The Design Files Daily

Australian Homes

Newcastle Home – Tim Neve

The Newcastle home of stylist Tim Neve

Loungeroom details

It isn’t often I come across a bachelor pad that is primped and preened enough for a feature on The Design Files (!!) – but this beachside apartment in Newcastle, belonging to stylist Tim Neve, sure fits the bill!  I have NEVER seen such a strict commitment to one muted colour palette!  Impressive discipline Tim!

AMAZINGLY, Tim’s pad is a rental.  This is even more impressive once you learn just how much TLC (and sheer elbow grease!) Tim has expended improving and renovating his much loved apartment.  At the original ‘open for inspection’, Tim says hordes of people inspected the property for its amazing beachfront location, but most made a swift exit when they saw the condition of the interiors.  Tim, on the other hand, was instantly smitten – ‘I saw nothing but potential!’ he says.  He admits he’s no expert ‘tradie’, but he rolled his sleeves up and got to work, doing his best to patch and paint the walls, also removing the shag pile carpet and brown floral wallpaper over 3 – 4 weeks.  Lucky landlord!

When asked why he chose such a limited neutral colour palette for his home (and how he managed to stick to it!), Tim says his main aim was to create the exact opposite of what he’s surrounded by at work.  When working with clients and magazines, Tim is surrounded by with bold colour and pattern – ‘there’s always so much visually happening around me!’ he says.  It was his goal to create a home that was a sanctuary – sticking to a restrained palette was his way of separating work life and home life.  Yes, it’s an unmistakably ‘beach-inspired’ look… but Tim is quick to point out ‘there’s not a crafty seashell or nautical motif in sight!’.  Ha ha – ok we get it Tim, it’s all in the details!

It’s no surprise Tim’s pad looks magazine-worthy – as a busy interiors stylist, Tim has contributed to many popular titles such as Real Living, Home Ideas Magazine, and Modern Home - you can learn a little more about his work over here. Huge thanks to Tim for sharing his home today! (Our first Newcastle pad!)

CLICK HERE for the full tour!

Sydney Home – Lisa Tilse of The Red Thread

The Sydney home of Lisa Tilse and daughter Roxy! The two art deco chairs in the main loungeroom have been lovingly restored and upholstered in Ici et La striped fabric – they’re Lisa’s favourite items of furniture.  All photos Lucy Feagins.

Light-filled loungeroom.  Deco armchairs upholstered in Ici et La striped fabric.

SO MANY cute details in this room! Love Roxy’s super cute drawing top right – an imagined version of her parents’ wedding (complete with meringue bridal gown!).  Bottom image – Small framed heart sculpture on left by Wyan McAllister, long thin painting on the left is from her parents home in the 1970′s and holds sentimental value for Lisa, on the right an original Chinese folk art painting, and vintage christmas baubles.

I must say what I love most about photographing homes pretty much every week(!!) is the incredible variety of creative styling you see from one gorgeous home to the next!  From teeny tiny one bedders to super slick architecturally designed homes, and of course the ever popular mid-century masterpieces… it’s always incredible to see just how many varied ways there are to pull together a beautiful creative home.  Today we’re in ‘cute ‘n crafty’ territory with this gorgeous family home in Sydney’s leafy suburbs!

This lovely light-filled home belongs to artist, designer and avid crafter Lisa Tilse of The Red Thread.  Lisa lives here with her daughter Roxy (7 years), and also runs her business from home.  After many years working as a graphic designer, in 2005 Lisa took the plunge and launched her own range of artwork for children’s bedrooms, home accessories and craft kits under the name ‘The Red Thread’.  Given Lisa’s creative background and love of all things handmade, it’s no surprise to see so many wonderful handcrafted details in her home – including a VAST number of cushions!  Lisa has a self confessed cushion obsession,  I counted 25 throughout the home during my visit – very impressive cushion count Lisa!  (Can anyone out there beat that?)

Lisa has lived here with Roxy for five and a half years.  She’s been lucky not to have to do too much to the place – other than the usual paint job, carpet removal (which – to Lisa’s surprise – revealed beautifully polished floorboards that looked like they’d never been walked on!), and a little landscaping in the front garden.  What is it with all these lucky people who move into beautiful homes that require LITTLE OR NO renovation / maintenance?!  Most unfair.

Lisa says her favourite aspect of the home is definitely the living area at the back of the house. ‘It’s drenched in northerly light and sun. In the summer we fling open all the french doors to bring the outside in, and in winter it’s cosy, sunny and warm. It’s the heart of the house.’  It certainly was a showstopper on the day I visited – filled with bright light all day, and casting long warm shards of afternoon sun across the dining table and kitchen towards late afternoon.

Huge thanks to Lisa for sharing her sweet home with us today!  (Thanks also for making me LUNCH when I visited!) If you love all the handmade flourishes in Lisa’s home, chances are you’ll love her pretty product range too – do pop over and have a look!

ps. forgot to mention Lisa has an excellent BLOG too! Well worth a visit!

CLICK HERE for the full tour and many more pics!

Sydney Home – Tim Ross and family

The beautiful mid-century home of Tim Ross and family.  Love that vintage turquoise Womb Chair (design Eero Saarinen, 1948).  All photos – Lucy Feagins.

Loungeroom details – top right is one of Tim’s favourite pieces, an Arne Vodder sideboard with coloured drawers – ‘my own 30th birthday present to myself’ he says.

Dining area – LOVE the Eames shell chairs in mismatched colours!  So perfect.

You may have seen this STUNNING mid-century home before, because it belongs to someone a bit famous.   Tim ‘Rosso’ Ross, his gorgeous wife Michelle and their very new bub Bugsy live here!

This mid-century marvel was built in 1959, and it sure was lucky to find Tim in 2005 (he is only the third person to own the home)!  SO many modernist homes in Australia end up being demolished or re-configured beyond any recognition (devastating!), but Tim is a self confessed architecture nerd, and has been extremely passionate about restoring his beloved pad in keeping with it’s original design.  Much of the home is in original condition – sadly the bathrooms had already undergone unsympathetic renovations when Tim purchased the property, so Tim replaced these.  Carpet from the 1980′s was removed and the original boards polished.   Tim chose big splashes of colour for internal doors and cupboard doors – incredible!  Love the bright red and yellow – the perfect 50′s finish!

It’s so clear within moments of chatting to Tim just how much joy his home brings him.   ‘As weird as it sounds’ he says, ‘the house actually smiles at you’.  Isn’t that such a beautiful idea? And so true!  Tim and Michelle seem to live such an inspired life here – ‘I love it in winter when we light the fire outside or we cook and listen to old records. The lounge room has so much light we find ourselves drawn to it daily.  The house is a great piece of international Modernism plonked in a suburb better known for it’s sandstone houses.  It has been important for me to maintain it’s rough edges. I want it to feel like a house that is 60 years old, it’s part of it’s charm.’ Ahhh, now that’s true home-love!

Tim’s passion for all things mid-century clearly extends to his choice of furniture and interior details.  He’s is an avid junk shop fiend – favourite pieces include the Arne Vodder sideboard with the coloured drawers in the loungeroom, a wonky old featherston chair, the Finn Juhl chair in the lounge room… and ‘watching Michelle curl up in the old Womb Chair to feed Bugsy is rather sweet’ he says!  Tim is a collector of MANY things – ‘cameras, old records, phones, teapots… I love all of them’ he says.  ‘I have some German tea pots and cups that were leftover stock from a homewares store that my parents ran in the late 1960’s, they are rather special to me.  I love the stories behind what we collect’.

Whilst Michelle and Tim did share a joke during my visit about being pretty much at furniture capacity(!), Tim admits he always has an eye out for new finds!  Favourite fossicking spots include Retro On Regent St, Vampt, Koskela and Spence & Lyda in Surry Hills, Recycling Works Annandale and in Melbourne The Junk Company and Found Objects in St Kilda (sadly now closed).  Tim says he’s also picked up lots of smaller things at The Rozelle Markets, and he keeps a keen eye on Shapiro’s mid century auctions and HFOC (Home Furniture on Consignment) is good too… (‘all those people who can’t help but redecorate all the time getting rid of stuff on the cheap’).

Tim’s Dad has an antique stall at the Tyabb Packing House in Victoria too, which Tim says he ransacks every time he visits, picking up cameras, old photos, postcards and posters. ‘The amount of stock he has is really quite incredible’ says Tim… ‘he’s 75 and quite insane but he just loves old things and their stories – mmm I wonder where I got my collecting bug from??!’

I must say a HUGE thankyou to Tim and Michelle for sharing their very special home with us, and for their patience and their trust.  Michelle was LITERALLY due to have Bugsy at any moment during the week I visited!  When Tim left for work, I was convinced it might be me taking her to the hospital!  Also, probably because I take so long to photograph a house… (like, 3 hours) Michelle and Tim left me alone in the end to let myself out!?  Amazing.  Thankyou so much Tim and Michelle!

CLICK HERE for the full tour and many more pics!

Melbourne Home – Jesse & Arla Marlow

The eclectic Melbourne home of Jesse & Arla Marlow and baby Zelda – all photos Jesse Marlow

LOVE the light-filled entrance hall.  Man I wish I had a real hallway.  All photos Jesse Marlow

Industrial details and vintage signage creep into every room…!  Including Jesse’s personal favourite – the ‘Chemist Cameras’ sign picked up at Tarlo & Graham in 2004.  All photos Jesse Marlow

The BEST thing about being on the constant hunt for new Australian Homes… (like, relentlessly!), is seeing the incredible variety of ways in which creative people kit out their living spaces!  From the super sleek digs of two Sydney designers last week, this week we’re back in Melbourne with a completely different creative home – the quirky rambling Victorian house of photographer Jesse Marlow, his wife Arla and their new bub Zelda (just one month old!).

Jesse and Arla bought their house in the Burnley end of Richmond in 2008.  At this time Jesse says it was more or less derelict. The previous owner hadn’t done any work on the building since the 1950′s, when the house had been divided up into 3 small one bedroom flats.  Jesse and Arla set about the challenging task of re-configuring these odd separate living spaces into one house – which meant opening and closing up many internal walls to make it flow again.  One thing they didn’t touch, though, was the 1950′s renovation upstairs – ‘that was just perfect’ says Jesse!  (He’s particularly fond of the wood panelling!)

It’s clear that Jesse and Arla are avid collectors, especially of all things vintage / industrial!  They’re both junk shop fiends – but many of their favourite pieces have also been picked up on overseas travels… including one rare print that the pair found rolled up and wet in a Paris Flea Market (sheesh why doesn’t that happen here!?). Jesse says his most prized possession, though, is his giant CHEMIST CAMERAS shop awning sign, purchased here in Melbourne from Tarlo & Graham back in 2004 (pictured above).

When it comes to the home itself, Jesse says the elevated decking area at the front of the house is pretty special. ‘On a summers day it’s great for a BBQ and enjoying the sun’.  He also loves the location – with the river a stone’s throw away and great parklands nearby, they are a pretty happy little family!

HUGE thanks to Jesse for sharing his home AND taking the shots – quite a mission in the same month you welcome your first baby into the world! AMAZING thankyou Jesse and Arla!  Thanks also to sweet Dell for the cute home tip-off!

CLICK HERE for the full post and many more pics!

Sydney Home – Heidi Dokulil and Richard Peters

The Sydney home of Heidi Dokulil and Richard Peters – architectural perfection! (…and that couch ain’t bad either).  All photos – Lucy Feagins/The Design Files.

Designer details – love love love that ENORMOUS Akari paper pendant lamp by Isamu Noguchi and amazing green dining chairs by Vico Magistretti / Artemide.  OK Hand by Tim Fleming, Flatland OK (from Workshopped)

Who needs bookshelves when a few vertical stacks of books look this good?  Also love the cheerful African woven rug, from The Country Trader, Alanda coffee table by Paolo Piva / B&B Italia (from 1981, secondhand, no longer in production), Alexander Girard wooden dolls (from Space) and Astroboy!

Eames LCW Plywood chair in RED.  So so good.

Homes just don’t get more photogenic than this.  Seriously stunning.  I’m usually most underwhelmed by my own photographs – but today I must say I am pretty chuffed.  That’s because this AMAZING Sydney home is a little like Miranda Kerr – it just doesn’t take a bad photo!  Effortlessly efficient design at it’s best.

It’ll be no surprise to learn that this incredible home belongs to two super creative Sydney folk.  Designer / writer / all-round design afficionado Heidi Dokulil (of The Parcel Group and  The Australian Design Unit) lives here with her partner Richard Peters – who studied architecture and is responsible for designing their beautiful home.  The house is an inspired re-working of what was once a shed at the bottom of a larger property in Sydney’s Randwick – it’s now subdivided, with access via a rear laneway.  The pair purchased the property in 2003 – renting it out as an artist’s studio for four years, before commencing construction in mid 2008.  The build was completed in 6 months, and Heidi and Richard moved in on Christmas day – ‘a wonderful Christmas present for us both’ says Heidi!

Whilst the open plan living and pitched roof give it a spacious feel, this perfect pad is actually deceptively tiny – just 85m2, with one modest master bedroom and an even smaller study.  Clean lines, clever built-in cabinetry, under-floor heating and a second roof (to sandwich insulation above the existing corrugated roof!) combine to make this minimalist home practical and comfortable for two busy people!

Whilst the architectural elements and Japanese proportions are a large part of this home’s appeal – it sure helps when you’ve got the coolest furniture in Sydney.  That Marenco sofa (Mario Marenco / Arflex) in incredible indigo denim is just too perfect for words (purchased from Poliform).  And the RED LCW Eames plywood chair on the RED woven checkered rug!?  And the GREEN Selene dining chairs (Vico Magistretti / Artemide – secondhand, sadly no longer in production) with LC6 glass dining table (with pale blue base) by Le Corbusier / Cassina from Space!?  Could this be the most perfectly styled house ever!?  Utilitarian enough to woo even the most staunch minimalist – but with just enough colour and artfully arranged clutter to keep things interesting!   Cannot imagine a single thing I would change.   Can I just MOVE IN NOW!?

Hats off to Heidi and Richard for this incredible achievement (and thanks so much for sharing it!).  Too cool for school.

CLICK HERE for the full beautiful tour and many more pics!

Melbourne Home – Kirra Jamison and Dane Lovett + print giveaway!

Beautiful light-filled dining space.  Artwork from left to right – David BandJake Walker, Laith McGregor. All photos by Daniel Mahon.  Beautiful.

The Northcote home of artists Kirra Jamison and Dane Lovett. Artwork above the bed by Ben Quilty. All photos by Daniel Mahon.

It’s getting harder and harder to avoid using superlatives and/or CAPITAL LETTERS when sharing these incredible Australian Homes every Wednesday.

I mean REALLY.

HOW AMAZING and truly unique is the Northcote studio and home of Melbourne artists Kirra Jamison and Dane Lovett?  Omigod!  Incredible. One of my absolute favourites so far.  (Must admit I have about 5).

There are so many ace things about this home!  The fact that it’s both a functional living and working space for Kirra and Dane.  The fact that it’s a rental, and yet Kirra and Dane have firmly put their creative stamp on the place.  The fact that they’ve filled their home with so much style and colour and brilliant quirky decorative details – all on a modest budget. The fact that this space has the distinct feeling of a Selby-esque New York loft – transplanted in Melbourne’s inner North!

Kirra and Dane have only lived here just over a year.  In that time they’ve done a lot to make their industrial space a warm and welcoming home – when they moved in it was simply a warehouse shell with basic kitchen and bathroom.  They set to work painting all the walls and the studio floor white, making the big chalkboard wall in the kitchen, and building walls downstairs in the studio to separate their two work spaces.

Kirra loves that her home has a connection to her work life.  ‘Of course there are the usual struggles to contend with when you work from home’ she says, ‘but the positive outweigh the negative’.  When bringing her paints home from the studio, Kirra realised that home had become the space in which she felt most creative – ‘it was full of the objects, colours, textures and experiences that inspire me, so to leave that space to make work somewhere else no longer made sense. And it is a real luxury especially leading up to a big show when it’s three in the morning and you can just walk upstairs and jump into bed!’.

Kirra Jamison fans will be excited to know that she’s having a solo show this month at Linden Gallery.  Sneak peek and details below!  LOOKS AMAZING!  Agh.  Such beautiful work Kirra!

Linden Innovators II
New works on paper by Kirra Jamison
Opening – 6-8pm Friday 24 June
Exhibition runs 25th June – 24th July 2011

New paintings by Kirra for the Linden Innovators II exhibition later this month!

Kirra has also recently created some stunning limited edition Giclée prints of her work, featuring hand cut vinyl appliqué to make them extra special!  Each has been made in an edition of just 6 prints signed by Kirra – and at $900, they present an affordable option if you’ve been coveting one of Kirra’s exquisite works for a while. 

AMAZINGLY, Kirra has sweetly offered one of these new prints as a giveaway today for one lucky TDF reader! The winner may select from the following two - Cosmic Might and Empty Head, each pictured below.

To be in the running, simply leave a comment on this post today Wednesday June 8th, before 10.00pm Melbourne time. A winner will be selected at random and contacted by email tomorrow!  Huge thanks to Kirra for this incredibly generous gift!  I have never wished SO BADLY that I could enter a TDF giveaway myself!

*UPDATE – Huge thanks for all your sweet comments!  A winner has now been drawn – comment #322 – congratulations John B!

Empty Head by Kirra Jamison, 90 x 53.5 cm, Giclée print and hand cut vinyl appliqué on 100% cotton rag paper, edition of 6, $900 inc. gst.

Cosmic Might by Kirra Jamison.  90 x 53.5 cm, Giclée print and hand cut vinyl appliqué on 100% cotton rag paper, edition of 6, $900  inc. gst.

CLICK HERE for many more shots of Kirra and Dane’s gorgeous home!

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