Categories
Interviews Styling

Stylist Kerrie-Ann Jones on creating Real Living covers

While you may not have heard of her by name, you’ve no doubt come across the work of Sydney based interior stylist Kerrie-Ann Jones through her many fabulous covers for Real Living magazine. After a career in the music industry, Kerrie-Ann worked on interiors title Homes+ before a freelance stint that culminated in her landing her dream job in 2017, as the style editor of Real Living.

“I had just had my second child, but I didn’t want to let the opportunity go so I applied when my son was six months old. There was a new editor at the magazine, and I had to really jump through hoops to get the job! But I did and I’m so grateful to her and the team for choosing me,” says Kerrie-Ann who describes the job as a steep learning curve.

One of Kerrie-Ann's Real Living covers. Photo by Maree Homer
One of Kerrie-Ann’s Real Living covers. Photo by Maree Homer

“I learnt a lot during my time there. I loved styling the cover shoots each month, the decorating features and house stories. It really propelled me forward creatively and took my styling to the next level,” says Kerrie-Ann. Producing the cover each month was arguably her biggest task and it involved directing a rather large team including a photographer, videographer, creative director, model, hair and make-up, florist and several assistants. A big production to helm, the shoots also had very tight turnarounds.

“I had one to two weeks to produce each cover, from the initial concept to the shoot day. After each shoot I started creating the next shoot the following day, so I had to learn the ropes, very quickly!” says Kerrie-Ann.

Kerrie-Ann Jones
Kerrie-Ann Jones. Photo by Alicia Taylor

The covers, intended as a source of inspiration for people decorating their own homes, unsurprisingly required the stylist to be ahead of the trend curve. “It made me become more acutely aware and open to inspiration sources. My eyes are always switched on and inspiration can hit me at any moment. It could be a seasonal colour palette, a flower that’s in season, lines and shapes, anything!” says Kerrie-Ann who finds art and fashion a constant inspiration.

Another one of Kerrie-Ann's Real Living covers. Photo by Maree Homer
Another one of Kerrie-Ann’s Real Living covers. Photo by Maree Homer

But the significant demands of the magazine world became difficult to manage with motherhood and, earlier this year, Kerrie-Ann decided to head back to the freelance world. “I love having more of a work/life balance now so I can spend more time with my children,” says Kerrie-Ann who now styles for several furniture and homewares brands as well as magazines, while running styling workshops too.

More of Kerrie-Ann's work. Photo by Maree Homer
More of Kerrie-Ann’s work. Photo by Maree Homer

The next workshop is an Instagram photo styling session where Kerrie-Ann will impart her inside knowledge on how to create beautiful lifestyle and flatlay photos. “Writing the workshop notes has really unraveled how much I have learned about styling and I’m really looking forward to sharing all that information with people who, like me, have a genuine passion for styling,” says Kerrie-Ann. The workshop will cover basic design and photography principles, concept creation, shoot preparation and production plus post-production. There will be some practical styling stations set up too so you can style your own shots with Kerrie-Ann’s feedback.

Flatlay by Kerrie-Ann. Photo by Benito Martin
Flatlay by Kerrie-Ann. Photo by Benito Martin

As for the next big thing in interiors, Kerrie-Ann has ear-marked a couple of trends – coloured glass vases and objects, and cobalt blue two of them. “I’m seeing cobalt blue everywhere recently, but I think only in small doses is best! Also, furniture with interesting and chunky shapes and the ancient Greek/Roman trend too with its Greek busts, statues and column motifs,” says Kerrie-Ann.

Flatlay by Kerrie-Ann. Photo by Benito Martin
Styling by Kerrie-Ann. Photo by Benito Martin

With an eye to the future, the stylist has coffee table book aspirations and a general desire to spread the styling love. “I would love to continue being a source of interior styling inspiration with the work I produce. It’s been incredible to see photos of how people have used my styling as inspiration for decorating their homes. I’m now exploring other outlets to inspire, educate and connect with people who share my passion for styling and interiors. Watch this space!”

Kerrie-Anne’s next workshop is running in Sydney this Saturday July 20 from 10am – 12pm at La Porte Space in Rosebery. Tickets are $225 each.

For more on Kerrie-Anne and the upcoming workshop | Meet talented interior stylist Jono Fleming

Categories
Styling

Real Living editor’s tips for a stylish Christmas home

Real Living magazine editor Elle Lovelock certainly knows a thing or two about design and styling and to celebrate the launch of her magazine’s bumper Christmas issue here she shares her top decorating tips for the silly season.

Colour palette
“Pick a colour palette or a theme for your tree. You can either choose something that works with the rest of your home or something completely different to contrast. Should you prefer to change things up from season to season, go for impact with large baubles and thick garlands and tinsel – it’s a more cost effective way of filling a tree, rather than using many smaller ornaments,” says Elle.

Soft furnishings
“Extend your Christmas decorating to your soft furnishings. Swap out cushion covers and throws – and even bed linen – for festive variations on your sofa and beds,” says Elle.

Real Living Christmas issue

Plants & foliage
“Bring a festive touch to greenery around the house. Wrap trees and larger pot plants with fairy lights, fill a vase with silvery green olive branches or eucalyptus and spray the tips with metallic spray paint. If you love a classic look, go for a beautiful red poinsettia,” says Elle.

Dining table styling
“The dining table is the focal point of every celebration, so give yours some special attention. Start with the centrepiece. Flowers and foliage are always lovely to decorate with, but you could also fill bowls and vases with piles of baubles, tinsel, shells or fruit. The key to an attractive centrepiece is to create dimension. Use a mix of footed bowls and cake stands, or tall and short vases and candles to create height,” says Elle.

Real Living Christmas dining table styling
Make a statement with your Christmas dining table styling

Continue your theme
“Carry your colour palette or theme through to your gift wrap. For example, if you have flowers on your table, attach a few to the tops of your presents. Or, use the same ribbon on your gifts to tie around napkins or as a garland in your tree,” says Elle.

Styling: Ashley Pratt | Photography: Maree Homer

Real Living’s annual Christmas issue is out now | Shaynna Blaze’s Christmas table styling guide

Categories
Designers Furniture Interviews Styling

Stylist Sarah Ellison’s debut furniture collection

For eight years, Sarah Ellison was the design savvy-mind behind Real Living magazine, curating the trends and influencing the way we design and decorate our homes. As the style editor, she scoured vintage markets, visited the crème de la crème of furniture showrooms and spoke to international designers at the top of their game. So it’s unsurprising that during that time an idea began to form: to create her own interiors brand.

“Through my work I discovered that there was a gap in the market for cool, original design that didn’t have a hefty price tag attached to it,” explains Sarah. “I love being a stylist but wanted an outlet to make all the things I dreamed up!”

Sarah

Launching today, her debut collection, The New Wave, features furniture and home accessories inspired by her native Bondi Beach. Modern and relaxed, it is a curated selection of must-have pieces for a liveable yet unique space. “It’s my version of urban, coastal cool,” says Sarah. “The inspiration was my city lifestyle by the beach with a hint of 1970s.”

Featuring key pieces for the dining and living room, as well as home accessories including sculptural ceramics, the Jay coffee table is her personal favourite. “The top is chunky white terrazzo and the base is a thick-legged, powder-coated steel. He’s contemporary, cool and original.” With a diverse range of materials, the collection also includes 100% washable linen, travertine, marble, brass and natural leather.

Having already started designing her next collection, Sarah is also keeping busy as a freelance interior stylist. They say working at the glossy mags is a tough slog (and not as glamorous as it seems!), but it’s fair to say Sarah’s never worked harder. And we absolutely love what she has to show for it.

The New Wave is available exclusively through Clickon Furniture and Sarah’s website.

Aussie designers we love

Categories
Designers Furniture Homewares

Our top picks from the real living for Freedom collection

Sponsored by Freedom

Ever since Jen and I attended the launch of the real living for Freedom collection, I’ve been obsessing over their ability to embrace the mismatched, the cool and the quirky. I’m quite the fan! Especially for the fact that their homewares let you create beautiful interiors, no matter your style.

Real Living Bedroom Option 1

Perfect for creating that cosy and warm winter feel, they are now — for a limited time — offering MyFreedom members 30% off across the range (you can join MyFreedom for a small fee here). So I thought now was the perfect time to showcase our favourite buys, which — with the discount — start from as little as $4.16! Yes please!

freedom real living

From clockwise top left: Serious Pendant now $118.30, Green Stripe Queen Quilt now $125.30, Lucky Table Lamp now $118.30, Adele Canister Set of 3 now $27.96.

freedom real living 2

From clockwise top left: Happy Monday Queen Quilt now $139.30, Serious Table Lamp now $111.30, Midnight Dreams Cushion now $27.96, Cordon Floor Lamp now $174.30.

Real Living Bedroom Option 2

Perfect for mixing and matching to charming effect, the collection will have you combining the old with the new to create a totally on-trend interior.

Real Living Vignette

Available in stores and online.

Categories
Expert Tips Styling

Meet Australia’s leading lifestyle experts at Home, Food & Design Weekend

Bringing together some of Australia’s leading lifestyle magazines, Bauer Media’s new two-day event, Home, Food & Design Weekend, will celebrate the best of home interiors, food and the latest in design.

Kitchen lookbook

Running 23 and 24 May at Sydney’s St Mary’s Cathedral forecourt, the weekend will include workshops, master-classes and interactive demonstrations; offering readers a rare chance to go behind the scenes with Australia’s leading lifestyle experts.

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Programme highlights include:

  • Mouth-watering recipes and delicious tasters, fresh from the kitchen stage – hosted by Australia’s leading food authorities from The Australian Women’s Weekly, Woman’s Day, Recipes+ and Gourmet Traveller.
  • Insider secrets on how to create enviable home spaces – straight from top stylists at the interiors workshops hosted by Australian House & Garden, Belle, Real Living and Homes+.
  • And much, much more…

Capsicum, Eggplant and Zucchini Skewers BBQ'd - Parley & Cashew Pesto, grilled Lemon Cheeks and Cous Cous Salad.

The event will be hosted by Australia’s leading lifestyle editors and experts. Including: Australian Gourmet Traveller editor Anthea Loucas, Belle editor Tanya Buchanan, Real Living style editor Sarah Ellison and many more.

Free registration is open now. A full schedule of events will be available closer to the date.

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Design DIY RENO ADDICT Shopping

Upcycling for a cause: our Feast Watson Re-Love Project entry

Over the past month, I’ve been getting my DIY on at Interiors Addict and Reno Addict HQ. It’s involved a lot of firsts, the most frightening being that of using an electric sander! However, I can happily inform you that all body parts remain intact!

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Olivia on the tools!

However, the reason for doing this hasn’t been my want for a new job (I’ll stick to writing, thank you very much!). Rather, I, along with seven other design personalities, have been upcycling for a cause, as part of the Feast Watson Re-Love Project.

Now in its third consecutive year, the project sees a range of pre-loved timber furniture items given a new lease of life, as they are transformed into unique statement pieces. I’m upcycling a table, but that’s all I can tell you at the moment! Once the pieces are completed, each designer’s creation will be available for sale on eBay from 8 to 17 July, with all proceeds donated to the Salvos Stores.

There’s some very impressive people taking part (I’d be lying if I said I didn’t completely freak out when I found out who!) including iconic furniture designer and maker, Mark Tuckey, leading interior and event stylist, Steve Cordony and Real Living editor-in-chief, Deb Bibby!

In the lead-up to the items being available for sale you can follow each designer’s progress, or find inspiration for an upcycling project at Feast Watson’s website. Also follow our sneak peeks on our Instagram and Feast Watson’s Instagram using the hashtag #Feastwastonrelove2015.

Categories
Homewares Styling

Video: Behind the scenes of the Real Living for Freedom launch

Olivia and I are lucky enough to get invited to some beautiful events and the recent Real Living for Freedom homewares launch was no exception! We thought we’d take the chance to show you behind the scenes in this fab video.

We enjoyed a beautiful lunch surrounded by the vintage style homewares and stunning blooms by Holly Hipwell of The Flower Drum at the Palm House in Sydney’s Botanic Gardens. So much thought had gone into the little touches, like our names embroidered onto napkins, and it was great to catch up with some of our favourite bloggers and stylists.

Spot my baby bump! Always looking for the perfect Instagram shot, of course!
Spot my baby bump! Always looking for the perfect Instagram shot, of course!

If only every day at Interiors Addict was this glam! We do work really hard most of the time, honestly…

Staff writer Olivia Shead gets some tips from interior stylist Imogen Roache
Staff writer Olivia Shead (left) gets some tips from interior stylist Imogen Roache

The Real Living for Freedom collection is available online and in store now.

Categories
Art Furniture Homewares

Homedrawn: the girl illustrating the homewares she covets!

With expensive taste (but maybe not the budget to match!), Christina Banos began drawing all the beautiful decorating pieces and furniture she envisioned for her home.

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Image by Nick Scott

As a graphic designer for Real Living, there was far from a lack of stimulus, and she began using all her spare time to bring everything from textiles to appliances, to life. “I find pieces online as well as in my favourite interior stores. I also like to flick through magazines for latest trends, inspiration and products. These items then translate onto paper, which I sketch. Some proving more intricate than others.”

christina banos homedrawn
Photo by Sonia Karagiannidis

Compiling her illustrations on her increasingly popular instagram, @homedrawn, it is the culmination of many years of interiors obsessing! “From a young age, I was always filling my sketch pad with drawings and doodles of my dream space. I would dream up floorplans, house designs, objects and constantly change my ideas, it was what I enjoyed doing, and still do!” Sounds like a proper interiors addict to us!

While she studied design, most of her illustration skills are self-taught, which led to a lot of experimentation when beginning Homedrawn. “My practice has changed over time. I started off with Artline pens and then began to add watercolours to my drawings. Now, my main preference is watercolour, however every now and again I do like a traditional pencil sketch!”

Our first of seven
The West Elm Martini side table: 1/7 Homedrawn # Interiors Addict illustrations
Photo by Sonia Karagiannidis
Photo by Sonia Karagiannidis

Interiors Addict collaboration

Here at Interiors Addict, we are big fans of Christina! So for a week, starting today, we will be sharing an exclusive new illustration on our @interiorsaddict Instagram every day. The drawings are of some of Jen’s favourite pieces. We also have some exciting collaborations set for the future, so watch this space!

WIN

For your chance of winning a set of flower bowls from Interiors Addict Shop in your choice of monochrome or black and fuchsia, simply share one of the illustrations this week, hashtag #interiorsaddict and #homedrawn and tell us why you love the piece in the drawing. Open to Australian residents only. Good luck! Find them on Instagram tagged #interiorsaddict and #homedrawn.

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Interiors Addict flower bowls in monochrome

For more on Christina.

Categories
Homewares

Real Living and Freedom launch new homewares range

Yesterday, Olivia and I attended the stunning launch event for Real Living magazine’s homewares range for Freedom. It was a gorgeous setting in the old school Palm House in Sydney’s Botanic Gardens, which suited the nostalgic collection perfectly.

Real Living Vignette

Mixing patterned pieces that look like they came from your nanna’s house or a cute country cottage with pops of more modern colour, leather and typography is what this collection does really well. Freedom homewares buyer Korryn Bentley, said: “Ever since we started working together we knew we wanted to create something really special that is the sum of both Real Living and Freedom. The collaboration brings a fresh new twist on homewares. It challenges the idea of a perfectly matched interior. We want you to embrace the mismatched, the cool and quirky, and really carve out your own style.”

Think classic checks in contemporary palettes, vintage-looking florals in new tones, lamps in retro cool colours and even furniture in the form of wire wear storage that’s a little industrial and edgy.

Real Living - Bedroom Option

“We welcome you to the 2015 Real Living for Freedom winter range, where the word “home” resonates with memories and emotions of a time gone by – a vintage vibe with a quirky element of playfulness,” said Deborah Bibby, editor-in-chief, of Real Living.

“I’m excited to see how customers bring the collection to life in their own homes with their individual styles — it’s warm, fun and a little bit eclectic, the way any home should be,” added Korryn.

Available in stores and online from Monday 6 April 2015.

See mine and Olivia’s photos from the event on Instagram at @interiorsaddict and @oliviashead.

Categories
Interviews Styling

One to watch: stylist Adam Powell

From working as a circus artist and stunt performer to an account manager at an advertising agency, Adam Powell has had a very diverse career. Yet it was only after enrolling in a BA in Design Styling and Creative Direction at The Whitehouse Institute of Design, that he finally found his calling: styling. And thank goodness he did because here at Interiors Addict, we believe he is a talent to watch!

Adam_Powell_Portrait
Photo credit: Maya Vidulich

“I had left the course hungry to sink my teeth into working in the interiors world,” explains Adam. “So when Chris Deal and Jessica Bellef, who were two of my teachers at The Whitehouse, offered me some assisting work with them at a new company that had just started called Temple & Webster, I jumped on it. Three years on, the brand is Australia’s largest online homewares retailer and I am lucky to have a regular gig there as their senior stylist.”

Temple & Webster, Easter Dining. Photo credit: Denise Braki
Temple & Webster, Easter Dining. Photo credit: Denise Braki

Working there two days a week, Adam spends the rest of his days freelancing, undertaking a mix of advertising and editorial work for brands such as Real Living, Inside Out and Freedom, a process he finds both challenging and rewarding. “It’s a hard slog being a freelancer and after three years I am only just getting into a good routine with my finances and erratic work schedule. I do love being a freelancer; I love the variety of work and exposure to working with lots of different and talented people who I am constantly learning from.”

Temple & Webster. Photo credit: Denise Braki
Temple & Webster. Photo credit: Denise Braki

While his assisting days are now over (as well as assisting for Temple & Webster he was lucky enough to be taken under the wing of both Jason Grant and Sarah Ellison), Adam is quick to dismiss the rumour that being a senior stylist is glamorous. Aren’t all stylists?!

“The biggest misconception about styling is that it’s a glamorous job. Yes we get to play with beautiful things most days but it’s tough work. A typical shoot day will often start with an early morning trip to the flower market or bakery to pick up consumables, then there is the running around doing pick ups, making furniture, painting walls, building sets, getting the perfect shot, tweaking the perfect shot to make it just right, dismantling furniture, repackaging furniture, doing returns, typing up crediting information and then heading home to work on creative concepts for other jobs.”

Real Living Magazine, June 2014. Photo credit: Nick Scott
Real Living Magazine, June 2014. Photo credit: Nick Scott

But all that tiring work aside, Adam loves his job, his favourite aspect being the ability to tell stories through images, loving that he can pull together products, lighting, paints, colours and props to visually portray a story. It’s something he has always been drawn to, having been a huge collector of props, even from his early childhood. “As a boy, it was all about frogs! My room was a tropical jungle and at the peak of the obsession I had over 500 ornamental frogs,” he admits. “These days, the collecting still happens but on a much smaller scale. Shells, feathers, sea urchins, vintage fishing floats and small clocks all make up my studio space and act as an easy prop department when pulling things together for a shoot.”

A corner of my sunroom/ studio in Bondi. Photography Maya Vidulich
Adam’s studio. Photo credit: Maya Vidulich

While it is no doubt a challenging industry to get into, Adam is proof that it is possible, that if you’re not afraid to put yourself out there, experiment and even work for free, you can turn your dream into reality. “What I’d say to budding stylists is try anything and everything. From here it will be a process of elimination in discovering what you love and what you don’t like doing. Work for free — we have all done it before — it shows you are hungry and enthusiastic.”

Temple & Webster. Photo credit: Natalie Hunfalvay
Temple & Webster. Photo credit: Natalie Hunfalvay

Having followed his own advice and been a fully fledged stylist for the last three years, Adam has achieved countless milestones and undertaken many amazing projects. But his biggest styling triumph is something much more modest: “I guess my biggest milestone would be that turning point when my styling went from a hobby to a career that I could make a living from. It’s something that makes me smile often; the realisation of finding that passion.”

Follow Adam on Instagram.

Categories
Interviews Styling

Tahnee Carroll on the switch from interior design to styling and finally finding her groove

Tahnee Carroll was destined to work in interiors and design, she just had to work out exactly how. “As a kid, my room was never in the same layout for more than a month, I changed everything all the time! Whether I knew it or not, the creative within had found a direction.”

Tahnee Caroll at home. Photo by Lynden Foss
Tahnee Caroll at home. Photo by Lynden Foss.

Beginning her career in interior design for a luxury firm in Sydney, it wasn’t until two years had gone by that she realised it wasn’t the direction she wanted to go in. “Interior design wasn’t quite perfect for me career wise, it didn’t stimulate my creative side enough to warrant staying, but I loved interiors. I just needed to find another outlet and found photographic styling to be the perfect role for me.”

Tahnee's work in Real Living
Tahnee’s work in July’s Real Living. Photography by Brett Stevens.

Approaching Real Living magazine for a week’s work experience, Tahnee instantly fell in love with the fast-paced, creativity-fueled world of photographic styling. Following that work experience, she was offered a role as a styling assistant and worked alongside some of Australia’s best, including Glen Proebstel and Sarah Ellison.

One of Tahnee's favourite food shots I've styled, featured in Real Living's May Issue, 2014. Photography: Maree Homer
Real Living, May 2014. Photography by Maree Homer.

Assisting at Real Living for two years, she did everything from searching far and wide for that one perfect prop, unpacking products, painting and building sets and moving furniture and accessories. “You won’t need a gym membership, let me tell you that!”

Yet while she loved her job, a six-month trip overseas gave Tahnee the inspiration and confidence to step out on her own: “I decided it was time to give assisting the flick and show the industry what I could do! I created a number of moodboards of shoot ideas and put them to the editor of Real Living, Deb Bibby, who then gave me my first job styling the Weekday Meals food segment. Safe to say it was a hit and I’ve been styling the food and entertaining stories ever since.”

A shot from Tahnee's first shoot, published in Real Livings March Issue, 2014. Photography: Maree Homer
Tahnee’s first shoot as a stylist for Real Living, March 2014. Photography by Maree Homer.

Since that first job being published in Real Living’s March 2014 issue, Tahnee has progressed in leaps and bounds, styling a whopping 17 pages in this month’s issue of Real Living and being a contestant in Inside Out magazine and The Home’s Search for a Stylist contest (you can vote for Tahnee’s entry here). The competition has seen wannabe stylists pitted against each other to create a mock Inside Out cover (between you and me, Tahnee’s is my fave!) with the winner getting the chance to style a real Inside Out cover and become a senior stylist at The Home.

“We were given a small number of products from The Home to select from and use in our cover shot,” explains Tahnee. “Then we all had to design and build sets which we believed would stand out to the Inside Out readers in order to get them to vote for us. On shoot day, it was all very secretive, closed studios, tight-lipped editors and hovering stylists. The contestants weren’t allowed to see each other’s sets and everyone was watching you as you tried to create the winning cover. I had so much fun, but it’s so nerve-racking waiting for the results!” (You can vote until 23 July).

Tahnee's cover for the Inside Out Magazine and The Home Search for a Stylist Competition. Photography: Nigel Lough.
Tahnee’s cover for the Search for a Stylist contest. Photography by Nigel Lough.

While Tahnee’s assisting days are now behind her, she is very grateful for what that time gave her, recommending the experience to all budding stylists. “As an assistant, be prepared to go the extra mile,” says Tahnee. “If the stylist wants blue hydrangeas that are out of season and the only florist in Sydney that has them is an hour and a half away, well then you’d better start driving if you want to beat the traffic!”

Real Living's Top Ten Lust List as compiled and styled by Tahnee, featured in the July Issue, 2014. Photography: Brett Stevens
Real Living July 2014. Photography by Brett Stevens.

Tahnee is proof that if you do the hard work and soak up all the knowledge and skill around you, you can make it as a stylist. Just don’t be afraid to take a chance: “Be outrageous,” says Tahnee. “Sometimes you hit, sometimes you miss, but that’s all part of the learning process and developing your skills.”

Love Tahnee’s work? Follow her on Tumblr and Facebook.

So, you want to be a stylist too? You should read this! Or read all our styling-related posts.

Categories
Expert Tips

Register for the fifth annual Home, Food & Wine Weekend

Fancy hearing from the editors of Australia’s leading lifestyle magazines, all in one weekend and for free? Well thanks to Bauer Media’s fifth annual Home, Food & Wine Weekend, you can!

HomeFoodWine_comp

From Friday 23 to Sunday 25 May in its new location at Sydney’s Westfield Bondi Junction, editors and industry experts including Belle’s editor in chief and The Block judge, Neale Whitaker and Real Living’s editor, Deborah Bibby, will lead interactive workshops and how-to demos on everything from interior styling to kitchen design trends to bathroom renovation. You’ll also get the opportunity to hear from food and wine experts and who would say no to that?!

Register online now for your favourite events and then head down to Westfield Bondi Junction to join in the fun.

Categories
Homewares Styling

New wallpaper by Real Living’s Sarah Ellison

Sarah Ellison sure knows what looks good and she’s partial to a bit (okay, a lot) of pattern, so you really have to wonder why she didn’t do her own wallpaper range before now?!

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I chatted to the talented Real Living style editor about Light of Art, her debut collection of six wallpaper designs she describes as “the romance of the beach with the energy of the city all rolled into one, with a nod to my love of fashion.” They’re called Zigzag, Cheetah, Geometric, Splatter, Leopard and Triangles. 

Categories
Interiors Addict

How to get your interior project featured in magazines like Belle and Real Living

It’s every designer and stylist’s dream: seeing one of your jobs showcased on the pages of a glossy magazine. But trying to achieve it can often feel like hitting your head against a brick wall. I asked the editors of Real Living and Belle – two magazines with very different aesthetics – for their top tips on how to give yourself the best chance of being featured.

Real Living's Deb Bibby
Real Living’s Deb Bibby

Funnily enough, their advice wasn’t that different. Deb Bibby, editor in chief of Real Living, said: “It’s not hard at all if you pitch the right story for the right demographic. Sometimes, for example, the style of photography isn’t suitable for Real Living but sadly the home is perfect. Or it might not be styled the way we like to reflect a home. So your team is crucial and each magazine is different.”

Categories
Interiors Addict

Mr Jason Grant’s book, A Place Called Home

Tomorrow I’m off to the Sydney launch of stylist Jason Grant’s first book, A Place Called Home, so it’s about time I reviewed it for you!

Mr Jason Grant A Place Called Home cover

If you know MJG, or follow him on social media, you’ll know this is a project that has taken over his life for a good year. Luckily he is DELIGHTED with how it turned out and I can see why. It feels like if Jason was a book, this would be it.

It’s light on words and heavy on beautiful images by photographer James Geer. And let’s face it, who has time to actually read their coffee table books anyway?! I actually devoured this book in one enjoyable afternoon, but it’s the sort of book you’ll want to dip back in and out of on rainy afternoons, especially as its many photos of the beach and Bondi will bring back memories of summer.

Mr Jason Grant A Place Called Home 3

Jason is a well known freelance interior stylist and was previously style director of Real Living, who he still works for, alongside almost every other Australian homes magazine. He was also one of the very first people I interviewed for Interiors Addict! Jason has his own paint ranges for Murobond and recently styled Freedom’s new winter collection for its catalogue and advertising.

Categories
Interiors Addict

Real Living, April 2013

As they say on The Block: “Wow, wow, wow!” Real Living’s front cover for April certainly packs a punch – the genius colour and print combination is so crazy it works. I’m not brave enough to wear prints, but I’m now reconsidering the option of working prints into my wardrobe, and my home!

Real Living cover

Highlights

The highlight for me this issue was the ‘Find your own Colour Palette’ feature by designer Jacinta Preston. It gives some great advice and made me feel more confident when it comes to choosing colour. I loved one of Jacinta’s examples: “Gloss matt is very different to matt black: gloss accentuates and intensifies the colour, matt helps colour to recede and look more subtle.”

What I’m loving

Categories
Art

Behind the scenes at the photoshoot for Blacklist’s latest collection of Cross My Heart art

I’ll make no bones about it. I’m a huge fan of Blacklist and they’re one of my first ports of call for affordable art. So I was delighted when they shared some exlcusive behind the scenes images from their recent photoshoot for their new collection Cross My Heart.

Blacklist Cross My Heart frames

Almost entirely black and white, it is still instantly recognisable as their popular work and I’m already getting in a panic about which one I’d choose for myself. I love the flexibility of having something monochrome because it usually goes with everything and in any room! And I don’t need to remind you how much I love typography in all its forms. Hello, word nerd!

So why is this collection called Cross My Heart? “We believe in the power and romance of promise,” says Jaynie Johnson, one half of Blacklist with husband Nathan. “Cross My Heart saw us create something that was different from anything we’d ever done; a collection about promise only using a monochromatic palette.” (Well almost all monochrome, we’ll come to that later…).

Blacklist Hold Tight flag

Nathan and Jaynie, known for being a couple of romantics, were reflecting on the simple things, on contrasts and ultimately what mattered most. “As with everything we create, there is always an element of hope: as with the night, joy comes in the morning. So the final pieces we created were the colourful, hope-filled, ‘peace & love’, they are the lights at the end of the tunnel… the last page of the story.”

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Styling

The reality behind the glamour, with Real Living’s senior stylist, Sarah Ellison

Sarah Ellison has the job many readers would kill for: senior stylist on one of the country’s most popular magazines: Real Living, where she’s been for more than 2 years. Here she shares what it’s really like behind the scenes and gives plenty of advice for those wanting to follow in her footsteps.

Sarah Ellison Real Living

After fashion college, Sarah Ellison started a small fashion label but to earn some money, she took a job doing visual merchandising for an interiors store. She met many stylists there and started assisting Paul Hopper from House & Garden part-time.

Fashion and interior styling are very similar jobs,” she says. “The main difference would be that interior styling is much more of a mammoth production. There’s a big difference between calling in some clothing and calling in 6 rooms’ worth of furniture to shoot. Creatively though, the ideas come from the same part of you that gets inspired. Inspiration can be applied to any media.”

Sarah assisted freelance for a couple of years and built a portfolio of test shoots in her spare time. She was assisting stylist Kirsten Bookallil, who had been putting a good word in with Real Living editor Deb Bibby. “I met with Deb and she gave me my first editorial shoot. Unbeknown to me it was actually a bit of a test as there was soon to be a position opening up for a stylist. Deb loved the shoot, put her faith in me and hired me for the job. Great timing too as I must admit there aren’t many jobs out there.”

Sarah Ellison Real Living print on print 1
Photo by Nick Scott

She says the most common misconception about the job of a stylist is that it’s all glamour. “Most of the time you are schlepping furniture around, crawling around on the floor putting Ikea together and being a bit like a courier,” she says.