The Design Files Daily

Monthly Archives: June 2010

Made by Mosey part 2 (or how to get yourself on TDF!)

Soft mobiles by Made by Mosey
This little boys ‘Nautical hankey blankey‘ quilt is just SO freaking cute if one of you does not snap it up TODAY you must be crazy.

Yesterday I did a talk/presentation kind of thing for the Coco Republic speaker’s series. It went quite well I think…. there were lots of lovely people to meet – if you came along then THANKYOU for coming and being such a wonderful audience! (And thanks so much to CR for having me!).

Anyway, I was asked a few interesting questions, and one of them was about the best way to submit something to get your work on The Design Files. It is true – I get a bazillion submissions these days and I do struggle to fit everything in and I hate to disappoint people. SO, what is the best way to get your product/shop/artwork/craft on TDF? Welll.. there are really no rules… but how about sending me an email like this -

‘Hi Lucy,

Just wanted to let you know I’ve been working hard on new mobiles, bigger and better Hankey Blankeys and more bunting in lovely bright vintage fabrics.

I know you are super busy and have posted about me before (I don’t want to seem greedy!) and have a million other creative/crafty people lined up to post about but this is just in case you have a slow news day :) !!

www.madebymosey.com
www.madebymosey.com/blog

Thankyou for your time. And keep up the wonderful and just excellent work!

Madeleine x’

So there you go. That is how you do it. Magic!

Also of course Madeleine’s lovely hand-crafted products are just super gorgeous – not to mention reasonably priced… and she had a lovely selection of pics for me to choose from which always helps :)

Yay for slow news days!!

Made by Mosey things are available to buy here!


Glenlyon Home – Magali Gentric and Jason Waterhouse

The Glenlyon home of Magali Gentric and Jason Waterhouse

Vintage signage in the loungeroom, vintage children’s xylophone

Reclaimed stained glass window in the bathroom

Industrial pigeon-hole shelves and details in the bedroom

Kitchen and bathroom details – reclaimed pressed metal in the kitchen, and an old bus door in the bathroom!

Be warned. This is another story about an incredible overachieving local family! Magali Gentric and Jason Waterhouse have spent the last 3 years building and renovating their home in Glenlyon (not far from Daylesford), bringing up three kids, working (Jason is a prize-winning sculptor – Magali is a web designer and lecturer) – all whilst building a successful local business from scratch! The pair are proud owners and directors of regional ‘makers space’ Wolf At the Door, located in Hepburn Springs. Jeepers creepers. I guess the water in Victoria’s spa country really must have energising powers!

Magali and Jason’s home is just off the Glenlyon ‘main drag’, found at the end of a dirt track, amongst beautiful bushland and farming properties. They bought the property from Jason’s Dad in 2000 with a definite ‘slow down’ philosophy in mind. Having experienced busy city lives elsewhere (Jason teaching and working in Melbourne, and Magali in France, London and Melbourne), both decided they wanted to live a simpler life where they could bring up their children in a stress-free environment.

Jason and Magali began their renovations in 2006. They extended on the original house by incorporating a shipping container for two of the childrens’ bedrooms, added split level floor, and creating a sizable ‘bloke-shed’ – where Jason and son Milo spend much of their time together, building structures for the house and property, making sculptures, and working on Jason’s hotted up early-70s, metallic-blue Toyota Crown – which he shows on occasion in Motor Shows, and in which he and Magali cruise around the region!

Magali and Jason love living in Glenlyon – the sense of community, the space, the people, growing their own vegies, the sense of possibility – everything! They have made many modifications to their home which means they live almost entirely ‘off the grid’ (except for the internet!).

Lush green view from bedroom/studio

Green house

Jason & Magali have planted a large organic kitchen garden which supplies them with luscious vegies each season. The pair have also redeveloped the terraced greenhouse at the back of the house, planted olive trees, and spent time direct-seeding several acres with native trees, to re-vegetate the property. From the front door you can hear the Loddon River which runs right through the property.

More lovely things at Wolf At the Door – top left – ceramics by Kris Coad, top right – teacup lights by Gregory Bonsera.

Wolf at the Door is Magali and Jason’s gorgeous little store in Hepburn Springs, which will celebrate it’s first birthday next month! However, there won’t be much time for M&J to stop and rest on their laurels! The pair are busily working on a brand new and very ambitious project – an arts complex called Stockroom in neighbouring Kyneton.

Stockroom is a big undertaking; converted from an ex-wool factory built in the 1860s, it will house artist studios, an exhibition space, a retail store, custom-built spaces for makers and designers to exhibit and sell their work direct to the public, and eventually a cafe. It promises to be an incredible central arts hub for in the region – so much for slowing down!

Wolf at the Door
113 Main street

Hepburn Springs

ph. (03) 5348 3158

*HUGE THANKS to Megan Spencer for facilitating this feature and supplying all the shots and info. I must admit I have borrowed many of the words here… *Thanks so much Megan!

Urban Crop

Urban Crop plants – photos by Earl Carter

Photo – Earl Carter

Have you been spotting tulips in unexpected places recently? Last week I was dashing around sourcing all manner of gorgeous things for a shoot… and it seemed that every single shop I visited (Safari Living, Loom Rugs and Mark Tuckey… to name a few) seemed to have these luscious blooms in their windows, each wrapped in a signature brown paper bag…!

Very curious indeed. ‘What is going on around here!?’ you might ask – ‘Who is filling all these shop windows with stunning fresh flowers, and where can I get my hands on some?’

The man behind this brilliantly hair-brained scheme is of course Melbourne’s best loved horticultural dynamo, Joost Bakker. Just launched this month, Joost’s Urban Crop project involves selling tulips, hyacinths, irises and herbs from the back of a van in various locations across Melbourne’s CBD.

I guarantee you’ve never seen such vibrant blooms… but in truth, it isn’t really the tulips that Joost is peddling. What he’s most excited to share is the unique nutrient-rich ‘Urban Crop Soil’ that each plant is grown in. This special soil mix, developed by Joost himself, is made from a blend of composted organic waste, worm castings, and a somewhat magical ingredient called Bio Char. It is a miraculous concoction which ensures the healthiest and most prolific flowering plants – in the most sustainable possible way.

Joost packages Urban Crop tulips - photo by Earl Carter

Joost and business partner Renee Nutbean hope Urban Crop will demonstrate the value of organic compost rather than fertilized soil – which takes vast amounts of fossil fuel to produce and doesn’t make for healthy, happy plants. Urban Crop plants are full of energy and nutrients – not pumped full of fertilizer and water only to slump into a sad heap once you get them home. Urban Crop herbs will happily sit in your kitchen for a week or two, ready for you to harvest as you need them. Urban Crop flowers will produce the most stunning blooms that last longer than any cut flower.

The idea is to take your bundle of gorgeous Urban Crop blooms or herbs home, keep the soil and root system intact, enjoy them for a week or more, then either compost the plant when it dies, or keep the bulbs for next year. All in all, it’s a much more sustainable way to give and enjoy flowers and plants at home.

Not surprisingly, Urban Crop stockists are growing quicker than Joost can update his website! He loves the idea that bars, cafes and all sorts of shops across Melbourne are selling flowers and plants in the middle of winter…. ‘Maybe this City will become famous for being able to buy living flowers on every street corner! Anyway I’ll just keep on dreaming..‘ he says!

Urban Crop plants are now stocked at over 40 Melbourne locations – from a bike shop in Greville st Prahran, to a book shop in Elwood… of course I spotted them at Safari Living, Loom Rugs and Mark Tuckey, and also you can try Leo’s Supermarkets in Hartwell, Kew and Heidelberg. OR for the real guerilla-gardening experience, hunt Joost and Renee down in their Urban Crop van… at various locations listed here.

Please leave a comment if you have another Urban Crop location tip-off!

Renee Nutbean in the Urban Crop van!

Rittenhouse

I don’t often blog about fashion, but I just had to share these gorgeous finds by Sydney-based fashion label Rittenhouse…. Their spring/summer ’10 range is just pure simple understated loveliness. These pieces seem somehow more French than Australian in style… love the layering, the muted colours and soft stripes. Purchase from the Rittenhouse website or from stockists listed here.

HOWEVER what really caught my eye whilst browsing the Rittenhouse website was their 2009 collab with Swiss husband-and-wife artists Michael Husmann and Pascale Mira Tschaeni (aka Husmann/Tschaeni) Oh. My. Goodness. I cannot believe the gorgeousness. Unfortunately many of the loveliest pieces are sold out. Which totally serves me right for catching on about 9 months too late. Where have I BEEN!? bleh.

Rittenhouse / Husmann/Tschaeni 2009 collaboration


Interview – David Clark, editor of Vogue Living

Vogue Living’s ‘new look’ July/Aug issue – out this week!


Brooklyn City Guide, as featured in Vogue Living’s current issue. SO good. (double click for an almost legible view!)

Oh my. Would you believe me if I told you that Vogue Living magazine just got even more irresistibly delicious? Truly! This week the famed Australian interiors magazine launches it’s July/August issue with a much anticipated ‘new look’ – merging the design eye candy we’ve all come to know and love, with some of the best content from Vogue Entertaining + Travel. The result is freaking AMAZING. Vogue Living will continue to be a magazine about interiors, design, art, architecture and decorating…. but will also now expand to cover food and wine, bars, restaurants, hotels, and the most stunning travel destinations from all corners of the globe. Aggh.

I am particularly enamoured with the ‘City Guides’ section – how incredible is the Brooklyn guide, pictured above?! I love it’s slightly more ‘personal’ feel – the perfect round-up from US-based Australian writer David Prior, complete with illustrated map! Other cities featured this issue include Kyoto, Manhattan and Paris… ooh la la.

To celebrate this important milestone for one of Australia’s best-loved design mags, I am very excited to share an interview with ‘Mr Vogue Living’ – David Clark! Yep. Only the big names around here! :)

After originally studying commerce/law, and later architecture, David was eventually seduced by the publishing industry, and has been at the helm of Vogue Living Australia for the last six years. David’s expert curatorial eye oversees every aspect of the magazine – a much bigger and more complex role than simply driving the editorial content. On a daily basis, David’s job involves problem solving with VL’s ad team, marketing team, finance team, publishers, photographers, writers, designers… not to mention endless speaking engagements and travel. I can only imagine how incredibly busy and stressful his job must be – albeit very rewarding!

I am truly grateful for David’s time, and I think everyone reading should go out and buy the latest issue to show their appreciation! (like you need an excuse!).

David Clark.

Tell us a little about your background – what path led you to your current role at Vogue Living?

When I was a teenager in suburban Brisbane, no joke, my family nickname for me was “Mr Vogue Living”. I can’t recall why – whether I was constantly reading Vogue and Vogue Living, or whether I had delusions of grandeur. Either way – it started early.

I studied commerce/law when I left school. Hated that. Always wanted to study architecture. 10 years later, after working in the interior textile industry in Sydney and London, I went back to university to fulfil that wish. It led me to an architect’s office, and then to write about architecture for a magazine. I moved back to Sydney to work for Belle Magazine as Design Editor and left there as Deputy Editor to freelance for a few years. I realised I still had this fire to be an editor. There was only one (possibly two) magazines that I wanted to edit. The stars aligned, and Vogue Living was it.

What have been one or two of your most memorable favourite shoots / stories featured in the magazine over the last few years?

Bhutan is one. Earl Carter and Susie Westwood got this fantastic shot of monks walking in a line across a courtyard of the Aman in Bhutan. Stunning. Houses? There are so many beautiful interiors we’ve published. One of the more recent that was a great story was John Wilson and Peter Lin’s apartment in Chippendale. It was a cover story. Great mix of good design (by Iain Halliday) and a wonderful aesthetic from the owners.

John Wilson and Peter Linn’s apartment in Chippendale, Sydney, featured on the cover of Vogue Living earlier this year.

What does a typical day at work involve for you?

Fielding questions and issues from my editorial team, the ad team, the marketing team, the finance team, the publishers, from the industry and clients, from photographers and writers… it’s a complex role and you have to deal with lots of things at once. At the same time you have to be a leader for your team. It’s a mix of business and creativity. Hard to balance sometimes. I’ll be at my desk trying to get through emails, will be diverted by something more pressing, then be at my art directors desk working on a layout with her, then a meeting with an advertiser, maybe having to be at a function that evening, or talking at one.

Vogue Living is such an incredible source of creative inspiration for so many – but where do you turn for your own creative inspiration? (Travel, other publications, the internet, your environment, travel, nature, family or friends…?)

I rarely look at other publications. In fact, I hardly read magazines at all. I have to say that most of my inspiration comes from my team. Such a smart bunch of people so full of curiosity. Curiosity is one of the most important attributes in a person I believe.

The design world also inspires me. Milan design week is an important source for me. People and design… travel is always inspiring. And the cinema.

Melbourne fairs pretty well in the latest issue… love this shopping story on Le Louvre’s new(ish) South Yarra digs… Striking shots by Lisa Cohen. Double click for a larger view.

What do you think defines an ‘Australian’ sense of style when it comes to residential architecture and interiors?

Australia has a ‘lifestyle’ (I hate that words…it demeans living) that is the envy of the world. We forget that people in other places find our life seductive and exotic. Tyler Brule (founder of wallpaper and editor in chief of monocle) has said that “Australia is the country that exported lifestyle to the rest of the world” I agree with him.

At a deeper level, the thing that distinguishes Australian design and architecture is the crossover space between indoors and outdoors. In fact, I think it defines our design and our living. You can see it in very Paddington terrace renovation that has opened up the back of the house to a private outdoor room. We’re lucky to live in a climate where we can do that.

How would your describe your sense of style when it comes to your own home? Is your own home a picture-perfect ‘Vogue Living home’!?

I don’t have a sense of style in my own home. It certainly isn’t picture perfect. I use my apartment as a place to put interesting things. Rugs, textiles, books, art from friends. Stuff I’ve gathered.

Which designers, artists or creative people do you most admire at the moment?

Too many to mention. I admire any creative person who is pursuing their inner vision. It’s such a hard road, especially in Australia where creativity can be belittled. They have such perseverance.

What are you most proud of professionally?

Editing Vogue Living. And knowing that it is a magazine read and admired around the world.

What would be your dream creative project?

A great party for my 50th birthday.

What are you looking forward to?

The great party at my 50th birthday. (I’ve got 2 years to organise it)

Sydney Questions –

Your favourite pocket of Sydney for shopping / strolling / people watching?

Darlinghurst

Where was the last great meal you ate in Sydney?

Lunch at Aria.

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

At a café in Darlinghurst.

Sydney’s best kept secret?

The harbour foreshore. I believe that contemporary Australian art came from that place.

The Design Files Tumbles…

A few pics from my new Tumblr archive…

I got super annoyed last month because I tried to sign up for a Tumblr account, and thedesignfiles.tumblr was taken. I got all grumpy and went to see who had ‘stolen’ my name. OH. It was me. In a brief moment of forward-thinking many months ago, I had absent-mindedly made a Design Files Tumblr account, and then promptly forgotten all about it.

Wow I totally outsmarted myself with that one.

ANYWAY. The point is… I now have a Tumblr! I know, I know… bit late in the game… but I didn’t realise how cool it was until I discovered the ‘archive’ function. OMG! so great. A virtual pin-board… so easy to use – just one click! No captions, credits or links to worry about. Everything is done for you! For me I guess it is a special and more personal eye-candy archive, somewhere I can save all the gorgeousness I come across without necessarily having to research, explain and blog it ‘properly’.

My new favourite fellow Tumblr-ers include The Beautiful Soup, Apartment Diet, From Scandinavia With Love, The Brick House, Flipside of a Memory… be warned – they’re hyperventilatingly good.

Please check out my comparatively measly Tumblr page and see what you think. And tell me all your Tumblr tips because I am still getting my head around it…

One of my favourite recently tumbled things… incredible timber toys / sculptures by US-based designer Mark Giglio (aka Pen Pencil Stencil). (These amazing Japanese-inspired timber toy trees are all sold out of course! Sorry!)

Recently discovered via Tumblr – Danish blog Ungtblod. OMG so good you will die.
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