The Design Files Daily

Monthly Archives: October 2011

PLANET LUXE Giveaway!

PLANET LUXE – luxurious, environmentally responsible cleaning products, made in Melbourne

I realise it is not entirely exciting to start the week with a post about cleaning products… but hear me out.  I have just been introduced to this brand new range of eco-friendly cleaning products by Melbourne-based startup PLANET LUXE, and I am seriously impressed!  And to be totally honest with you, it takes a lot to impress me these days.  Being such an old and jaded blogger. :)

It’s clear that PLANET LUXE has been created with passion, and that each product has been really carefully considered.  The products are 100% biodegradable and greywater safe – but they’re also luxurious, beautifully packaged and genuinely affordable.  AND, importantly, they smell amazing!   Lemon Myrtle is a totally underrated fragrance, I now realise. It’s like washing your dishes with expensive body products!

PLANET LUXE is the culmination of two years work for Toni Lawler.  Toni worked for several years as a Brand Director for VicUrban – the Victorian Government’s sustainable development agency. Whilst at VicUrban Toni spent a lot of time investigating how people felt about sustainability – and in turn she also spent a lot of time re-assessing her own habits and thinking about ways to lower her own environmental footprint and live a healthier lifestyle.  The lightbulb moment came after a search to find products for VicUrban to give  new homeowners as a welcome gift that sent the ‘green’ message, but which were also luxurious. “I couldn’t find anything I loved and wanted to have sitting on my kitchen bench” says Toni – so after she left VicUrban she set about making some!  Two years of development and product testing ensued, and Toni enlisted friend Richard Blackman of multi-disciplinary design firm RBD to create the stunning, simple packaging.

PLANET LUXE products are 100% made and packaged in Melbourne.  They’re currently available from Safari Living, Hermon & Hermon or online.

BUT if you are at work today on this quasi-public holiday, we would like to reward you with a gorgeous giveaway from PLANET LUXE!   Toni has generously offered two packs of product for two lucky TDF readers.  Each pack is valued at $78.00 and includes :

1 x 500ml Dish Wash
Australian lemon myrtle, rose geranium and kakadu plum.  RRP $12.95

1 x 500ml House Cleaner
Australian lemon myrtle, sweet orange and kakadu plum.  (for use on all surfaces including glass / mirror).  RRP $12.95.

1 x 1000ml Floor Cleaner
Australian lavender, rose geranium and coconut.  RRP $15.00

1 x 1000ml Laundry Liquid
Australian lemon myrtle, kakadu plum and lavender.  RRP $18.00

1 x 500ml Hand Wash
Australian Lemon Myrtle, ylang ylang and kakadu plum. RRP $20.00

To enter, simply leave your comment on this post before 10.00pm Melbourne time today, Monday October 31st 2011. Two winners will be selected at random and contact by email tomorrow.  This giveaway is open to Australian residents only.  Good luck!

*UPDATE – thanks so much for all your comments!  Two winners have now been drawn.  The lucky numbers were #151 and #253 – congratulations Eleanor and Lee Lee!

PS. – Just a friendly reminder that The Design Files only covers product we genuinely rate, and no one pays for a mention or giveaway around here!  In case ya forgot.

New Guest Blog – Día de los Muertos with Madeleine Stamer (+ 2 GIVEAWAYS!)

This week Melbourne designer / illustrator Madeleine Stamer joins us with a Mexicana-inspired Guest Blog!

GODDAMN. I know I am prone to excitement / exaggeration / general gushing but CAN I JUST SAY – this week’s Guest Blog is seriously EXCELLENT.  No bones about it.

Melbourne’s favourite (non-Mexican) Mexicana afficionado Madeleine Stamer has put together the most stellar series of posts covering a festival which falls this week – Día de los Muertos, aka Day of the Dead!  This year the celebrations will take place tomorrow (All Saints Day) and Wednesday (All Souls Day).  So at TDF HQ we’re ignoring the big horse race – instead you’ll find us Mexifying the loungeroom with a DIY shrine and traditional Papel Picado (punched paper) banners, and munching on tasty tacos. ;)

Maddi’s guest blog this week is very educational as well as entertaining!  It covers spirituality AND death AND craft AND food AND two giveaways!!   AWESOME!

Día de los Muertos Guest Blog Giveaways

Giveaway #1 – new Madeleine Stamer Print - ”Sweet Calavera”

Brand new Madeleine Stamer Print - ”Sweet Calavera”
Limited edition, signed and numbered giclee print.
Deckled edge hand pressed Arches paper.
Dimensions 56 x 76cm
RRP $330.00

AND thanks to Madeleine’s foodie friends, we also have a $100 gift voucher for dinner at Melbourne’s excellent Mexican restaurant – Mamasita!

Giveaway #2 – a $100 gift voucher for dinner at Mamasita in Melbourne

These two amazing giveaways will be won by two lucky TDF readers. Alls ya need to do is leave a comment on any of Maddi’s Guest Blog this week to be in the running. Winners will be selected at random and contacted by email early next week.  Giveaway open to Australian residents only.

Massive thanks to Maddi for her brilliant Guest Blog this week and the giveaways…!  Don’t forget to pop by each day for a little Mexican madness.

AND of course please do share the love by paying Madeleine a little visit too over at her fab blog and website!

Día de los Muertos with Madeleine Stamer!

This week we have the gorgeous Madeleine Stamer on the Guest Blog! Maddi has been a long time favourite of both Lucy and I and we are so excited that she is here to share her love for Mexican culture and arts by focusing on Día de los Muertos celebrations (aka Day of the Dead). It’s going to be a truly fantastic week- be sure to visit Maddi’s website for more of her amazing work here. – Jenny x

Hola, hello I’m super excited to be guest blogging on The Design Files and I’m looking forward to sharing with you my passion for all things Mexicana throughout this week of Día de los Muertos celebrations.

For the uninitiated, Día de los Muertos or Day of the Dead is a Mexican indigenous tradition tweaked with Catholicism beliefs. Dia de los Angelitos is commemorated on November 1 coinciding with All Saint’s Day when the souls of children return to visit their familes. Dia de los Muertos falls on November 2 (All Souls’ Day) when los muertos grandes, the adults temporarily return and join the celebrations.

Illustration by José Guadalupe Posada

Dealing with the intricacies of death is tricky in anyone’s language. I’m certainly no authority on the subject but like others I too have experienced the death of someone near and dear. I have utmost respect for Mexican sensibilities and their celebratory grieving process. A lot of imagery in my art derives from Mexican folklore and I’m very grateful for the endless source of visual delight that has helped me deal with the fragility of life and death.

To the Western eye explosive visions of rainbow coloured sugar skulls and cheeky skeletons engaged in ritualistic play may appear slightly irreverent and a little hard to digest. What may appear surreal and seemingly morbid to some is a deeply spiritual and cathartic process for others. Don’t get it confused with the modern day horror of Halloween people, The Day of the Dead is a vibrant and joyous occasion, injected with gentle humour and friendly expression in honour of our dearly departed and ancestors. Spice up the grieving pot with a pinch of colour, laughter, singing, eating and dancing!

The beautiful Frida Kahlo

If I had a handful of wishes I’d opt to travel back in time and celebrate Día de los Muertos in the heart of Mexico with my lady friend Frida, we would have a great time with flowers in our hair.

Let the celebrations begin!

- Madeleine x

Interview – Rebekah Cichero of Bowerbird Bazaar

Bowerbird Bazaar exterior

Bowerbird Bazaar gorgeousness

One Small Room details

I discovered a LOT of creative talent in Adelaide in just four days, making it very tricky to decide on just one interview subject to close this week.  BUT with Bowerbird Bazaar taking place in Adelaide this weekend – it seemed the perfect opportunity to learn a little more about multitasking local creative Rebekah Cichero!

I introduced Rebekah yesterday with a brief mention of her gorgeous store in Croydon – One Small Room.  One Small Room is one of Adelaide’s sweetest furniture / homewares shops…. but it’s only one small part of Rebekah’s story.   Rebekah lived in London for 8 years, where she worked as a freelance stylist for a host of excellent mags including Elle Decoration and Living etc.  After relocating to SA so partner Tim could return to study, and opening One Small Room in 2003, it wasn’t long before Rebekah had pounced on another creative opportunity – launching Sproutdesign, a gorgeous textiles and soft furnishings label, in 2006.

And then came Bowerbird Bazaar!  Yep, Rebekah is one half of the dynamic duo behind Adelaide’s much loved design market, now in it’s fifth year.  The event draws an incredible crowd from far and wide, and has a fantastic reputation for it’s curated range of stalls and varied mix of indie craft and design.  It’s definitely one of the jewels in SA’s busy festival calendar!

Inbetween co-running Bowerbird Bazaar and One Small Room, producing screenprinted textiles and products for her Sproutdesign range, and doing the odd interior design / styling project, Rebekah is also a busy Mum to two small kids!!   I am seriously impressed.  What is your secret Rebekah?!  Perhaps in Adelaide it is easier to be outrageously prolific, because you spend way less time stuck in traffic… ??  Maybe?

Massive thanks to Rebekah who has sent me about 400 emails this week and a bazillion photos, all in the busy lead-up up to the big Bowerbird Bazaar event.  If you’re in Adelaide this weekend DO VISIT!  Details below.

Bowerbird Bazaar
Queen’s Theatre
Playhouse Lane (off Light Square)
Adelaide
SA 5000

OPEN Today – 2.00pm – 4.00pm trade only, 4.00pm – 9.00pm trade + public
THIS Saturday – 10.00am – 5.00pm
THIS Sunday – 10.00am – 4.00pm

You seem to have had a few unexpected twists and turns in your career! – can you tell us a little about your career background and what path led to the projects you run now?

I think I’ve always been creative and have always wanted to try different things, but just didn’t know where to start. Actually I was a misguided youth who was told that studying practical subjects like typing and business was worthwhile to make sure you’d get a job.   And, although this has proved true in many ways, back then, all I wanted to do was travel the world, become a photographer and a fashion designer.  It took me a while to come full circle and trust my creative instincts and find what truly made me tick.

After attempting to become a children’s Dentist I moved on to studying a BA, upgraded to Businesss Communications and Marketing and floated from one lecture to the other dreaming of travels aboard.

While studying I worked as a functions waitress and casually in sales at Sportsgirl… This is where I found my interest in visual merchandising and a rare opportunity arose to be a part time visual display merchandiser with Sportsgirl.  I went for it and they gave me the job!   I loved it but still decided to head overseas, left my studies and took off. I worked in very practical jobs while travelling and studying some short courses in textiles, guilding, interior decorating and sewing, until my partner insisted on offering his support for me to focus on one creative thing and go from there.

After all the travel I’d become very interested in architecture and interiors, so chose to study a full time intensive course in interior design at the London College of Printing. I loved every minute of it – I was completely reinspired. I finally had some direction, and was set on working for interior design magazines. After my course I approached several magazines and ended up being a freelance stylist with Elle Deco and Living Etc. Mainly I assisted in house stylists so was exposed to the many different approaches stylists take to the various photo shoots.

We left London after 8 years when my partner wanted a career change and decided to also head into design. We chose to come to Adelaide so he could study a post grad degree in architecture. Not being from SA, I had to work out what path to take. I worked freelance before deciding to set up a shop in 2003 – a kind of creative experiment where the room (literally one room back then) was set up as an ever evolving installation.

One Small Room

The idea for One Small Room was to create a shop that felt like a lounge room, so customers could see how each piece on display might work in their own home. Everything from the rug on the floor, to the cups on the table were for sale.  I sourced a mix of eras and styles – from vintage furniture and homewares to the work of local designer / makers such as Michael Hill.  8 years later we’re still here, and One Small Room now includes interior and building design services, interior styling, a lamp base range, Sproutdesign textiles and Bowerbird Bazaar.

One Small Room has opened up other creative opportunities, one of which was the chance to buy some old fabric designs from a textile designer who had created them in the 70’s.  I felt they had a whole new relevance in today’s market – and so Sproutdesign was born.  The prints were reworked and coordinates added, as well as a product range developed.  Since the initial Sproutdesign launch in 2006 we’ve had several other Australian designers design a print for the range – like Aunty Cookie, Moyra of Surface Art and Lara Cameron of Ink and Spindle.

Sproutdesign textiles and  soft furnishings

How did the idea come about for Bowerbird Bazaar, and how has the event grown since you first launched?

The idea came up after attending many trade and retail fairs, both as a visitor and also as an exhibitor. I started wondering why nothing like this existed in South Australia, and with the shop experience, I’d met many many designer / makers locally who I felt would really benefit from a dedicated event like this in SA.  I could see from interstate markets how worthwhile it was for designers to be able to connect with the public and retailers, and make direct profits from their sales.

I met Jane Barwick, who at that time was running her own jewellery label, and really understood the challenges of being a designer / maker in SA.  We chatted about it a few times at different events until we decided to just do it!

Our first event in 2009 was a success. Jane and I are both genuinely interested in assisting each designer / maker to grow successfully into small business, and using Bowerbird as a testing ground.  We think the combination of both a trade event and a public event work well. It enables the designers who take part to really the test the market by selling directly to the public, and gives them an opportunity to network with retailers and the media – growing not only their business but their ideas and networks. We’re now up to our fifth Bowerbird Bazaar and the response has been overwhelmingly positive.

Busy at the Bazaar!  Photos – Denis Smith Photography
Which Australian designers, artists or creative people are you loving right now?

I love people in general who can create great environments that inspire me – visual impact and a good feeling evoked is always a treat for me.

I love what Greg Hatton does, and like seeing what Tide Design and Yellow Diva come up with. Lex Stobie’s furniture also has a great aesthetic. I love Kate Stokes for lighting and the new flatpack Enoki lighting.

The work and the drive of Daniel : Emma I really admire. They are a great example of designer / makers who have worked hard and understand that to be a success you have to make things happen for yourself, take chances and not expect others to make it happen for you.

I actually find inspiration and get more excited about people I see everyday making their own personal steps to success whether it be in the choice of how they live their life or how they make a small business work for them. I love seeing people make a business grow from an idea to a success where they choose the way they work, how busy they are and how flexible to be, so that life is valued and the the task of earning money can be enjoyed and the rewards reaped in the more creative satisfying ways.

Can you list for us your top 5 creative resources across any media – ie websites or blogs you visit daily, magazines you can’t live without?

The Design Files – of course – up to date in every way!
Door Sixteen blog – lives life with visual impact – love it.
Abigail Ahern – love her take on colour
Magazines must haves – Urbis, Dwell, Elle Decoration, Vogue Living, Inside Out, World of Interiors – I’m an addict and wiill always buy interior mags in any country I visit!
Stylists to feel inspired by Glen Proebstel, Claire Lloyd, Finola Inger and Sibella Court.

You have a lot to juggle with 3 businesses and 2 kids! What does a typical day at work involve for you?

A lot of juggling, being a little mad and working at night helps. Being organised is a must, a tick off list also helps – as does having great staff!

A typical day involves a bit of everything usually. Doing tag team with my husband, school drop off, bidding at auctions and sourcing, catching up with our store manager, checking emails, setting up a new installation, ordering stock, updating facebook and blog, liaising with designer / makers (expecially when in Bowerbird season), attending trade shows, product launches, meeting clients to help on interior projects, playing with a four year old, getting a coffee at Red Door Bakery (a must!) and being flexible as every day is different. Mainstays are: breakfast and dinner with my family, bedtime stories with the kids!

Sproutdesign textiles and  soft furnishings

What are you most proud of professionally?

Succeeding in a business that allows my husband and I to work together, and be flexible with how we live and work so that our children see both of us a lot. Learning lots along the way, trusting my own instincts and following through with an idea. Being willing to try different things and be open to change.

Bowerbird Bazaar

What would be your dream creative project?

Where do I start?  Designing a boutique hotel in Itay. Styling for a movie set with an endless budget…

What are you looking forward to?

Another trip overseas with my family and deciding what my next project will be.

Adelaide Questions

Your favourite Adelaide neighbourhood and why?

Croydon for sure. It’s a real community where neighbours know each other and are supportive. There is old and there is young, lemons handed over fences, visits to neighbours homes, help when needed. There is a creative buzz here and a keen desire to live life well with varied but like minded people.

The strip of shops on Queen St is a continually inspiring place to be, to people watch, shop, eat, drink and just be.  Small businesses have set up and continue to grow and succeed here. We’re close to the city, close to the beach but still have a leafy suburb and lovely good sized homes.

Any tips for one creative Adelaidian to watch?

Hmm, there are actually a few here to watch. I think John Quan has a lot more to come yet and his collaboration with his wife Kumiko Nakajima is bound to take them into some interesting directions.

What and where was the last great meal you ate in Adelaide?

Probably Kenji’s Hutt St – the best Japanese!  Also simple but tasty tapas at Mesa Lunga and a good sparkling wine…

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

At home having breakfast with the kids, then a stroll down to Queen St to Red Door Bakery for coffee and pastries then off to roller skating or the park.

Adelaide’s best kept secret?

Adelaide Lifestyle – The quality of life you can have here. Good food, good wine, great houses, easy living. I think you only realise how good it is when you’ve not come from here or have done plenty of travel.

Bowerbird Bazaar.  Photos - Denis Smith Photography

The JamFactory – Ceramic Studio

We have had a delightful week getting to know the JamFactory and seeing more of the work from this talented Adelaide group. Thank you again to Emma Aiston for organizing this week’s Guest Blog and a big congratulations to the lucky winner of the KINK Oil Bottle – Bev! Have a great weekend everyone! – Jenny x

JamFactory Ceramics Studio

The Ceramics studio at JamFactory is a bustling hive of activity. The team of Associates (first years, Sophia Phillips, Hilary Jones, Guy Ringwood and Wayne Mcara, and second years, James Edwards and Maria Chatzinikolaki) work together on the production of Studio products and Commissions while also developing their own designs for sale in JamFactory outlets and Galleries around Australia.  Recent commissions include 1200 ‘Magic Bowls’ for Gay Bilson and the Adelaide Film Festival event on Willunga Beach.

Second year associate James Edwards in the Ceramics Studio

The Associate program is designed to assist in the professional development of a small, selected group of committed ceramicists and encourages them to learn new techniques and approaches that enable them to enter their field at an advanced level. A number of ceramic artists from the local community, along with tenants from within the building, regularly use the kilns and equipment in the studio and assist in the building of a vibrant and stimulating environment.

Top Left: JamFactory studio tenant Susan Frost in the Ceramics Studio. Top Right: Second year associate, Maria Chatzinikolaki painting her cups in the Ceramics Studio

This brings us to the end of our week guest blogging with The Design Files, we hope you have enjoyed learning a little more about what we do.  If you are interested in anything you have seen or read here, like becoming an associate we would love to hear from you so drop us a line or send us an email!

Top: Susan Frost, Jug and Saucer (available from JamFactory shops) Bottom: Commission work, Magic Bowl

First year associate Guy Ringwood’s bowls

Daniel and Emma’s Top 5 Adelaide shops

Emma Aiston and Daniel To of Daniel : Emma!  They laugh a lot.

I was SO lucky to spend a good chunk of my time in Adelaide with the gorgeous Emma Aiston and Daniel To, otherwise known as Daniel : Emma.  These guys have received accolades worldwide for their cute ‘n quirky functional designed objects – but in Adelaide no one knows them from a bar of soap. :) Which is just the way they like it.  They travel twice a year to show their work at international design fairs, but the rest of the time they just bunker down here in SA designing, prototyping and eating good food (they really like food).

During my visit Daniel and Emma took me on a little tour of their fave shopping spots in their hometown.  It was awesome!  For today’s post we’ve whittled it down to a vaguely design-focussed TOP 5… but there is a brief list of other Adelaide highlights listed at the bottom of this post too!   If you have a favourite spot I haven’t mentioned, please leave a comment and let us know!

One piece of advice if you’re planning a trip to SA anytime soon – hire a car!  If you can. Much of the goodness is dotted all over town in different locations, and public transport is not as regular or wide reaching as it is in Melbourne and Sydney.  Parking is easy, and traffic non existent, so if you can manage it, hiring a car is the best way to see this town.

One Small Room

One Small Room in Croydon (ps. vintage bus scrolls are much cheaper in Adelaide than in Melbourne!)

One Small Room is a gorgeous and unique little furniture / homewares / gift shop in a cute residential area called Croydon.  It’s incredibly popular, so much so, that since opening in 2003 OSR has grown from one to three rooms, and has taken over the shopfront next door.  It has also spurred on a smattering of cute local cafes in a suburban street that previously had little else going on. Isn’t it amazing how one great  little businesss can re-energise a whole area?

One Small Room is owned and operated by local designer and stylist Rebekah Cichero, who also runs Bowerbird Bazaar (on this weekend in Adelaide!) and offers private home styling services.  She’s one hell of a creative multitasker – you’ll learn a little more about Rebekah tomorrow!

Daniel and Emma say - One Small Room is our number one pick!  We can’t remember a time we have gone into OSR and not come out with something new. So many lovely furniture finds as well as tastefully selected accessories and home wares :)

One Small Room
2 Elizabeth St
Croydon
SA 5008

Ph. (08) 7120 2368

Hours
Tuesday – Friday         11.00am – 4.00pm
Saturday & Sunday      10.00am – 4.00pm

RHD

Cult denim and menswear store RHD.  That’s RHD’s Andy (top right) showing Emma pics of his new bub!   Photos – Lucy Feagins.

Apparently, the coolest cats in Adelaide roll up the cuffs of their jeans! (from left, Daniel, Andy from RHD and little Emma!)

Daniel and Emma were super keen to introduce me to their pal Andy Watson who runs cult menswear store RHD.  That stands for ‘Right Hand Distribution’ and has something to do with the way jeans are made. Or something like that.  ANYWAY it is one of those awesome and effortlessly cool shops that stocks all the best indie labels you’ve never heard of. These guys seriously know their denim.  They even have a special industrial denim sewing machine behind the counter, to take up your jeans in that perfect way that you just can’t do on a regular sewing machine.

Sadly RHD is only for boys, but I would totally wear half the stuff in there.   If you live in Melbourne or Sydney and are sick of having the same jeans as everyone else, you should check out RHD’s new online store!  SO. GOOD.

Emma and Daniel say - RHD is run by our talented friend Andy. It is the place to go to in Adelaide for men’s fashion, and also the number one way to kill an hour or two in the city, just strike up a conversation with Andy and watch an afternoon go by!

Right Hand Distribution
22 Ebenezer Place
Adelaide
SA 5000

Ph. (08) 8359 3557

RHD

Treadly Bike Shop

Treadly Bike Shop.  Photos – Lucy Feagins

Treadly is a super awesome bike shop just up the road from RHD in Ebenezer Place, a cute little side street in the CBD.  Full of great stuff for cycle lovers – the best imported bike bits, super cute sales staff, and a resident dog.  I fell in love with the most gorgeous raspberry-coloured Brooks bike saddle, despite not actually owning a bike (shame, I know).

Daniel and Emma say ‘We’re bike enthusiasts, and this is one well stocked bike store.  Is there a limit on how many Brooks bike saddles one should own?’

Treadly Bike Shop
Shop 5, 4-10 Ebenezer Place
Adelaide
SA 5000

Ph. (08) 8232 0158

Hours
Monday Closed
Tuesday – Thursday 10.00am – 6.00pm
Friday 10.00am – 9.00pm
Saturday 10.00am – 6.00pm
Sunday 12.00pm – 5.00pm

Treadly Bike Shop.

Bauhaus

Bauhaus in Adelaide’s city centre.  Photo – Lucy Feagins.

Bauhaus is a favourite of many locals seeking something a little different than high street shopping in busy Rundle street.   Perfectly merchandised, the store showcases a great variety of ever changing international imports – trinkets from Morocco, Mexico and India sit happy alongside vibrant Marimekko prints and contemporary jewellery.

Emma says – ‘Bauhaus is a longstanding favourite, a perfect place to buy a gift for a friend (or oneself!) full of an eclectic mix of Mexican day of the dead paraphernalia, Moroccan jewellery and Marimekko fabrics’.

Bauhaus
257 Rundle St
Adelaide
SA 5000

Ph. (08) 8215 0003

Hours
Monday – Thursday 10.00am – 5.30pm
Friday 10.00am – 9.30pm
Saturday and Sunday  10.00am – 5.00pm

Bauhaus details

Khai Liew

Khai Liew showroom – photo by Marcel Aucar

Khai Liew is kind of like the grandmaster of the SA design industry.  His stunning cabinetry and freestanding furniture pays homage to a great variety of influences – from mid-century Danish design to traditional Chinese and Japanese detailing.  Khai Liew’s striking pieces are usually one of a kind and custom made.  His work can be spotted in some of the most impressive homes in SA.

Daniel and Emma say ‘Khai Liew has the coolest showroom/studio space around……. one day we aspire to have a set up as lovely as this!’

Khai Liew Design
166 Magill rd
Norwood
SA 5067

Ph. (08) 8362 1076

Hours
Tuesday – Friday 9.00am – 5.00pm
Saturday 10.00am – 5.00pm
Sunday 1.00am – 5.00pm

Khai Liew showroom – photo Derek Henderson

Other good things

The Store restaurant – ‘We think it is the nicest place for eats in town, tasty breakfasts, yummy din dins, and stylish interior, what more could you ask for?’ say Daniel and Emma.

Adelaide Central Market – delicious quick cheap lunches in the food hall, plus 80 stalls under one roof selling the very best fruit, vegies, deli produce and gourmet treats.

AND

Danish Vintage Modern / Rock N Rustic / Clair Inc Vintage Clothing / One Rundle Trading / Bowerbird Bazaar (it’s THIS WEEKEND – more on that tomorrow!) / and don’t forget a drive up to see the city lights from the Adelaide Hills!

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