Categories
Interiors Addict

Oroton’s new interior inspired by the Australian landscape

While we don’t normally write about retail interiors, Oroton’s new flagship store in Sydney’s iconic QVB definitely warrants a mention.

Oroton OVB 5

Designed in collaboration between leading London-based creative consultancy Universal Design Studio and Oroton’s creative director Ana Maria Escobar, it features fresh neutrals and ceramic hues, natural light and refined architectural details.

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With a look that aims to echo the Australian rural landscape, raw, heavy and unfinished materials are contrasted against the processed, fine and polished. Natural light further accentuates the design, with reflection and shadow being apparent throughout. The perforated brass screens at the entrance diffuse the outside light and the fitting rooms are backlit with sheer fabric bringing tranquility to the store.

Oroton OVB 2

The Oroton QVB Flagship Boutique is located at Shop 19-23, Grand Walk, Queen Victoria Building, 455 George Street, Sydney, Australia.

Categories
Homewares

Dinosaur Designs reduced by up to 80%!

For many years, my Mum and I have visited this sale and after having come home with bags full of goodies each time, I can confidently say that this is one of the best sales in Sydney!

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With up to 80% off homewares and jewellery, the sale I’m talking about is the mammoth annual Dinosaur Designs sale. And for three days next week (Friday 8  to Sunday 10 August) you can get your hands on beautiful resin pieces at a fraction of the original price. So, whether you have a bit of a bangle habit (like Jen) or a penchant for their vases (also like Jen!), you’d be mad to miss it!

Where:

Dinosaur Designs (back entrance)
585 Elizabeth Lane
Strawberry Hills NSW
Ph: 02 9698 3500

When:

Friday 8 August: 8am to 6pm
Saturday 9 August: 10am to 4pm
Sunday 10 August: 10am to 2pm.

The sale will also be online here.

Categories
Interiors Addict

7 Vignettes August with West Elm starts a week today

Just one week today, it will be time for another round of our fun Instagram styling challenge 7 Vignettes and this month, West Elm are on board to celebrate the upcoming opening of their new Chatswood Chase store in Sydney. As a north-of-the-bridge girl, I’m pretty excited about this! Here are the themes for those of you who like to get prepared in advance! This round, the winner gets a $300 West Elm voucher to be spent in store or online.

august 7 vignettes

Our guest judge is Williams Sonoma Australia’s social media manager, Chantal Brady. Make sure you tag her @westelmaus and us @interiorsaddict and use the hashtag #7vignettes. All the basics on how to take part can be found here.

In other exciting news, we are so close to reaching 40,000 images shared on the hastag that I’m confident it could happen this round. Exciting!

Read all about 7 Vignettes on the West Elm blog, Front and Main. Shop West Elm online.

Categories
Interviews Kitchens RENO ADDICT

At home with My Kitchen Rules’ celebrity chef, Pete Evans

As soon as I found out we were going to get the chance to take a peek inside Pete Evans’ newly renovated Sydney home, I immediately wanted to check out his kitchen. As the owner of multiple restaurants and a judge on the hit TV show My Kitchen Rules, I had high hopes, and not surprisingly, I wasn’t disappointed!

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“Our kitchen was always going to be the soul of our home, especially because home cooked, nourishing, mindful, paleo-inspired food is such a focus in both our business and our personal life,” explains Pete. “It’s the part of our home where we all enjoy so much memorable time together, which for us is an integral part of connecting with ourselves, each other and our food.”

Featuring an almost six-metre Corian island bench, it also doubles as their dining room table, a purposeful decision, to generate a feeling of closeness between the family and flow throughout the house. “There’s no separation between kitchen and dining and we also chose to have our kitchen and family room laid out in an open plan manner,” says Pete. “This allows us to always feel close to and communicate with the kids, which generates a nice sense of togetherness.”

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The house is home to Pete, his fiancée Nicola Watson and his children Chilli and Indii. It has gone under quite a thorough renovation, including putting in a brand new kitchen, laundry and outdoor space. And while Pete says the original house had some great bones, he always knew he was going to have to renovate the kitchen.

“It was something that we needed to do regardless of which house we bought because we both definitely had an ideal kitchen in mind that suited our specific needs and our family,” says Pete. “In the beginning, the living area and kitchen were both quite dark and disjointed, whereas now it feels a lot more open, unified and filled with light. Everything flows from the kitchen to the family room to the outdoors and it has a pleasing brightness that greets you as soon as you walk in the front door.”

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With a style that is not ultra modern but rather ultra functional, the home is full of clean lines, bright yet neutral tones and refreshing splashes of colour, a design aesthetic Pete always had in mind. “Both Nic and I were very hands on in the design because we knew exactly what we needed, from the colour, to the appliances, to the cupboards and drawers, and we were conscious of exactly what sort of space we required for everything to function harmoniously.”

With Nic being a talented artist and as an avid skull collector (her latest being a saber-toothed cat skull!) the home has no shortage of unique homewares and furniture, yet Pete’s favourite piece has to be his BoConcept couch: “It’s the ultimate place to snuggle up and watch a movie, which is something we all really like to do, especially in winter.”

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While Pete undoubtably loves his home, especially that kitchen, it’s not actually a room that is Pete’s favourite part of the house. “I have to say the thing I love the most about our house isn’t anything that you can touch or see, it’s the sense of contentment and comfort that we all feel when we’re at home. That’s what wholeheartedly stands out to me and it’s a feeling that I don’t take for granted.”

Can’t argue with that, eh?

Do you like Pete’s home? Before you ask, much of the furniture shown is available from BoConcept and one of their interior designers helped him achieve the look.

Photography by Jacqui Turk.

Categories
Styling

Video behind the scenes of Mr Jason Grant’s second book, Holiday at Home

That sun-drenched feeling of a perfect holiday shouldn’t have to go away when you get back home. Taking inspiration from road trips, beach houses, boutique hotels and long lazy summers on the coast, Sydney stylist Mr Jason Grant shows you how to style your spaces to capture that holiday feeling in your own home in his forthcoming second book, Holiday at Home. I’m looking forward to picking up some tips on the return from my own travel adventures!

Holiday at Home, out in September, published by Hardie Grant
Holiday at Home, out in September, published by Hardie Grant

A follow-up to last year’s A Place Called Home, it’s brimming with inspiration and tips for making your outdoor spaces feel like your own private resort, laid back entertaining, using colour to create those vacation vibes, and upcycling found and secondhand items. Out early September, Holiday at Home is your creative guide to turning your living spaces into your own little patches of paradise.

We’ve been lucky enough to get to share this video behind the scenes with you today:

If you follow Jason on Instagram, you’ll know he loves the beach. Born in Tasmania, but growing up in Melbourne where his career began, it seems he found his spiritual home in Sydney’s Bondi. Fascinated by colour and nature from a young age, he is always looking for new ways to express his creativity.

Jason has styled for many Australian and international magazines including Inside Out, Belle, House and Garden, Real Living, Vogue Living, Elle Decoration and Livingetc and has his own range with Murobond Paints.

Stylist and author Jason Grant
Stylist and author Jason Grant

The sunny images in this book are by Lauren Bamford, a Melbourne-based photographer, specialising in food, lifestyle, interiors and documentary.

The book is published by Hardie Grant in Australia. It is also being published by Rizzoli in America under the alternative title Away at Home. We’re looking forward to getting our hands on a review copy to share with you very soon!

Keep in touch with Jason’s blog.

Video music and editing by Keith Mason, cinematography by Lauren Bamford.

Categories
Designers Interviews

Interview: architect Christopher Polly

Christopher Polly struggles to pick a favourite project: “That’s a bit like choosing a favourite child!” But when pressed, he does admit that four of his most recently completed residential projects hold that special place in his heart.

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Christopher Polly

“Our Cosgriff House, Elliot Ripper House, Darling Point Penthouse and Haines House are our favourite completed projects to date,” explains Christopher. “Each project provided potential to explore various ideas for individual design responses, which were brought to fruition with good clients and builders.”

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Cosgriff House

These four projects have also been shortlisted for many awards, including the Australian Interior Design Awards, Houses Awards, Interior Design Excellence Awards and House & Garden Room of the Year, a feat which is made all the more impressive by the fact that Christopher is a one-man show. His firm, Christopher Polly Architect was established in late 2005, when he decided to take on a large mixed-use commercial project at Sydney Olympic Park; a job that became the catalyst for establishing an office in a full-time capacity.

Since then, he has gone on to complete commercial, hospitality and residential projects, where he is involved in the design process from architecture all the way through to landscaping. “We have a holistic detail, design and process-led approach for each project and site, entailing architecture, interior design and preliminary landscape advice. Depending on the project and client, and when requested, we also offer advice as to selection for furniture and furnishings.”

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Elliot Ripper House
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Elliot Ripper House

Currently, Christopher primarily works in residential, something he favours for its ability to: “allow a broader depth of opportunity to explore and test ideas.” Working on a federation house in Petersham, a 1960s brick veneer house in Woolooware and a terrace in Newtown, he has several renovations on the go, all transpiring in hugely unique ways.

“They all involve significant additions and alterations to the existing fabric of each house,” says Christopher. “The particular pattern of development in the street and the strength found in the existing individual formal qualities of a building always define the parameters for a uniquely appropriate and differentiated design response for each project.”

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Haines House

While Christopher does acknowledge the fact that having your own firm comes with its economic challenges, being the sole driver of each design response far outweighs any negatives. “Having autonomy in the exploration of ideas and being master of your own design direction was, and still is, the overriding benefit of having your own firm.”

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Darling Point Penthouse

With business in no way slowing down, Christopher feels very fortunate to be in his position, though it’s certainly not something that’s come easy. Rather, he sees hard work as the key to his success, and would recommend all emerging designers get their hands dirty if they want to make it in the business. “My advice would be to work extremely hard, with an unwavering commitment and focus to achieving great outcomes!”

Categories
Expert Tips Homewares

Learn from textile queen Chrissie Jeffrey at the Sydney Craft & Quilt Fair this week

For those who can’t get enough of DIY, Chrissie Jeffrey from No Chintz is the person to talk to. A fabric designer and craft guru, she has spent 30 years in the business, and thanks to this week’s Sydney Craft & Quilt Fair, you get the chance to learn from the woman herself!

Chrissie Jeffreys
Chrissie Jeffrey

“I will be showing how anyone from novices to creative geniuses can turn humdrum living spaces into incredible rooms using DIY interiors, creative patchwork, curtains and wallpaper ideas,” explains Chrissie. She’ll also be hosting daily, 50-minute ‘Make & Take’ workshops, where you can create your own lampshade using a pre-made kit and your own fabrics or a choice of 10.

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Chrissie has created homewares and furniture for designers and architects for many decades, through her store, No Chintz Textiles and Soft Furnishings. Giving people retail access to well-designed fabrics off the roll as opposed to having to order them in through designers, No Chintz makes getting crafty a whole lot easier. They also offer goods to order, manufacturing anything from lampshades through to bed quilts, curtains and blinds.

However, one of the things Chrissie and her team are most known for is their new spin on patchwork, something that you will get the chance to hear more about at the fair. “We have been experimenting with patchwork on furniture since Vogue asked us to do a patchwork chair, curtains and tablecloth for them in 2007,” says Chrissie. “We love to piece together uneven, large pieces of assorted patterns. We have put together a kit for creating a blue/green quilt or a pink/cream quilt for the craft fair and online.”

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While Chrissie admits she sees far more bad DIY interiors than good ones, she believes that through her workshops even novices will be able to create something beautiful. “Visitors will learn how to make something well through the step-by-step processes that we use in manufacturing ourselves,” explains Chrissie. “These are simple projects that even inexperienced sewers and decorators can easily master, are cost-effective, visually interesting and can totally transform any room.”

Chrissie’s lampshade classes, Handmade Room display and wallpaper demonstrations will be amongst a host of other Make and Take classes and displays at the Sydney Craft & Quilt Fair this week.

From Wednesday 9 to Sunday 13 July, Sydney Exhibition Centre. Buy tickets here.

Categories
Interiors Addict

The winners of our Freedom Moore Park vignette challenge

I’m happy to announce the winners, as judged by me, of the Freedom Moore Park vignette styling challenge in store last week. They are:

First place: @imandhedhi wins a $300 Freedom voucher for this entry:

imandhedhi

Second place: @nicsrecast wins a $200 Freedom voucher for this entry:

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Third place: @christinasunario wins a $100 Freedom voucher for this entry:

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 A huge thank you to everyone who came along to the styling workshop on Thursday night and met our editorial assistant Olivia Shead and the Freedom team. And well done to all those who entered their vignettes in the competition.

Winners, please contact us with your mailing address to claim your prize.

7 Vignettes starts again on 1 July, my birthday! Details here. Jen x

Categories
Designers

Directory of Sydney’s top interior designers

Searching for Sydney’s many interior designers online, whether for your own home, a student design project or inspiration, can be a long and drawn out task, so we’ve done the hard work for you! Here you can find Sydney’s interior designers, organised alphabetically, with links to their websites, all on the same page. This list will be updated regularly and if you’d like to be added to it, please let us know using the link at the end.

A

Arent & Pyke

Arkhefield 

B

Bates Smart (also in Melbourne)

C

Christopher Polly Architect

Coco Republic

D

Darren Palmer Interiors

Debra Cronin

F

Fox Johnston

G

Greg Natale

H

Hare + Klein

HASSELL (offices in all major Australian cities)

I

Interni

J

Justine Hugh-Jones

K

Karanda Interiors

Karen Akers

L

Lenard Design Associates

M

Madeleine Blanchfield Architects

MCK Architecture + Interiors

N

North Shore Interiors

R

Renato D’Ettorre Architects Pty Ltd

S

Sarah Davison Interior Design

Shareen Joel Design

Stephen Collins Interior Design

SJB (also in Melbourne)

Smartspace Interiors

T

TFAD 

Thomas Hamel & Associates

TKD Architects (also in Brisbane)

Tobias Partners

Touch Interiors

Tribe Studio Architects

Tzannes Associates

V

Virginia Kerridge Architect

W

Woods Bagot (offices in major Australian cities)

 

This list is handpicked by the Interiors Addict team. Please do not contact us asking to be added or to pay to be added to it. Thank you!

Categories
Interiors Addict

Two Sydney sales for interiors addicts this week

I have news of two REALLY good sales for interiors addicts, so listen up! The first is the Pony Rider sale (they make the most awesome cushions mainly, and other cool homewares) starting tomorrow (Thursday) and the second is the AZB Creative (event styling extraordinaires, if you didn’t know) warehouse sale, starting Friday. Find all you need below and you can thank me later. Jen x

pony rider sale

azb sale

Happy bargain hunting!

Categories
Interiors Addict

West Elm joins forces with Etsy for Australian first pop-ups

Here at Interiors Addict we LOVE West Elm and Etsy, so we are pretty darn excited about them joining forces later this month! Get your diaries out now!

Pop-up event at West Elm
In an Australian first, West Elm will have their Sydney and Melbourne stores transformed into Etsy pop-up shops, giving customers the chance to track down and purchase unique and one of a kind pieces from local artisans. On Saturday 21 June from 1-to-6pm, a huge variety of products will be on offer from repurposed timber homewares, to skincare and paper goods.

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One of the Etsy sellers: House of Origin
Plant Skincare
One of the Etsy sellers: Plant Skincare

West Elm and Etsy have been collaborating with one another in the US since 2010, a venture that was pioneered by West Elm president Jim Brett. Identifying the demand for less mass-market products, he had a vision to inject authenticity and integrity into the West Elm product offering.

For Jim and the West Elm team, expanding the partnership to Australia was the obvious next step: “There’s this incredible crafts movement happening,” he says. “It’s the symbolisation of wanting to get back to a simpler time when you knew your shopkeeper and knew how and where your goods were made.”

The pop-up shops will be held at both West Elm Sydney: 472 Oxford St, Bondi Junction and West Elm Melbourne: 464 Chapel Street, South Yarra.

Read all about Jen’s recent trip to West Elm in London. West Elm is due to open a second Sydney store at Chatswood Chase and a second Melbourne store in Chadstone this August.

Categories
Furniture Homewares Travel

My visit to West Elm London

When West Elm UK asked me if I’d like to come and visit their first store in my motherland while I was in London, what do you reckon I said? YES! I went for my tour with the associate marketing manager Jessica Sims last week, where we argued about who was the bigger West Elm addict.

West Elm London, which opened a few months after Australia’s first Bondi store, is housed in a great old building on Tottenham Court Road, conveniently opposite Goodge Street tube. It’s perhaps competitively close to established UK homewares brands like Heal’s (it has a great cafe, incidentally) and Habitat, in what is an excellent part of town for an interiors addict after a spot of retail therapy.

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This fabulous window display brightened up the store on the grey and drizzly day I visited

The store, on two floors and with a huge green wall of living plants, is brilliantly styled (or merchandised as they say in the business). I love the Bondi store but this was something else. AND it has a cafe. Hello, two of my favourite things (West Elm and coffee) in the same place! There are plenty of friendly staff everywhere, including an in-house stylist ready to help customers in the Design Lab. No doubt this level of service is shaking things up in the UK homewares market.

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This fab marble coffee table is available in Australia too, for $699

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I of course wanted to walk out with one of everything. Especially this divine navy (of course) velvet couch (sadly not available in Australia). Yes, you should buy big ticket items in neutrals, but… And the herringbone coffee table is clearly magnificent! A side table version is available in Oz, if you’d like a piece of that mirrored action.

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I have already started making a shopping list ready for when I’m back in Australia and looking for my next home, and can visit the new Chatswood store. Hoorah!

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This visit reminded me just how much I heart West Elm. I remember once telling someone, if I was a brand, I’d be West Elm. (No really, Jess, I am the bigger West Elm addict…)

Here are four finds I saw in store which are available at home in Australia too (Bondi, Melbourne or online). Clockwise from top left: Paidge chair, $999;  Terrace side table, $329; Parquetry 3-drawer dresser, $1,299; leather stripe zipper cases, from $39.

west elm favouritesI also found out that West Elm are now doing wedding registries, in Australia too. I so would have considered that last year (but I used The Wedding Nest and they were amazing).

Categories
Interiors Addict

Urban Couture’s new showroom offers one-on-one service without the snobbery

Sponsored by Urban Couture

There’s no question that the internet is increasingly a game changer for all industries, not least interiors. It’s amazing the products and services we can sell online these days. But despite having an innovative and digitally brilliant online model, new business Urban Couture realise that there are some people who still want to touch and feel! That’s why they’ve just opened this gorgeous warehouse space in Sydney’s Ultimo.

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“We decided to open the showroom as it became evident that although the majority of Australians are increasingly confident to buy furniture online, there is still the need for people to “try before they buy”– in relation to seeing and touching the products before they purchase. This is common with our big ticket items such as beds and sofas where clients really want to test the comfort,” says creative director Katriarna Rodgers, a stylist and graphic designer. “We also felt that it is important that we have a beautiful creative space where clients can visit us, be inspired and receive a one-on-one design service.”

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Online, Urban Couture is both a homewares and furniture store, a place to create your own moodboards with their free tool Couture Boards, and a place to get free e-decorating advice. Katriarna runs the business with Tom Towhidi who, with a background in accounting and law, looks after the logistics, legal and financial side of things.

Katriarna and Tom
Katriarna and Tom

The showroom is a converted warehouse and former wool factory. It’s open to anyone, but Urban Couture have made it by appointment only so they can give everyone a specialised, one-on-one service. They hope to avoid the snobby and unfriendly feel of some high end showrooms and will even be offering customers a glass of wine or a cup of tea: “A process that in our opinion always helps you to relax and decide what it is that you really need!”

Katriarna believes it is thanks to shows like The Block and House Rules, and online inspiration from design blogs and Pinterest, that the general public are increasingly interested in interiors and excited to have a go themselves. While there is still a perception that professional design advice is only for the very wealthy, Urban Couture are trying to make it more accessible by offering free e-decorating to their online homewares customers. “E-decorating is simply an avenue for us to understand our clients’ needs, in order to deliver tailor made design and decoration which works for them and importantly, represents their personal style.”

“One of our goals is to make great international design more accessible to the consumer, no matter where you live or what your budget. We want to continue doing what we love by traveling the world and bringing new and inspiring furniture and homewares to Australia. We hope to play a big part in changing the perception of buying furniture and homewares online, by showing customers that choosing furniture and homewares for their homes can be simplified and enjoyable for them through effective and efficient customer service. Further, by offering a one stop shop and design service, we hope that customers will be in a position to enjoy the process, rather than being faced with the task of searching tirelessly around shopping malls on the weekends and wasting their valuable time.”

Shop online or make a showroom appointment.

Categories
Covet my coffee table

Covet my coffee table: with stylist Mr Jason Grant

“We have a few little coffee tables we use together as a little collection. You will find books (Monocle) and magazines (a mix of interior and fashion) a Palm Beach/Blacklist Daisy candle, crystals, Sophia our Boston terrier’s new lead from Best in Park, a gold dish from Crate and Barrel and a copy of my book manuscript.”

mjg coffee table

We love how relaxed and real MJG’s coffee table is! His second book, Away at Home, published by Hardie Grant, is out in September.

Check out all our other featured coffee tables here.

Photo by Lauren Bamford
Photo by Lauren Bamford
Categories
Designers Interviews

James Dawson’s award-winning edgy apartment, inspired by all things Parisian

James Dawson is still on a high from last week’s win. James Dawson Interior Design came home with the Best of State – Residential (Queensland), at the Australian Interior Design Awards (AIDA) as well as a commendation for Residential Decoration.

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“I entered the awards on a reluctant whim,” says James. “And to be listed with those that have been in the industry much longer than me, that on its own was a huge thrill. Considering the experience of the judging panel and the high standard of entries, it was a great professional achievement in the eyes of my industry.”

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Marine Parade Apartment

It’s no surprise James’s Marine Parade Apartment was a winner; avant-garde in design and inspired by all things Parisian, it is sophisticated but risky and that’s exactly how James likes to design. “My niche is my ability to create spaces that require risk-taking and conviction,” he explains. “Even if the client doesn’t always see it at first, they love it in the end! It’s a self-confidence and belief.”

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Marine Parade Apartment

A risk taker not just in interiors, he rocked a black custom kilt, jimmy high tops and a tuxedo shirt for the AIDA gala night! James’ dream project would be to create a space for Bjork. He is inspired by all things music, fashion and architecture and definitely marks them as influences for the change in his practice: “My style has been evolving recently, it was light and playful but after the recent project I feel I have found a new style, more sophisticated and moody.”

New projects will soon be added to this list, with James currently working on a riverfront penthouse in Brisbane’s St Lucia, a residence in Sydney’s Neutral Bay and, fingers crossed, a commercial space he is currently in negotiations for.

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Marine Parade Apartment

Working in residential, commercial and hospitality, James started James Dawson Interiors in late 2012. With a team of three, he is based in Brisbane and will be adding a Sydney office to the mix in August this year. Starting his own firm has had its challenges, but he says having patience has been the key to his success. “The challenges of starting your own practice, from my experience, were finding the right people to surround myself with, getting a good balance between work and home life and having the right clients that have confidence in me and my ability. All of these things take time, so have patience.”

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Studio 23

Though for James, the benefits far outweigh any initial teething problems: “You get such a variety of work each day and work with interesting and creative people. There’s a sense of freedom.”

A lover of mixing materials, textures and finishes, James first found his love for interiors when, at 20, he started flipping properties. From there, he dabbled in a number of different industries before settling down for a life as an interior designer.

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Springwood Residence

For James, interior design is all about self-expression, finding your own place and style in the industry and realising that the design world is big enough for everyone!

Categories
Designers Expert Tips Interviews The Block

Meet Block judges Neale and Darren this weekend

The Home, Food & Wine Festival starts today in Sydney and it’s your chance to meet two of The Block judges, Neale Whitaker and Darren Palmer. We asked Neale why you should go along and couldn’t help but ask him for some interiors tips too…

Belle's Neale Whitaker
Belle’s Neale Whitaker

Why should people attend the Home, Food & Wine Weekend?

Because it’s an unparalleled opportunity to get up close and personal with the editors and experts from Australia’s favourite magazines!

What events will you be involved in?

I’m hosting a session on behalf of Natuzzi Italia tomorrow (Saturday 24 May) at 3pm to talk room planning. Our special guest is my good mate and fellow The Block judge Darren Palmer. And on Sunday (25 May) at 11.30am I’ll be hosting a session on behalf of Smeg to discuss new trends and directions in kitchen design.

What are some of the latest kitchen trends?

Mixing natural materials like wood and steel or wood and marble with laminates, soft-close features and integrated technology, and tiled and decorative splashbacks. It’s an interesting mix of the raw and rustic with hi-tech!

What are some tricks for optimising the design of a kitchen?

No tricks. Just planning, planning and planning. Kitchens are a big investment and you need to be realistic about your own needs, with one eye on resale. Kitchens sell houses, as my friend (real estate guru) John McGrath always says. Priorities should be abundant storage, integrated appliances and if there is space, a work/study area is a real luxury in a kitchen.

What are some of your biggest tips when it comes to renovating or re-doing a room?

I’m going to quote Darren here as it’s his specialist area: “Get references, gather samples, shop with your phone and check all of your measurements twice!” There’s more, but you’ll have to come along on Saturday to find out! It makes a huge difference too whether you’re renovating for yourself or for resale.

The Home Food & Wine Show, today, tomorrow and Sunday, Westfield Bondi Junction. More details.

 

Categories
Furniture Homewares

Loft Furniture and Other Ideas: French industrial meets Scandi

When Prune and Mark Lewinsohn left France to move to Australia, they left behind a successful business, Karma Creative Living. A chain of 10 stores, the brand was known for its modern ethnic and exotic style of furniture and homewares, yet it was a style that Prune didn’t believe was synonymous with the Australian way of life.

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“When we moved to Sydney it presented us with an opportunity to take a step back and think about and develop a new concept,” she explains. “Here Loft Furniture and Other Ideas was born, a mix of French industrial and Scandinavian looks, perfectly suited to the more relaxed Australian way of life.”

Since its conception, Loft has gone from strength to strength, with retail stores in Clovelly and Mudgee, a showroom/store in Kogarah and an online store that delivers Australia wide. A carefully curated collection of furniture and homewares, the products are a mix of pieces that they’ve sourced, designed themselves or modified according to style.

With a magnitude of stock, new collections are always being added, most recently lights and textiles and an upcoming stools and chairs collection. “”What’s most exciting is our new stools and chairs collection, which will be available in July. During our last trip to France we bought a heap of old school and bistro chairs that inspired us to redesign, adding new colours and materials.”

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Apart from stocking such high quality versatile pieces, one of the reasons Loft Furniture and Other Ideas’ products are so desirable, is because of their beautiful photography, which is all done in-house. “We are lucky to have a freestanding warehouse in Kogarah,” says Prune. “It is a large, open space with original floorboards and industrial features, authentic and perfect for photographing the Loft look. Depending on what we are going to shoot, we decide on the style and feel we want to give the images and then we bring our special team in to style and photograph.”

They include their preferred stylist Sophie Thé and photographer Trent Blackmore, who along with Prune and Mark, collaborate to create styled shots, with the end result being rooms sets many would love to live in!

Inspired by all things design, Prune is always keeping an eye out on what’s happening in France, the Nordic countries and here in Australia, bringing it all together to create their unique mix of styles.

Categories
Interviews Travel

Kevin McCloud: my house is shambolic and autobiographical

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Jen interviews Kevin McCloud in London

My scheduled chat with Kevin McCloud in London was delayed by a mere five hours due to his non-stop schedule but he was, of course, worth the wait. The inimitable Grand Designs host arrived with some new sustainable materials made from old air bags and car tyres, capable of making furniture. “This stuff is going to change the world,” he tells me, excitedly. And I think it’s this infectious enthusiasm which is one of the things which makes him so likeable on TV.

A regular visitor to our shores for Grand Designs Live Australia the past three years, Kevin is amazed by and grateful for his popularity on the other side of the world, with more people watching the show in Oz than in the UK. He has a real fondness for the country and its people, telling me the story of how he almost was Australian (his parents had tickets booked but then found out his mother was pregnant with him and decided not to go).

“It’s actually amazing how popular the show is in Australia,” he says, joking that some of the re-runs are so old he has a lot more hair in them. “I’m very, very grateful. Here, Grand Designs is successful and everything else I do is two-thirds as successful. In Australia, Grand Designs is even more successful and everything else I do is just as successful too.”

Kevin, who was appointed MBE (Member of the Order of the British Empire) for services to sustainability in this year’s New Year’s Honours list, says he’s seen more passion in the decoration of houses in parts of Melbourne than he has in the UK. “I’ve probably seen more delight and wonder in Sydney and Melbourne than I have here.” He’s been blown away by Queenslanders (the houses) in Brisbane and loves how the architecture can be so different between states and territories, but always uniquely Australian due to our climate. “I’m really fond of some of the 19th Century and early 20th Century stuff, ” he says.

So, what is Kevin’s own home like? “It’s as shambolic, autobiographical, worn around the edges and unplanned as anybody else’s in truth! You and I know that the rooms we see in mags are highly engineered to meet the demographic and advertisers of that mag. Sometimes I look at those homes with a single pineapple in a bowl on the side and think where’s their toaster?! When we’re filming for the show, I always prefer the homes which are a little more shambolic, they’re more interesting.”

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If Kevin was invited into your home he’d probably go straight to your library (if you’re lucky enough to have one) or bookcase (more likely), which he believes gives a great snapshot of someone’s life.

I couldn’t resist asking him how he deals with being an unlikely sex symbol, to which he joked it was a but a myth touted by journalists like me. I think we all know that isn’t true! Certainly not judging by the number of readers who tell me otherwise… “Nobody’s ever thrown their knickers at me anyway, ” he adds.

Kevin McCloud Grand Designs Live London

I was lucky enough to meet Kevin a couple of years ago at a media dinner in Melbourne. I can vouch for him being a thoroughly charming, polite, fun, clever and interesting man. He’s exactly as he seems on the telly! I totally meant to tell him that my husband and I watch an old episode of Grand Designs most nights before bed but I’m not even sure that’s a good thing…

Thanks to Grand Designs Live London and Publicasity for orginaising my interview with Kevin.