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Decorating 101 Design Designers Expert Tips Home Office Styling

Design inspirations: Turia Pitt’s unique, Zoom ready home office

Bestselling author, athlete, and mindset coach, Turia Pitt, was inspired to reinvigorate her home office after a stay at the much-Instagrammed SOUL of Gerringong holiday accommodation. The trip left her feeling “like Michelle Obama on holidays,” so she worked with its creator Simone Mathews (who has since sold it) to bring that magical holiday energy into her own office.

“Before, Turia’s home office space was quite dull and characterless; not a very inspiring or motivating space to spend time and work,” says Simone, of SOUL Home.

Turia and Simone

With the shift to online meetings off the back of COVID-19, Turia wanted to create an office backdrop that reflected her casual and fun personality. The calm, neutral wall colours and creative furniture choices allow Turia to host online interviews and online meetings without worrying about her backdrop.

“Before, I used to be embarrassed if people came over, but now I want them to come in and sit in my office,” Turia comments. “Actually, it’s probably the most relaxing space in the whole house!”

Simone always employs a 70/20/10 ratio in her styling, blending three styles into a personalised but cohesive space. For Turia’s office space, the driving theme was contemporary design, as seen with the furniture choices. Organic materials were incorporated through the use of timber and linen, and the leather chair added a unique retro twist.

If your office feels stifling in comparison, Simone has shared her top tips to revamp your own office space:

Say “so long!” to traditional office furniture

“When it comes to picking furniture for your office, I tend to steer away from the traditional office style furniture. There are so many great, stylish furniture pieces that can double for your office and cater to both form and function,” Simone says.

She suggests swapping out that drab filing cabinet for a sleek sideboard or console, so you can store your documents in style. Turia’s office reimagined her tired corner desk as this dynamic table and chair set.

Incorporate nostalgic touches

With many of us working longer hours, a comfortable and relaxing office space can stave off burn out. Find what transports you to your dream destination – it might be palm trees, or a particular exotic scent – and make that a focal element.

“I like to make styling easy, so you just want to pick pieces and things that really connect with you on a sensory level,” Simone adds.

Focus lighting on your working areas

“Task lights and wall lights are great in an office, versus your general overhead ceiling lighting. They add to the mood and provide vital focus lighting on the areas where you most need,” Simone explains. “In Turia’s office, I’m using a brass statement wall light that is highly functional yet looks super cool. Personally, I think wall lights are so underutilised when it comes to styling.”

Incorporate artwork that ignites your creativity

“Sometimes you just need a mood board to inspire, keep you on track or get over a block in your day. Choosing the right artwork can act as your mood board; a moment for your eyes to readjust away from the screen and take a moment to drift, reset, and then revert back to the task,” says Simone.

A former mining engineer, Turia’s love of rocks and stones is her creative driver. This was reflected in the specially commissioned Ozlem Savelle artwork, as well as the brass wall lights and stone greys of the office lounge seating.

Think about window treatments

“Window treatments are the final layer for any space, and I’m always a fan of doubling sheer curtains with a black out blind,” Simone suggests. “This combinations ensures you have a space you feel comfortable at any time of day.”

Follow Turia Pitt on social media @turiapitt. For more information on Soul Home.

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Designers Furniture Interviews

Bespoke furniture made from salvaged and found items

A fourth generation carpenter and a plastic surgery nurse (with a knack for finding secondhand gems), Nik Kulas and Olivia Prescott are the masterminds behind new kid on the block, The Savage & Scott.

Nik and Olivia
Nik and Olivia

Offering bespoke industrial furniture made from items salvaged and found; there might be one piece made or there might be 10, but there will never be a million! “The Savage & Scott furniture is limited and custom-made, each piece coming with a personalised name tag and number,” explains Nik. “We see something in what is aged and we see value in what is discarded.”

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Having always valued well-made, one-off-pieces, looking back it seems only natural that Nik became a designer. “A while back my mum had bought a mass-produced bookcase which I put together for her again and again as it fell apart. It sat awkwardly in a gap that it didn’t quite fill. So I decided to custom make a bookcase to fit the space.”

Loved by himself and his mum, Nik, who spent the day working for Boeing building aircrafts, started to spend his nights crafting furniture. After a year of juggling both, he was ready to turn his labour of love into a business. And inspired by Olivia’s eye for design and their regular trips to secondhand markets, The Savage & Scott was born.

the savage and scott

[contextly_sidebar id=”FCgWACkecZj6WXCnVJg3dHaw1gvDzabU”]Using steel and reclaimed timber to create unique, modern furniture with old-world class, the construction process varies but the aim of making quality products remains. “The design process can be on the fly on the workshop floor if I’m trying to get something out of my mind and into the world,” says Nik.” But then engaging with clients we like to sit down and get as much information as we can about them, their home and what they are trying to achieve and then we hit the drawing board.”

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the savage and scott 4

Hoping to expand from their Melbourne workshop to an accompanying showroom and online store, no amount of growth will have them deviate from their goal: of producing one-of-a-kind pieces that each have a story to tell. “All our materials have a story. From a door used to being slammed shut to a machine that lived in a factory collecting dust, the beauty of each product is in its history and its future.”

For more information.

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Furniture

Brett Sambrooks’ furniture tells stories of previous lives

Based in a small Victorian town nestled on the banks of the Murray River, craftsman Brett Sambrooks has launched his own online store, selling his furniture range made from 100% recycled materials. The same could be said for his home, which is also home to his workshop.

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Reflective of his surrounding environment, Brett handcrafts unique designs from reclaimed timber and secondhand materials which result in mostly one-off collectables.

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BS00001-Chopping block  (photo. Jenni Finn)

Known for his wooden surfboards and red gum butcher’s blocks (which is fitting given he lives in an old butcher’s shop), Brett has converted the original shopfront into a showroom for his creations. The rest of his house continues in the vein of his furniture: bold, reclaimed and experimental. A living showcase to his preoccupation with recycled and sustainable materials, every single surface, bench, floor and window has a story from its previous life.

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The show-stopper bay window (above) was rescued from an old club house that was demolished in the next-door town of Barham. Brett re-glazed and re-jigged it to ensure the windows functioned. He then installed it, on a purposeful lean, as a key bedroom feature. You have to look twice, right?!

History is everywhere, whether it is the front door that came from the nearby house of the local ambulance driver or the Baltic pine laundry cupboards made from old wooden polling booths that were discarded with the introduction of their cardboard replacements.

BS000028-Low Credenza(Jenni Finn)

An adventurer at heart, Brett has lived and worked in Antarctica as an on-site builder at a research base and he currently works as a builder and maker in Victoria’s Koondrook-Barham region. For more information and to see his full range of products, visit his website here.

Photography: Jenni Finn