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Furniture Homewares

Sneak peek: Exciting new products landing at IKEA next month

IKEA Australia will launch a huge selection of products in February, including new kitchen fronts made from 100% recycled materials, unique inserts to style and personalise the cube space in your KALLAX as well as a fun and coordinated range of children’s textiles and accessories.

New range of inserts to pimp your KALLAX
New range of inserts to pimp your KALLAX
KUNGSBACKA kitchen fronts
KUNGSBACKA kitchen fronts

Here are some of the best new products coming to IKEA Australia in February:

KUNGSBACKA kitchen fronts

The KUNGSBACKA kitchen fronts are the first in IKEA to be made out of 100% recycled materials. The KUNGSBACKA fronts are made from recycled wood covered in a foil made from recycled PET bottles, making them a sustainable choice that doesn’t compromise on quality, design or price.

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The matte anthracite-coloured fronts not only look beautiful, but are easy to clean and feature anti-fingerprint surfaces. KUNGSBACKA fronts fit with the METOD kitchen system so you can create literally thousands of different combinations to squeeze the most out of every centimetre of kitchen space.

New ways to style your KALLAX

The popular IKEA KALLAX range (the new and improved version of EXPEDIT) will get a series of unique new inserts in February to help add style and function to this IKEA staple. Five new items: a hanging organiser, shelf divider, shelf insert, storage with compartments and a wire basket (hello, it comes in gold!) – will allow more flexibility to personalise your KALLAX so it can meet your exact needs.

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I think these inserts are absolutely fantastic and will completely lift your storage game! I want to run out and buy myself a KALLAX unit right now so I can pimp it with these gorgeous, expensive-looking accessories. The great thing about the KALLAX is it’s as at home in the home office as it is in the lounge room and with these new inserts, it will definitely look a lot more high end and chic, as well as making it way more useful for storing and displaying your items. Exciting!

Camera hight 92cm, distance to closest corner shelf 104cm

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VÄNSKAPLIG, a collection designed for children

VÄNSKAPLIG means friendly and has been designed to deliver endless ways for children to mix and match their bedroom textiles and accessories, to express their own identity and create their own style and individual look. The coordinated collection includes quit cover sets, rugs, curtains and cushions.

Other new things to look out for

  • With a whiff of the 1920s industrial style, the FJÄLLBO storage series is a new range of small furniture pieces combining minimalist design with a rustic edge.

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  • SJÄLSLIGT is a set of three porcelain cacti of different heights that add a humorous touch to the home. A great way for funky greenery, without the prickles.
  • STENLILLE is a new graphic, low pile rug with coordinated curtains (NUNNERÖRT).
  • BERÄKNA, a range of basic but beautiful vases.

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For more information.

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Expert Tips Furniture

Upcycling – what is it, why it matters and how you can use it

By Helen Edwards

Upcycling is a buzz word of the moment, but do you know what it actually means? In the pure sense, upcycling means reusing a product or material over and over again – it is taken back up the supply chain of production and can be reused as something else once it is finished with, in a perpetual cycle. Things like aluminium cans and newspaper can be upcycled in this constant cycle, meaning there is no need to create or use new resources. Once finished with, the material is simply turned into something new.

Bowling alley dining table by Rubble Designs
Bowling alley dining table by Rubble Designs

Upcycling has also come to be seen as “repurposing” or the act of taking something and making it better than it was before. Examples include old bicycle wheels being made into amazing light fittings, light globes being turned into pretty terrariums, crates and pallets being made into furniture, ladders used as shelves and old tyres being upcycled into belts and bags. The idea with upcycling however, is to always be considering what you can do with that object once it is no longer needed, otherwise you are just prolonging its trip to landfill.

Recycled timber pendant by Giffin Design
Recycled timber pendant by Giffin Design

There is really no limit to what you can upcycle yourself in this way, except your imagination! A simple way to upcycle a piece of furniture you might find on the side of the road, or at the op phop for example, is to decorate it with decoupage, chalk paint or stencils. You don’t have to be a welder or carpenter to create an upcycled piece for your home, a simple paint job can breathe new life into many things. It is rewarding and fun!

Lamp by Patturn Studio
Lamp by Patturn Studio

Incorporating an upcycled piece, or material, into a contemporary home, adds character, individuality and warmth. A clean contemporary interior looks fabulous with a salvaged timber floor or a rustic table handmade with recycled timbers. I have seen people building furniture from an old dance hall floor and even a basketball court! A floor that has been created from old hardwood timbers taken from an old pier or jetty, has not only already been grown and chopped down, they also contain gallons of character and look fabulous.

TV unit by Michael Hayes
TV unit by Michael Hayes

There are now lots of designers, woodworkers and creative small businesses using recycled and salvaged materials in their work, or selling items which have been made from waste materials. Many are small businesses and run from their own studio and website, or you can find them at local markets, or online at places like Etsy.

A sample of upcyclers I love include:

The key to having an Upcycler’s eye is to consider objects not as they are now, but what they could become. Look at things from all angles and let your imagination run wild! Consider if an old drawer could be hung on the wall as a shelf or used in an open shelf as storage units for example. And keep your eyes peeled. You never know when you might come across something you can turn into a masterpiece for your home!

–Helen Edwards is a blogger, stylist, author and wellbeing expert. Check out her blog, Recycled Interiors.

www.recycledinteriors.org

Categories
Furniture

Transforming unloved secondhand furniture

By Fiona Gavan

I am an avid believer in the beauty of vintage furniture — good quality, well made and well-loved pieces that have stood the test of time and come with a little history; pieces that are a little different and you won’t find in hundreds of other homes. 

2013-08-13 Graphite Serpentine Chest of Drawers
Before and after

With my business Lilyfield Life, I spend my time finding unique pieces of secondhand furniture and, using paint and a little elbow grease, I create beautiful pieces that really speak to you, as well as being very functional items in your home. I absolutely love that paint can update discarded old furniture into treasures that will still be loved in years and years to come.

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Interiors Addict

5 ways to accessorise your home by upcycling

By Brianna O’Neil

Even in tough economic times, your home and office can still look great and be environmentally friendly with the use of recycled and upcycled materials. Melbourne property styling expert Brianna O’Neil says it’s not difficult to use recycled items to add personality and flair to your home whilst reducing your carbon footprint.

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Wall hanging made from recycled wrapping paper, clock made from industrial letter P (formally Hoyts movie signage), telephone table and typewriter from eBay (secondhand), books from thrift shop, faux fur throw from Kmart.

“When styling a home, it may surprise you to hear that places like eBay and the Salvation Army are one of my first ports of call for artwork and decor,” she said. “Sometimes the most interesting items can be found where you least expect it and don’t cost an arm and a leg. Vintage items are not a new trend and many blogs and websites give ideas on how they can be best used.”

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Interiors Addict

Recyled timber picture frames with heart

It’s a pretty simple thing,” says Ryan Melder, “we make products from materials that are destined for landfill – anyone can do it, it’s just about having the motivation make it possible.” This is the humble nature of the Melder family and, in fact, the whole story around their recycled furniture and homewares business, Mulbury.

mulbury frame 1

After years in the building industry, Gerry Melder became disillusioned by it – he’d been let down by too many contractors and had seen far too much beautiful timber go to landfill. Having always considered the environment, Gerry saw a way to make a positive out of this negative situation; turning to what he knew – “woodwork, design and construction” – he took the material destined for the dumpster and made it the source of his next venture. Thus, “Mulbury was born.”

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Furniture

Saving timber from old cattle yards and wharves and giving it a new life as furniture

Just like its name, Rabbit Trap Timber is unique. It’s a family run furniture business that produces handcrafted pieces from individually chosen, recycled materials; no table, stool or bench is quite the same.

Rabbit Trap Timber trestle

Initially inspired by “a few pieces of timber full of rusty nails” – and a heap of character – Rabbit Trap Timber is now a full-time job for Justine Taylor and her husband Rabs in the NSW Southern Highlands. “I love it,” Justine says.

Rabbit Trap Timber share platter

Central to their business is a commitment to the environment. The pair source material from old cattle yards, wharves and demolished warehouses, turning it into furniture that will “last another lifetime.” Offcuts become share platters, chopping boards and pilgrim stools, and the sawdust even goes to local farmers.

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Interiors Addict

Theory of Willow combine recycled timber with colour and pattern to make unique homewares

Theory of Willow are a husband and wife team making stylish and colourful homewares from recycled timber.

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They started with 2nd Chance Tables, a custom-made recycled timber table business started by Chris Booth. Building on the concept of using recycled timber, he and wife Hien developed Theory Of Willow’s homewares range. “We incorporate colours, shapes and patterns into our homewares, which we feel compliment and accentuate the beautiful characteristics of recycled timbers,” says Chris. “Blending these elements results in striking, eye-catching products that otherwise might have been quite ordinary.”

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A carpenter by trade, his love affair with carpentry started from an early age. Through the influence and guidance of his father and grandparents, he developed a fondness for building things from scratch. In 2012, Chris first tried his hand at making and selling tables using recycled and reclaimed timbers.

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Interiors Addict

Sarah’s found her happy making sustainable homewares

With sustainable design practices gaining momentum, basket weaver Sarah Powell is bang on trend with her new venture, Find Your Happy. “The majority of my designs start with rescued or found materials,” she says. “I love giving materials a second life. I can often be found scouring op shops, recycled centres and even my husband’s shed for ‘potentials’.”

Find Your Happy Baskets
While many basket makers work with natural materials, Sarah laughs that her preference for manmade materials stems primarily from laziness, as natural materials require preparation to work with, whereas manmade materials such a rope, wire, nylon, and paper are all readily available.

“By working with recycled, manmade materials, it allows me to also address sustainability and the fact that we continue to over produce things. I like to think by rescuing materials for my baskets I’m doing my very small bit in helping reduce landfill.” Having studied textiles design at the University of Wollongong, Sarah was drawn into the world of photography, and initially chose to pursue this medium as a career. She spent most of her twenties travelling the world, documenting what she saw with her camera.