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Interiors Addict

Order custom textiles online from Ink & Spindle

Melbourne’s Ink & Spindle have launched a new website which allows retail and trade customers to fully tailor their own high quality, sustainable, hand screenprinted textiles to suit their own special project. All of this online from the comfort of their home or office!

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Via an extremely simple, easy-to-use visual interface, customers can select from a range of sustainable basecloths and ink colours and apply them to their favourite design. Co-owner Lara Cameron says the biggest challenge for clients making custom orders previously, was being able to visualise the final product. 

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Interiors Addict

Twofold: Textiles from around the globe, curated by an Australian in America

Jessica Warner, an Australian living in the States, is curating great textiles from around the world and selling them online.

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With a lifelong love of traditional craftsmanship, Jessica launched an online store so she could make her favourite textiles available to everyone. Twofold offers a huge selection of soft furnishings and textiles by the likes of Holly Berry from the UK, Zoe Wall and Sally Campbell from Australia, RosenbergCph from Denmark, Comma Workshop, South Street Linen and Proud Mary from the US, Rumisu from Turkey, and Nuno from Japan. If you want something beautiful that everyone else hasn’t got, take a look!

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Interiors Addict

Billy Heckenberg: a great new cushion brand from Sydney’s Northern Beaches

I love discovering new, independent, local brands, and Billy Heckenberg is certainly one of those! How great are these zippered cushions? They’re designed to look like they’re drawn with texta that’s not quite filled in between the lines!

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Maddy Duggan is the woman behind them, and she told me how the brand is in fact named after her great grandfather, William Heckenberg. Family’s important to her and she grew up on Sydney’s Northern Beaches, surrounded by creativity and encouragement. “An obsession with art, design and photography throughout my life led me to complete a degree in Fine Arts at UNSW College of Fine Arts. From this point on, you could be sure to find me sitting at a sewing machine or with a paintbrush in hand, in a constant quest for creative fulfilment.”

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Homewares Interviews

Mrs Darcy’s Kellie Collis: the stylish girl behind a stylish brand

Funky florals and pretty patterns, all with a healthy splash of colour, is a good description of Mrs Darcy’s range of cushions, textiles and other assorted treats.

Kellie Collis

Kellie Collis is the stylish mastermind behind the growing brand. Although she comes from a corporate background (you’d never know it to look at this fashionista!), Kellie has always had a passion for textiles and design, it just took a while for her to realise she could pursue it as a career. Over time, my desire and interest in forging a business out of my passion for this industry blossomed, and here I am!” 

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Furniture

Mr & Mrs White, marrying handmade furniture and textiles

The name says it all for boutique textiles and furniture company Mr & Mrs White, run by husband and wife Nathan and Sasha. They create gorgeous pieces for the home: Mr White takes care of the furniture, Mrs White of the textiles.

Sasha White
Sasha White
Nathan White swapped boat building for furniture building
Nathan White swapped boat building for furniture building

Sasha and Nathan didn’t always plan on working together, however. Nathan has a background in boat building, completing an apprenticeship as a shipwright. His fondness for working with timber started from a young age, spending afternoons in his Pop’s workshop making wooden shoeboxes. He moved from boat building to cabinetry, then began making furniture. Sasha meanwhile, majored in graphic design, but found herself craving an outlet that didn’t involve a computer screen. “My nan bought me a secondhand sewing machine and I fell in love with the ability to create with my hands.” Later came the lightbulb moment and realisation they could build a business together. 

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Interiors Addict

Today I’m loving Mrs Darcy’s florals

If you don’t already know about the Mrs Darcy label, you need to! Their range of cushions, textiles, table linen and candles are the ultimate in girly goodness!

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So many pretties! They’re all available from Sydney-based online store Ada & Darcy.

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Interiors Addict

Studio Bonnie sisters tell stories in their textiles

Sisters-in-law Aura Parker and Marena Von Behr teamed up to create Studio Bonnie. Passionate about colour, design and beautiful fabrics, they create whimsical textile designs of intricate detail with a sense of storytelling.

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While Marena studied interior design and Aura studied multimedia and web design, textiles is Studio Bonnie’s forte. For Marena, “going from selecting fabrics, to designing fabrics seemed a logical progression” and their shared love of drawing is where they really come together.

It was a love of “all things creative” that initially made the two click as well. Soon after meeting through Marena’s brother, Aura and Marena exhibited together, took a liking to each other’s work and pretty quickly decided to band together.

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Interiors Addict

One off homewares, from India and Melbourne by Shakiraaz

From one backyard studio in Melbourne – and a few in India – come the beautiful textiles that make up homewares brand, Shakiraaz. The collection of rich and colourful handprinted, painted and woven pieces are a combination of owner Shakira Lima’s designs and others by creatives she finds during trips back home to India

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Both her parents were artists and her mother’s “sense of mixing old and new, sketching and painting” started her love for homewares early on. Even while studying a genetics degree, Shakira’s artistic inclination stuck, leading her to study textile design. “I’ve always gravitated towards art, design and beautiful things,” she says.

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Interiors Addict

Nina Maya swaps fashion for interior design

Nina Maya isn’t new to the design business. For five years she worked as a designer for her own fashion label, which was stocked at Myer and worn by the likes of Jennifer Hawkins and Cate Blanchett. Yet it was while travelling in 2011 that Nina’s passion changed direction from fashion to interiors.

Nina Maya

I was living in London at the time and was lucky enough to spend some time travelling around the south of France. During these travels I became so inspired by all the incredible design museums and grand homes that it seemed like a natural progression… it utilised a lot of the same skills in colour and print.”

And so Nina Maya Interiors was born. Putting to use her studies in textile and design at the College of Fine Arts in Sydney, as well as skills learned while training at Owens & Co, an East London textile firm, Nina quickly found a knack for interiors and textile design.

Nina's latest commercial project, The Paddington Inn
Nina’s latest commercial project, The Paddington Inn

My focus is entirely on interiors now. I loved designing fashion but really enjoy applying my ideas, colours and prints to a much bigger canvas. Designing interiors allows you to be much more free and less restrictive as long as you have an open minded client who is willing to explore new territory with you.”

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Interiors Addict

Deco Glamour collection is very Great Gatbsy

I’ve always loved all things Art Deco but the imminent release of THAT Great Gatsby movie (have you seen the trailers? It looks magnificent in every way!) has me loving it even more. And no doubt we’ll see a resurgence of all things Art Deco in fashion and homewares very soon.

Grace Garrett Deco Glamour wallpaper blue

The latest Grace Garrett Deco Glamour collection at Emily Zizz is positively swoon-worthy! This is just a small selection from the huge range of patterns and colourways available in wallpaper, fabric, cushions and lampshades, and, eventually, rugs. Geometric shapes and patterns are already being seen everywhere in interiors this year, so the Art Deco look fits very nicely. Maybe it’s time to bring back symmetry? Are you a fan of these patterns?

Grace Garrett fabric Deco Glamour

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Interiors Addict

Bonnie and Neil move into bed linen, ceramics and rugs in latest collection

Yes, yes, I love Bonnie and Neil, and so do you, judging by the flurry of comments every time I post a photo on Instagram with my pink B&N tablecloth in shot! So of course I’m delighted they’ve expanded their cheerful range into bed linen, ceramics and rugs. Surely every room in your home could benefit from a little colour when it looks this good?

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The designs are immediately recognisable as Bonnie and Neil but they’ve changed up some colours (more orange then pink this year and a lot of indigo blue, which I love too) and patterns to keep it fresh.

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The plates take on last year’s popular Water Colour design in black, pink and blue. Throws, bolster cushions and pillowcases have been added in their move into the bedroom.

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Interiors Addict

Florence Broadhurst patterns reborn as bed linen

Florence Broadhurst the Cranes bed linen

Legendary design maven Florence Broadhurst’s legacy of patterning has now been translated into beautiful dressings for the bedroom. The first ever collection of Florence Broadhurst bed linen and coordinating accessories features some of her best known designs. The Cranes, Kabuki, Chinese Key and Japanese Floral all feature.

Each quilt cover set, European and square cushion is uniquely printed with pearlised inks laid across 100 percent cotton sateen.

Florence Broadhurst Matelasse Coverlet

Florence herself loved to lavishly mismatch colour and pattern (as this collection allows), and many items have a contrasting reverse pattern for versatility. There are textured, appliqued, quilted, sequined, embroidered, pearlised and metallic finishes to coverlets, a variety of cushions, quilted throws and pillowshams.

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Interviews

An interview with Bonnie and Neil

Bonnie and Neil have achieved a bit of a cult following for their fabulous homewares. THAT fluro pink watercolour table cloth was everywhere (including my table) last year.

I chatted with with one half of the Melbourne duo, Bonnie Ashley. She’s a textile designer whose partner, Neil Downie, is a carpenter. Their two very different skill sets have come together to create a homewares range that features both timber boxes and tea towels and somehow works perfectly!

Neil Downie and Bonnie Neil
Neil Downie and Bonnie Neil

“We’ve worked together (outside our day jobs) for a long time, so looking back, it seems it’s always been obvious to us,” says Bonnie. “It’s just happened naturally. We officially started in February 2010, putting together the range to launch in August that year.”

Bonnie says working with Neil is really fantastic! “It’s great having complementary but different skills – it helps us look at things from different viewpoints. We don’t need to explain things too much to each other, so we work quickly.”

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Interiors Addict

“I’ve been putting sticks, stones and shells on cushions for years,” says Bandhini’s Tai Schaffler

Maybe it’s the fact that she was once a journalist that makes Bandhini Homewear Design’s Tai Schaffler such a good interviewee. Or maybe it’s as simple as her passion for her business and the dying crafts of the people who hand make her products.

As an 18 year old, “small town Kiwi girl” Tai got a scholarship to study in Thailand, and her love affair with textiles began. “I would drive the other students nuts, fossiking through the Jim Thompson Silk stores. God I loved that silk! Still do,” she tells me. Her writing life started as a Christchurch correspondent for More Magazine.

She left journalism when Geraldine Sethi offered her a job in Perth to re-market and refurb her fashion business, Asaan. With a toddler and her husband in tow, Tai relocated to Perth and started traveling to India with her new boss. “I was hooked on textiles,” says Tai. “Not clothes but cloth for homes.” It wasn’t long before she saw the potential to open her own home textiles label.

These days she heads up Bandhini, now in its 20th year. Key to its success has been the longstanding relationship between the Schafflers and another family, in India. “I met Sangetta and Yuvraj Narain when I worked for Asaan and they were doing a stunning clothing collection called KALAKARI,” says Tai. “We were totally on the same wavelength of quality, cultural and handmade soft furnishings. That was it, I wasn’t going anywhere else! I adore them.”

Both families’ children have now have joined the business, with Tai’s son Sharm and the Narains’ sons Sharan and Karan, heading up the team in the USA. “They have finally got our gusto!” says Tai. “I think they are more business orientated than us. The next generation take it to the next level. They want to keep it on the same page ethically though, that’s important.”

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Interiors Addict

Rapee to launch Florence Broadhurst textiles

Home textiles label Rapee has collaborated with Signature Prints to release a Florence Broadhurst collection, available in June.

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The collection will be available in five stories and a number of colourways, which will extend throughout outdoor, indoor living and dining and kitchen and will be centred on 11 archival prints. The designs will be printed on premium fabrics using various techniques like silk jacquards, embroideries on cotton and foil prints on linen. 

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Homewares Interviews

Talking pineapples with The Brown Trading Co’s Keren Brown

I’m a big fan of The Brown Trading Co’s colourful, sunny homewares. If you didn’t know they were Queensland based you could probably guess, with their tropical designs featuring pineapples and cockatoos and their bright yet sophisticated, on-trend collections. Once I knew they were about to release navy pineapple cushions (a combination of three of my favourite things!) I decided we were kindred spirits and decided I needed to find out more.

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Interiors Addict

Online 3D chair designer launches today

My Bespoke Chair claims to be the world’s first 3D online chair design studio.

British/Dutch artist Emma Veiga‐Malta, who has a studio in Sydney’s Mosman, founded My Bespoke Chair as a natural progression from the parent company Bespoke Art. While creating tailor‐made art and fabrics, she had many clients request specific and unusual fabric combinations for their upholstery. With the internet streamlining business, and the increasing upholstery work at Bespoke Art, Emma put two and two together and created My Bespoke Chair.

“It captures the zeitgeist of social, online shopping and mobile, smart technologies. We have developed an online “point and click” tool which gives the customer total design freedom,” says Emma. “All our fabric designs start life as hand painted art, designed in‐house. The fabrics are exclusively ours, printed in limited runs, ensuring that every chair is a work of art.”

The customer chooses a chair style, then scrolls through the collection of fabrics and selects all the chair’s upholstered elements in any combination. They can spin the chair 360 degrees to view their design from every angle.

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Interiors Addict

Help craft a colourful opening for new cloth store

cloth fabric has just moved into the ex-Ferrari showroom in Darlinghurst and owner Julie Paterson is putting on a crafty show for its opening by Lord Mayor Clover Moore.

With wraparound floor to ceiling windows and a leafy, accessible courtyard out the front, the new space is perfect for the community projects cloth has planned for Spring. Upcycling workshops with the City of Sydney, a guerrilla style public knit-punk project and craft hangouts with Google+ are all on the agenda.

The new cloth shop will be officially opened on Wednesday 29 August at 6pm by Clover Moore and Steve Pozel from Object Gallery. Julie is looking for helpers to help make the area look as crafty and colourful as possible and has been very busy herself, painting the RTA box for one thing!

But she’d love more crafty goodness to hang from the trees at the opening and really put on a show. Bring your knitted squares to dress the trees, your crocheted scarves to accessorise bike racks, your bunting to garland the lamp posts and your pom poms for street jewellery

If you can help, please take along old scarves, pom poms or pieces of knitting to the shop between 11am and 4pm tomorrow! For more information and an invitation to the event, email [email protected].

Pom poms made from cloth fabric ready to decorate!

cloth fabric | 113 – 115 William Street | Darlinghurst 2010 | 02 9699 2266