
BEFORE kitchen
AFTER kitchen
AFTER kitchen

“The central point of the kitchen renovation was to save the granite benchtop as the owners liked it, it would have been expensive to install originally, and we weren’t making layout changes. I came up with a colour scheme that allowed the bench top to sing, rather than look horrid,” says Kathryn. The designer noticed a pink vein in the granite and decided to complement it with bronze handles and a terracotta feature tile. The dark cupboard fronts really helped to modernise the space too.

AFTER kitchen

Kathryn also modified some aspects of the joinery to improve functionality whilst only refreshing those parts that were still in good condition. “Whether existing or new, all cabinets received new fronts, new kick and the new splash really did reinvigorate the existing bench,” says Kathryn.

BEFORE lounge
BEFORE lounge
AFTER lounge
AFTER lounge. A Jardan sofa complements a set of Coco Flip coffee tables in this newly tranquil space.

“It’s a lovely property now. The owners are absolutely stoked with the changes and the outcome so it’s just brilliant. They are so proud of the home – you can really tell.”

Photography: Amanda Prior

For more on Trentini Design

Categories
Design Designers House Tours Interiors Addict Interviews Real Renos RENO ADDICT

A statement-making home that delights its owners daily!

When interior designer Kathryn Trentini was enlisted to oversee the renovation of this Port Macquarie family home, she was tasked with creating statement moments in every room. The ensuing design features a series of impactful yet homely spaces that regularly delight the home’s owners – a family of four originally from the UK.

Bedroom
Bedroom. The Wallpaper is Catherine Martin for Mokum

“When I was first brought into the house there was already a lot of colour but it was applied in a really terrible way,” says Kathryn, who set about applying colour in a much more considered fashion. And while colour features throughout the home it’s in the library that the biggest statement is made – the entire room is red, from the skirting boards to the ceiling.

Library
The library is painted in Porter’s Paint Chinese Firecracker

“It already had red on the walls, but it was such an old nanna room. I said that if they wanted to keep the room red, they needed to be brave enough to paint the whole thing. It’s a really big room so it gets away with it,” says Kathryn. The result is a super moody space that is amplified by layers of velvet and alpaca wool, an open fireplace, baby grand piano and brand-new joinery that ensures everything has its place. “The feeling that I get is that there is a lot of colour in UK homes because it lightens the mood from the drizzly weather. So, this room was a nice reference to the owners’ roots,” says Kathryn. 

Library
Library

Colour is used in the kitchen too with a lovely blue tone (Dulux Calandre) featuring on a large section of cupboards and a deep aubergine shade (Dulux Concord Grape) further accenting the space. A neolith stone bench and splashback are another standout feature – alongside the joinery, stone was the biggest splurge of the project.

Kitchen
Aubergine cabinetry (top right) is accented by blackened timber and Neolith stone
Kitchen
Kitchen

Nearby, the dining room features a repurposed tabletop with new powder coated legs. “We repurposed the existing dining table that was an inherited piece and the patina that exists on the top is just beautiful,” says Kathryn. A cost-effective alternative to buying everything brand new, Kathryn assisted with the reupholstering of many furniture pieces throughout the project. “Reupholstering existing furniture is a passion of mine and these pieces had sentimental value to the clients.”

Dining room
The dining room features a repurposed tabletop

An additional living area further embraces colour – a custom jade green Jardan sofa and ‘evil eye’ mirror from Reflections Copenhagen make for a fun space. “I love the use of unexpected colour throughout the home. Having worked with the clients for a while I can see that the trust we built has resulted in some beautiful outcomes.”

Living room
Living room
Child's room
Child’s room

Photography: Amanda Prior

For more on Trentini Design

Categories
Interiors Addict

Samantha Wills launches stationery and homewares ranges as beautiful as her jewellery

Seasonal Concepts in Redfern was the picture perfect venue for the launch of Samantha Wills’ new homewares and stationery ranges yesterday. The glamorous former model, who now lives in New York, revealed hand carved wooden place mats, display domes and glass museum boxes as well as pretty stationery with illustrations by Kelly Smith of Birdy & Me.

Samantha Wills at the launch of her new ranges yesterday

Glass domes on top of the round version of the placemats

Jewellery designer Samantha, who started with costume jewellery before moving onto bridal and fine jewellery, launched a jewellery chest earlier this year, which started something! She said the extension of the brand into stationery and homewares was very organic and came largely as a result of customer feedback, which she is known for embracing via social media. She has long been obsessed with stationery (bring back handwritten letters in the mail, yeah!) and collaborated with Kelly Smith to create the three card designs with feminine, yet empowered, imagery.