The Design Files Daily

Monthly Archives: November 2011

Behind the Scenes with Jardan!

This week we welcome the fantastic team at Jardan to the Guest Blog! It has been great getting to know the crew in the lead up to TDFOH and let me tell you, they are every bit as lovely as their furniture! Over the coming week we’ll be getting a behind the scenes look at how their furniture is created from start to finish – today we start with a collection of inspiration. – Jenny x

G’day folks! Jardan will be taking over the guest blog for the next 5 days. This week we will take you through our design process; from inspiration to design development, as well as an insight to our production team and the work of our dedicated crafts people. We’re stoked to also give you a sneaky-peek of the exciting new outdoor range to be previewed at The Design Files Open House.

Jardan is proud to design and manufacture in the leafy suburb of Mount Waverley, just 20 minutes away from Melbourne CBD. With showrooms in Sydney and Brisbane, along with representation in Perth, Adelaide, Singapore, Hong Kong and Dubai, Jardan is taking over the WORLD!…. Nah kidding, just this blog… and only for a week.

Jardan’s style captures the very essence of the chilled Australian lifestyle and forms the inspiration for our designs. Today we are sharing a few images that we love.

- Jardan x

Interview – Donna Hay (+ subscription giveaway!)

Various pagespreads from Australia’s much loved Donna Hay Magazine.  Photos – Chris Court.

Pagespreads from Donna Hay Magazine

The prettiest sashimi in Donna Hay Magazine

Donna Hay celebrates her 10th year in print with the launch of the brilliant new Donna Hay iPad app!

OK so this is a ‘pinch me and tell me I’m dreaming moment’.  YES it’s an interview with Donna Hay!   Wowsers.  We really have hit the bigtime, people.  I’m pretty sure Donna is the most famous person ever to grace this little old blog.  Yeeha!  We must be doing something right :)

Donna Hay is, of course, a household name both here and abroad, and one seriously clever cookie.  Or probably more of a perfect homemade macaron.  After many years working as a food editor and food stylist across various titles including Marie Claire’s hugely popular cookbook series in the 1990′s, Donna Hay branched out in 2001 with her very own self-titled magazine.  I think we can safely say that in the ten years that have passed since then, she has created an empire.

Donna Hay Magazine has been a runaway success from the very earely days, and now reaches a loyal readership of 384,000 people per issue.  The ever-growing network of projects under the Donna Hay brand include cookbooks, a dense and juicy website full of recipes and exclusive content, a tableware collaboration with Royal Doulton available nationally from David Jones, The Donna Hay General Store in Sydney’s Woollahra, and a TV series on the Lifestyle Channel.   I’d call that a pretty epic Australian success story.

This month, Donna Hay Magazine celebrates their 10th birthday, and to mark this very special occasion, they’ve launched  their brilliant new iPad app!  The app is the perfect extension of the printed magazine, with a few added bonuses of course!  One of the key features is the ‘cook mode’ for every recipe, dividing the recipe into easy-to-follow steps and bringing each up in large text.  As we’ve come to expect from the Donna Hay team, it’s executed faultlessly – beautiful to look at and intuitively simple to use.  You can download the first Donna Hay iPad issue FREE right here!

Donna and her team have also kindly offered a year’s subscription to Donna Hay magazine for ten lucky readers! To be in the running for this fab giveaway simply leave a comment on today’s post! Ten winners will be selected at random and contacted by email early next week!  YUM a whole year of delectable recipes and simple, special foodie goodness.

*UPDATE: Thank you to everyone who left a comment! 10 lucky winners were drawn at random and they are… Frances G (comment #169), Emily (comment #284), Renee (comment #1), Laura (comment #71), Georgia (comment #24), Mademoiselle Slimalicious (comment #309), Mary Anne (comment #10), Lizzy (comment #234), Diana (comment #192) and Lena (comment #233). Congratulations and we hope you love your subscription to Donna Hay Magazine! Thank you again to Donna and her team for their generosity!

Massive thanks to Donna and her team for being part of The Design Files interview series! I can pretty much retire now.

Donna Hay works her magic

Donna Hay!  You’re Australia’s best known food editor and best selling food author – we love your work! Can you give us a little info about your background, and what led you to food writing / styling initially?

I loved cooking as a kid and from a young age spent hours in the kitchen. I was inspired to cook by my grandmother – I used to watch her cooking and she was an accomplished baker. I remember being so proud to make Steak Diane for my Dad’s birthday when I was eight years old.

My love of cooking led me to study home economics at college, and I started working in test kitchens, on food magazines and cookbooks. I got the confidence to branch out and go freelance as a food stylist, but I missed the connection between the creative folks and the wordsmiths that you get working at a magazine. I eventually started my own magazine to fill the gap.

The Donna Hay brand has gone from strength to strength since you first launched Donna Hay magazine in 2001. What were your initial goals when you first left Marie Claire, and did you always expect that your own name would become a household name?

I’m not much of a goal setter, I believe in going where life takes you! I was literally working freelance in an old warehouse studio in Surry Hills, dreaming up what my ultimate magazine would look like, when the opportunity to work with News Magazines was presented. It was never my intention to be the name of the publication (even now I still feel a little awkward!), there were so many details for the team of 5 to work on for the launch issue, but the marketing team at the time thought it was a great idea because people knew me from my books, so it was thought they could identify with the familiar.

Can you give us a little insight into the inner workings of Donna Hay inc.? How many staff do you employ across the magazine, website, General Store, TV production and other areas of your business?  What significant tasks do you oursource? Do you still play a very hands on role in each creative decision?

It’s a very tight team. There are 15 on the magazine across art, copy, food, marketing, design and styling. Then for the business side, there are just two people. My sister works with me on the retail side of the business. I’ve been really lucky to work with some great supportive brand partners, so there are good resources backing me up. I’m quite hands-on but I think that’s to be expected when the title and the business carries your name. I like to muck in at all levels, but am fortunate that my passionate and creative team share my vision, so I can rely on them whole heartedly!

Congrats on the launch of your brand new donna hay magazine for iPad app!  Can you tell us a little about it?   How long has your team been working on the app and what content / features can we expect to see?

The process of working on the iPad app has been really exciting and it’s been wonderful watching the pages of the magazine come to life. The same team who work on the print magazine work on the app, redesigning the issue for the iPad. We worked for several months on the concept to get it right the first time. We incorporated our app plans into the schedule for the magazine, launching it at the same time as our 10th birthday issue. One of the key features is the cook mode for every recipe, dividing the recipe into easy-to-follow steps and bringing it up in large text, plus there are video tips to assist with certain recipes and special animated features that bring the pages to life.

the brilliant new Donna Hay iPad app complete with super handy ‘cook mode’ feature!

What does a typical day involve for you?

Working in a test kitchen there is no such thing as a typical day! I am an early riser thanks to two young boys, so it’s breakfast, packing school lunches and doing the final check on homework. Then I’m in the office by 9.00am, earlier on some days if there is a TV commitment or radio. Then the day is divided between meetings and studio time for shoots.

We work in the single studio/kitchen space. So we can be working on magazine, book and newspaper content all at the same time. That means that we don’t eat like normal people – lots of small bites throughout the day, which can be very dangerous! We’re not a very serious office in the corporate sense – lots of laughter fuels creativity.

Can you list for us your top 5 creative resources across any media?

I love looking at fashion and design websites and blogs. My app version of French Vogue and net-a-porter are always quite inspiring. I often check out Design*Sponge, too. I get a lot of inspiration from little details – typography, the dressing in a shop window, flowers, tableware.

Which other Australian creative people do you admire?

One of my closest friends is the wonderful stylist, Sibella Court, and I love her bower bird approach to collecting and styling. We work with some wonderful photographers like William Meppem, Anson Smart, Con Poulos and Chris Court, who always brings something new to the studio.

What would be your dream project?

I’m very lucky in that lots of my dreams have come true already! I have a beautiful new range with Royal Doulton that will continue to grow, and the magazine has been going from strength-to-strength, so I’m very much focussed on these. I believe that digital media will mean some significant changes for our industry and I’m really excited about where that might take us.

What are you looking forward to?

I am looking forward to some time off at the end of the year and lazy summer days with my boys (plus, the chance to eat ice -cream at the end of those lazy hot days!). It’s about the simple things, really.

Sydney Questions

Where do you shop in Sydney for great kitchenalia and foodie finds!? (Besides your own store!)

I must admit I love the Chef’s Warehouse, a large store stacked high with pots, pans, utensils, glasses, you name it!  I can get lost in there. They are a trade supplier but are open to the public as well. I also like the local farmers’ markets around Sydney – the one at the Eveleigh CarriageWorks in Redfern is a must – you can even spot some famous Sydney chefs there peddling their wares!

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

There’s a great new local bistro-style restaurant that’s opened up in my local area called Honeycomb, run by chef/owner Andy Bunn. I like his philosophy and approach to food – it’s full of flavour and really pops, but isn’t tricked up. It’s honest, refined and super tasty.

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

The school sports run with an early start; I pack the car the night before! It’s like a choose-your-own adventure with visits to sports ovals all over the place. Obviously after running around, little boys require big breakfasts!

Sydney’s best kept secret?

Messina Gelato – it’s the best ice-cream in Sydney and they are consistent in all the classic flavours and continually reinvent themselves with their ‘special’ flavours. I honestly believe a serve of good ice-cream is the same as a great meal!

Kirra Jamison Loves Japan – Picture-books for Grown-ups

A huge thank you to beautiful Kirra Jamison for such an excellent week of Guest Blogging- we have loved seeing Japan through your eyes! Kirra has so kindly provided us with a tasty selection of her works for The Design Files Open House and be sure to visit her new website here! Kirra is also represented in Melbourne by Sophie Gannon Gallery. Thanks again Kirra, have a great weekend all! -Jenny x

I spent the last few days of my time in Japan buried deep within Tokyo’s incredible book stores, so I thought it appropriate to end my blogging week with some of the treats I took home. Japan definitely has it going on when it comes to book publishing. While I can’t read a word the pictures are enough (if you’ve been to Perimeter books in Thornbury you know what I’m talking about). Anyhow many kilos of excess luggage later (thankfully pre-paid) here is a selection of my treasured scores.

Put your dexterity to the test by crafting your own wooden utensils and tableware with this instructional book by artist Watanabe Hiroyuki. The best bit is at the end where he shows you how to oil your wares with a walnut! I picked this book up from Watanabe Hiroyuki’s exhibition at Kitone in Kyoto.

This is some kind of recipe book with awesome pics of Japanese kitchens…that’s all I can work out! Magazine World.



Cool Interior Life
by ME & MIRACO chock full of creative Japanese homes. Published by Pie Books.

A Fragment of Journey is one of several great books by legendary the textile designer Mina Perhonen. Have a peek into Mina Perhonens beautiful fashion boutiques throughout Japan here.

Cinema Table, a book of photographs of food that has been recreated from films. The styling exceptional. Published by Aspect.



Making Truck
by is a kind of journal by Truck, a furniture store/label in Osaka, Japan run by Tokuhiko Kise and Hiromi Karatsu. Truck is so unbelievably good. Do yourself a favour and head over to their site.



Hiroshi Sugito, April Song.
From his recent paintings to a drawing he made when he was 7 years old, this book includes casually taken photographs and small scribbles by artist Hiroshi Sugito. Published by Foil.

MIRAI-CHAN is a collection of photographs shot by artist Kotori Kawashima of his friends daughter Mirai Chan on Sado Island, Nigata prefecture over a one year period. Many more pics of Mirai Chan on Pinterest.

More Truck from their 2005 exquisitely produced 312 page catalogue Truck Works, 57 Sorts of Furniture.

Kilts ARE cool Lucy Feagins. Fudge magazine says so.

Japanese lifestyle magazine ku:nel.

Thanks Lucy and Jenny for allowing me to indulge my inner blogger this week. Thank you Dane (who took a great many of these pics) for your skills with the camera…for reading the maps and letting me crash your residency! Catch you at The Design Files Open House next week. Having glimpsed it’s magnificence yesterday my hot tip is wear your sneakers, you may want to stay a while. Over and out.

- Kirra x

Vintage & Nostalgia Co.

Vintage goodies from Vintage & Nostalgia Co.

Before I accidentally stumbled into this ridiculous career as a fulltime blogger, as many of you guys know, I worked as a set dresser in the film industry.  It was a super fun, super varied and at times super exhausting job… but the best bit was all the wonderful creative people in that film world.  They sure are a colourful bunch!

One of my dearest film industry buddies was/is a fellow set dresser by the name of Rob Molnar.  In the fickle and very competitive world of film and TV, Mr Molnar is never short of work because he is a) one of the loveliest and most hardworking guys you could ever meet, AND b) there is not a prop on this planet that he cannot source!  I must admit, Rob’s generous advice and epic contacts list got me out of more than one pickle during my time in the job!

Aside from his role in film and TV, for the past few years Rob and his wife Caroline have run an excellent vintage stall at the Chapel st Bazaar.  I’m sure many Melbourne readers would know it!  Here Rob and Caroline sell all kinds of vintage furniture, nik naks and ephemera sourced from endless country jaunts and prop-hunting missions!

Caroline and Rob’s passion for all things vintage and nostalgic has now led them to launch another brand new venture - Vintage & Nostalgia Co!  Vintage & Nostalgia Co. is a super cute new online store stocking both original vintage and vintage-inspired or industrial homewares, objects and accessories that hark back to a time when life was simpler and things were made to last!  The range includes functional reproduction school clocks and telephones, vintage packaging and glassware, scientific ephemera and nostalgia-inspired kids toys and books.  It’s the sweetest collection of goodies and gifts hand picked by this very clever creative couple.  AND I must say, the pricing is super reasonable (plus they have $10 flat rate shipping!).

DO POP OVER for a little fossick at Vintage & Nostalgia Co. Rob and Caroline are always finding new goodies and adding new product to the store – sign up to their mailing list to be kept in the loop!

Melbourne readers will also have the chance to see some of Rob and Caroline’s wares in person next week, as Vintage & Nostalgia Co. will be stocking some of their most popular items at The Design Files Open House!   I am especially coveting that fabulously cartoony Scandi Phone – it really works!

A few Vintage & Nostalgia favourites!  1) reproduction Dulton school clock - $59.95, vintage-inspired wire mesh document trays – $19.95, 3) functional reproduction red ‘Scandi phone’ – $144.45, 4) vintage industrial bobbins – $39.95, 5) functional reproduction Drefuss 500 black old school telephone – $179.95, 6) Vintage timber Pepsi crate - $75.00.

Kirra Jamison Loves Japan – Bus Stops and Bathhouses

A delightful day out and about with Kirra Jamison on the Guest Blog today!  From street-side gardens to the Tower of the Sun, we get a lovely insight into some of the day-to-day scenes in and around Tokyo. Thanks Kirra! – Jenny x

Ohayou gozaimasu Design Filers! Today I’m sharing another random selection of travel shots including some DIY bus stops, the best piece of public art I’ve ever seen along with some other treasures, arty and otherwise.

-Kirra x

Bus-stops in Kichijoji.

This amazing sight is artist Taro Okamotos Tower Of The Sun in the Expo ‘70 Commemorative Park just outside of Osaka.

Book and Work and exhibition by Masanao Hiryama at PANTALOON.

PANTALOON, in Osaka, is a multi disciplinary design studio and exhibition space. Within Pantaloon is the studio of artist Tomoko Soda. Under the name gogcod, Tomoko hand makes beautiful basket like objects entirely out of thread that she zigzg stiches over and over on this older Singer machine!

Hello Sandwich workshop at Shibaura House. Magical.

Naoshima island or ‘that art island in Japan’ is located in the Seto Inland Sea of Japan. It’s famous for the Benesse House complex and a slew contemporary art museums.

This is the exterior of “I ♥ Yu” a fully functional art installation and Japanese traditional public bath on Naoshima Island. “I ♥ Yu” is a collaborative project between artist Shinro Ohtake and design studio graf.

Works by Yukinori Maeda at the Yokohama Triennial 2011: Our Magic Hour. Yukinori is the founder of the AMAZING multi-media art and design project Cosmic Wonder. Light Source is Cosmic Wonder’s fashion project… it’s gorgeous and totally worth getting acquainted with.

The Design Files Calendar Launch!

THANKYOU dearest readers for your amazing support this year, and your incredible enthusiasm for every crazy project we dream up over here at TDF.  We heart you bigtime!

AND we would love to see you tonight for the launch of The Design Files 2012 calendar at Lamington Drive…!!!  You can grab a calendar ($30) and also admire the beautiful work of one of our favourite local illustrators, Marc Martin, whose exhibition ‘Silent Observer‘ opens tonight also.  Double the fun!

PLEASE COME ALONG!  Many of the fab illustrators who have contributed to this year’s calendar will be in attendance – Kat Macleod, Kat Chadwick, Dawn Tan, Madeleine Stamer and more!  Come along and admire their beautiful work over a drink and a lamington. We would love to see you!

The Design Files 2012 Calendar Launch
6.00pm tonight! (Thurs Nov 24th)

Lamington Drive
15 – 25 Keele st
Collingwood

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