The Design Files Daily

Monthly Archives: August 2009

New things at Five Boroughs

The new counter area at Five Boroughs – designed and built by owners Steph and Kyle

New set-up… love that perforated screen behind the counter area… also how cute are those hand-printed gift cards and wrapping paper?

These vintage cabinets were re-worked by Kyle to turn them into shop display-cases – he added glass tops and drawers to display Five Borough’s unique range of jewellery and industrial nik-naks.

I’ve posted about the fabulous Five Boroughs before… this gorgeous little shop is owned and run by young designers Stephanie Fleming and partner Kyle De Kuijer. This super-creative pair also create screenprinted textiles for their soft furnishings range Holly Daze on site at the back of their shop.

Steph and Kyle share a 1950′s-inspired aesthetic and much of their creative output reflects their passion for this era… they’re also an extraordinarily prolific creative team, whose talents perfectly complement one another. Day to day, Steph takes care of most of the buying for Five Boroughs, whilst Kyle’s skills are in graphic design and serious DIY! – he takes care of most of the store’s signage and shop fit-out stuff. Look at the beautiful signs hand-painted by Kyle below! Such attention to detail! Love it.

Hand-painted signs by Kyle. Yes hand-painted!

Recently Kyle and Steph also shrank their back workshop area to make way for even more retail space… if you haven’t visited recently you must check it out! They also bought some fantastically wacky modular glass shelving for the window (pictures below), which they found at an old shoe store which was closing down in Williamstown. Isn’t it perfect? Lucky!

Re-purposed glass shelving soiurced from an old shoe shop in Williamstown.

Artwork by American artist Barry McGee

Holly Daze cushions

Love these little vintage letters everywhere! Steph and Kyle scour ebay for vintage finds from the USA… maybe this is why Five Boroughs always looks so unique and very different from other Melbourne stores! The ‘Pancake Zoo’ hand-made resin brooches (top image) are $18 each and are by Japan-based designer Shawn Chen. The ceramic NY coffee cups are $25 each.

LOVE the ‘Holly Daze’ lettering in the workshop! Inspired by California’s ‘Hollywood’ sign (of course!). I Also love Kyle’s mural on the back wall… which he insists isn’t finished (apparently the orange needs another coat? I think it looks awesome).

Steph and Kyle name their screenprinting inks after American 1950′s cars? I think? Must admit this is not my strongpoint… but allegedly ‘Berty’, ‘Goblin’ and ‘Chevy Mauve’ will have significance to any vintage car enthusiasts!

Check out Steph’s amazing vintage key ring collection displayed in the workshop!! Awesome or what? It’s an ongoing project…. they just add more rows as more keyrings are discovered!

Thanks so much to Kyle and Steph for letting me photograph their workshop and store… You can check out their blog for all Five Boroughs news! And stay tuned next week for a peek into Steph and Kyle’s lovely home! It is tiny, but seriously gorgeous. VERY excited.

Five Boroughs

345 Lygon st

East Brunswick

3057

Tues – Sat 11.00am – 6.00pm
Sun – 11.00am – 5.00pm

Behind the scenes at The Australian Ballet

Behind the scenes photos by Teagan Glenane.

In recent weeks I have been very fortunate to have struck up a relationship with the Australian Ballet… you may have noticed that their current show, Concord, is sponsoring my site at the moment, and I was lucky enough also to receive some tickets to opening night last Friday! How lovely is that?! Thankyou so much Kate and Kitty at the Aus Ballet! It was a truly inspiring and very eclectic show, and I felt so special to be there!

ANYWAY I am actually not writing to plug Concord… (although it was amazing!) instead I feel compelled to draw your attention again to the incredible Behind Ballet blog… I know I’ve mentioned it before but it is just so well put together I just can’t recommend it enough! So many large companies and cultural organisations try and do the ‘behind the scenes’ blog thing and it just doesn’t work – I guess because so often it is not properly planned, curated and prioritised. Not so with the Behind Ballet blog! This is an absolute treasure trove of stunning behind the scenes photographs, profiles on all the beautiful dancers, videos, and more. Some of the absolute gems to be discovered over there at the moment include :

- Incredible behind-the-scenes videos of the dancers and choreographers rehearsing Concord, and discussing this challenging performance. These videos are so amazing! It’s utterly mesmerising watching the dancers in their rehearsal environment, concentrating so hard to master each dance. It’s also really interesting to see the dancers in a new light… and to see them as real people….!

The video above documents rehearsals for the ultra-contemporary Dyad 1929. Also do check out this other beautiful video documenting the more traditional and very entertaining Suola di Ballo (both works are part of Concord).

From the Scuola di Ballo video by Melbourne filmmakers The Apiary. Top – Choreographer Alexei Ratmansky. Bottom – dancer Dana Stephenson.

The Behind Ballet videos are by super-talented young Melbourne filmmakers Gavin Youngs and Lily Coates – aka The Apiary.

- A peek into the costume / set department - a world of mannequins, metres and metres of beautiful textiles, and a collection of Phillipe Starck Ghost Chairs…! photographs by Teagan Glenane.

The Australian Ballet’s scenic designer Scott Matthewson at work. Photo – Teagan Glenane.


Costume department details. Photo – Teagan Glenane.

Do pop over and check it out… I know nothing about dance at all and I could easily lose myself for hours in the Behind Ballet blog!

ps. Also I have a major girl crush on dancer Dana Stephenson. She is too gorgeous for words. Hee! I think it was those lovely videos… ;) Get your own Australian Ballet crush here.

Dana Stephenson rehearses.

Sesame Magazine

All images from Sesame Magazine issue 7. Photo – Thuy Vy, Styling – Nadia Barbaro

Photo – Thuy Vy, Styling – Nadia Barbaro

Photo – Germain McMicking and Thuy Vy, Styling – Nadia Barbaro

Do you know about Sesame Magazine? Sesame is an online magazine published by the super talented, incredibly driven Nadia Barbaro, who I happened to go to uni with many moons ago! By day, Nadia works as a wardrobe stylist in TV-land…. but in her own time Nadia co-ordinates all the content for Sesame Magazine, styling many of the photo shoots herself, not to mention managing all the other behind the scenes stuff like pulling in models, photographers, contributors etc. It’s a HUGE task and one I can totally relate to! Great work Nadia!

The current issue of Sesame was launched only last week – it’s full of glorious eye candy and lots of local talent… including contributions from previous Design Files interviewees Beci Orpin and photographer Louisa Bailey. It’s fantastically curated I have to say – the perfect mix of slick fashion shots, cutsie illustration, interviews, interactive snippets (you get to ‘colour in’ a Beci Orpin drawing!), and even a splash of carefully edited video and animated content!

Beci Orpin’s ‘Colour Me’ illustration! Fun!

And, oh yeah, there’s an interiew with me in there too! Ha ha. Go to the ‘blogs we love’ section to check it out!


Please pop over and visit Sesame Magazine issue 7!

…and stay tuned for an interview with Nadia B soon!

Interview – Dawn Tan

Artist Dawn Tan in her VCA studio space
All illustrations/artworks here by Dawn Tan

Dawn Tan loves sandwiches so much she made this super-cute zine about it! You can buy one here for only $6.50!!

Mmmmm cheese sandwich.

I have to thank gorgeous Ebony Bizys of Hello Sandwich for introducing me to the beautiful work of Melbourne artist / illustrator Dawn Tan! Thanks Ebony!! Dawn’s smudgy watercolours with delicate inky outlines are so engaging and so beautiful… and I adore her everyday subject matter – food and commercial packaging! Never has a Neutrogena foam cleansing product looked so lovely!

I also LOVE all Dawn’s super-cute responses to my questions below! They made me giggle more than once as I put this interview together… It’s not hard to pick up on Dawn’s infectious energy and her love of good food! I was so excited to hear that her dream project would be to create an enormous human-height book filled with illustrations of pancakes, sandwichs, cakes, danishes and hot chocolates :) Awesome!

It was also extremely funny also to hear how Dawn’s boyfriend tricked her into consuming ridiculous amounts of food during her ‘All in a Day’s Worth’ project, in which she painted every single item she consumed in one day. He did it just so she had to draw more items! Ha ha! Cheeky!

Anyway enough of my babbling… read on for a very entertaining insight into the work of Singaporean-born, Melbourne-based artist and VCA art student Dawn Tan! Also be sure to visit her sweet blog and online shop to nab yourself one of her gorgeous little zines! ($6.50! – Hello!? What else can you buy for $6.50?)

Thanks so much for your time and all the beautiful images Dawn!!

Tell me a little about your background – what path led you to what you’re doing now?

Hello! I come from a tiny little country called Singapore. I was doing a design diploma back then when I decided to try my hand at becoming a part-time teacher, teaching art to kids at a little Japanese art studio. I relished the idea of being a designer and having to meet clients and all, but the rushing of deadlines and working in front of a computer all of my day wasn’t exciting me much. Instead, I found my part-time art teaching job to be more fun and engaging! Spending a lot of my time painting with kids, filling my hands with clay, paper collages, etc just made me realize how I really love the whole hands-on physical aspect of art. I spent a lot of time in the studio, just painting and learning from my colleagues who were all established Japanese artists. They taught me a lot when I was there. I was teaching yet learning at the same time! Just the thought of having my hands stained with paints after a long day at the easel, simply made me happy. And everything just kind of took off from there! And soon after, I decided to pack my bags and go for what I really love doing, and that’s to paint. I enrolled and got into The Victorian College Of The Arts/VCA and here I am, in Melbourne, schooling and exploring new stuff everyday, and I’ve been painting ever since!


Your work looks familiar! Where have we seen your drawings before…? (ie which publications, ads or exhibitions have featured your work?)

The wonderful Ebony Bizys from Hello Sandwich did a feature on me before, and so have a few other bloggers around the blog world. The blogging community is awesome! We bloggers share good art and crafts with each other. It’s great that way!


What have been some of your favourite drawings, special projects or collaborations?

It has definitely got to be my ‘All In A Day’s Worth’ project! I basically drew and painted every single item I used in just one day and made it into a little book, which I later turned into a zine! It was oh so super much fun because my boyfriend, after knowing what the project was all about, decided to trick me into consuming so much food, just so to make me draw even more items! It was crazy! Haha. I had to be true to the project and not cheat. So I drew them all! I couldn’t stop painting because of my fantastic amount of consumed items. It was such a silly, crazy but funny project and I had so much fun. So it was all worth it.

PS: You can buy this zine of mine from my online shop over at handmadelove.bigcartel.com


Where do you turn for inspiration – nature, travel, books, magazines or the web etc?

Quaint Cafes! I don’t quite know why but I think it’s always the food and smells that inspires me and makes me think harder about more exciting projects. Other than that, I’d say Nature. When I first arrived in Melbourne, I’d walk an hour to school each day and back, and along the way, I’d pick rocks, twigs that came in funny shapes, leaves, just tiny nature bits really. These sort of stuff serves as an inspiration to a lot of my work. And I really like going to the David Jones Food Hall, just to look at beautiful food packaging. I love packaging!



Which designers, artists or creative people do you admire?

Catherine Campbell’s sweet girls never fail to make me smile. Sarah Mcneil’s fantastic pencil drawn girls and animals, Laith Mcgregor’s biro men, and of course, Edward Ruscha’s text works. But you know what’s my all-time favourite? Quentin Blake! He’s my favourite!

What does a typical day at work involve for you?

I spend most of my weekdays in school, in my studio working on my own self-driven projects. I am the sort who likes having 7 projects on the go, all at the same time. I’d spend some time on each and hop from project to project. This way, it helps me to make sure I don’t get stuck on one project for too long, which is not a good thing because I get bored and my ideas run dry.


What would be your dream creative project?

To be able to create a giant (human-height) full-coloured illustrated book! Filled with all the food, pancakes, sandwiches, cakes, danishes and hot chocolates, I’ve tasted from different lovely cafes around in Melbourne. You see, I really love just sitting and painting in cafes. There’s always something new to discover, be it the people, smell or even new items on the menu!

What are you looking forward to?

To start on my dream-creative project after I finish my current project. Haha! I’m in the midst of making a tiny tippi tent out of fabrics patch-worked together. And also, I would really love for the day to come when I start showing in Melbourne galleries. Or galleries around in Australia would be awesome too! I’m hoping a chance would pop up soon! Just the thought of it excites me!

Melbourne Questions

Where do you shop for the tools of your trade?

I get most of my supplies from Senior Arts Supplies at Degraves, just because it’s near, the staff’s friendly and it’s on Degraves street (My all-time favourite street in Melbourne! ) I sometimes pop by Art Spectrum for watercolour book blocks. They have the best there!


What/where was the last great meal you ate in Melbourne?

Over the weekend, my boyfriend brought me to Melba at Langham Hotel for a ginormous buffet meal. We were so stuffed at the end of it all. It was fun and the flatbreads that were made on the spot were Delicious with a capital D! But if you’re thinking of something more affordable, try Fandango in North Melbourne. They have one of the yummiest flatbread wraps around. I keep thinking about going back! PS: I like flatbreads!

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

At a quaint café having brunch! I try and make it a point to explore new cafes/places every week. It’s fun and makes Melbourne even more exciting!

Melbourne’s best kept secret?

There’s this little push-cart waffle stall in Degraves Street. It’s at the entrance to the subway and I think a French guy runs it. They sell wraps too if I’m not wrong. It’s a push-cart + tiny corner sort of shop. I love the waffles there and the guy’s always so friendly and polite. He greets you with this huge ‘Bonjour!’ when you arrive and ‘Merci’ when you leave. It’s really sweet! And they have this wall at the side, all plastered with notes from all over the world. It’s kind of … kitschy in my opinion. Don’t know why, but it’s funny. Haha. You should go visit and buy yourself a yummy waffle!

Raw-Edges Design Studio

Stack shelving system – Raw-Edges Design Studio / Established & Sons

Tailored Stools reverse the usual upholstery process… rather than skinning a foam shape as with conventional furniture-making, the resulting 3-dimensional shape here is informed by the initial 2-dimensional fabric pattern.

I am quite in love with the kooky work of UK-based, Israel-born design duo Yael Mer and Shay Alkalay, otherwise known as Raw-Edges Design Studio.

Their best known design is probably the ‘Stack’ drawer/shelving system, picked up by the UK’s prestigious Established & Sons after spotting Shay’s prototype at the Royal College of Art graduate exhibition in 2006. It’s now one of Established & Sons most popular and recognisable designs, and has won numerous design awards. It’s place as a contemporary classic has also been confirmed by it’s inclusion in MOMA‘S permanent design collection.

Since graduating in 2006, this dynamic pair have received several respected design awards including The British Council Talented Award, an iF Gold Award, a Dutch Design award, Wallpaper* Design Award 2009 and the Elle Decoration International Design Award for best furniture of 08/09. They were also recently awarded the Designer of the Future award for 2009 at Design Miami/Basel. Phew!

Not bad for the 33 yr-old pair who launched their design studio only 2 years ago in July 2007! Jeepers. It’s enough to make you feel positivity unproductive.

LOVE this packaging design for milk cartons, in which the amount of fat in the milk is distinguished by form rather than colour! The folds in the back of the package function as a handle for pouring, whilst the 2 folds in front function as the spout. Beautiful, efficient, clever, simple design.

Look how much fun it is working at Raw-Edges Design Studio!

Melbourne Home – Kat Macleod and Cam Teys

Cam and Kat balloons from their recent engagement party!

Top left – yellow and pink pig/elephant from Chapel st Bazaar. Top right – Pop Ink : Decor-a-Board given to Kat by a close friend.. purchased from In the Woods (Northcote). Bottom – lovely loungeroom… featuring an Aubrey Beardsley black and white print from an op shop (above the couch).

Dinign area, and Kat’s favourite Marimekko cup by one of Kat’s favourite illustrators – Maija Louekari.

Got another gorgeous Melbourne Home to share with you today… these shots are from the beautiful apartment of super-famous, ever-modest Melbourne illustrator Kat Macleod, and her partner – equally talented musician Cam Teys (he’s the drummer in Melbourne band Gaslight Radio).

Kat and Cam are the cutest couple ever. Seriously. They also just got engaged last month in NYC! (I promised I would make it clear that they don’t always have huge gold balloons in their house spelling out their names!! These kooky decorations were for their engagement party just a week ago!)

Cutest. Couple. Ever.

Kat and Cam have only recently moved into their beautiful older-style apartment in Carlton… it’s such a gorgeous little nest, with amazingly high ceilings and huge windows, and lots of leafy foliage in the garden – visible from every light-filled room.

As you’d expect, there are quirky feminine flourishes in every room, lots of artwork by friends, and pieces by some of Kat’s favourite illustrators. Cam balances out the girly stuff with his musical equipment, the odd motorbike mag and his favourite James Dean photographs!


Kat and Cam’s friends gave them their couch. The yellow ‘upholstery’ is a doona cover Kat bought at an op shop. The cushions are all either op-shop or Ikea! The copper gloves on the side table are the most amazing engagement gift from friends! There’s a boy and a girl hand. Sweet!

Dining area – Cam’s James Dean photo hangs above the dining table alongside ‘Roses and Hips’, an original drawing by Tina Berning, one of Kat’s favourite illustrators. It was bought on a trip to new york 2.5 years ago.

Bedroom details… wish I could have captured the light and enormous windows better (These windows are actually twice this tall! – I need a wide-angle lens!). Suzy sits in the window looking at the rain… The pillowcase is by Miranda July – from Third Drawer Down. Kat and I planted the red lips above Cam’s side of the bed just for the photo! As if it wasn’t girly enough… hee!

A beautiful little sketch of Cam and Kat hangs in the hallway, drawn by their good friend James Lin, from a photo he took of the pair at dinner one night.

Silver-foil peach made by Cam for Kat. Awwww! The embroidered doily was customised by Simone Elder, one of Kat’s partners in graphic design studio, Ortolan.

Top – Kat and her baby, Suzy!! 10 year old burmese. Not in the photo is Andy, Cam’s 10 year old black & white reclusive cat. (Very camera shy!). Bottom – new Iittala bowl, with illustrations by Klaus Haapaniemi. A gift from Ortolan for Cam and Kat’s engagement. Don’t you love all that beautiful lush green foliage outside the kitchen windows???

Lovely little bathroom details – Pencil shaving necklace by local jeweller Victoria Mason, Wooden heart earrings by Maru.

Kat enforces a ‘Green Only’ policy for bathroom essentials! All toothbrushes, product packaging and accessories must be green!

Succulents and other happy little plants on the back deck :) (It was rainy, or I would have ventured further outside!)

a huge, HUGE thanks to Kat and Cam for letting me run around their beautiful home on a Sunday morning with my camera! Also thanks for feeding me Dench bakery goods! :) Too lovely!

ps) If you missed my interview with Kat back in November last year, here it is!

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