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Modernist Australia – Interiors, Textiles & Raiders of the Lost Craft

For their final installment today, Pete and Patricia share some of their favourite mid-century modern fabrics and ‘lost crafts’! It’s been a fantactic week of Modernist marvels… huge thanks to Peter and Patricia for sharing their brilliant finds, and don’t forget to bookmark Modernist Australia for more! – Jenny x

Pattern and colour

For all the clean lines and simplicity of space, Mid-Century Modern homes are by no means boring. After the austerity of wartime, interiors suddenly had licence to go wild and fabrics, ceramics and surfaces incited a riot of colour. Hot pinks, burnt oranges, turquoise or Kelly greens were the order of the day.

The culmination of all these elements can still be seen in some unaltered, original and truly classic homes which we find coming up for sale every week…

String Art

Our final passion here at Modernist Australia is an appreciation for what we’d term The Lost Crafts, those kind of ‘hobbies’ often see instruction for in op shop craft books, the results of which hang in rumpus rooms and craft cupboards of many Mid-Century homes. They’re just awaiting a new audience to (literally) make them cool once more…….

Paint by Numbers

Enamel

Adios dear readers, thanks to The Design Files for having us and remember – stay Modern!

Pete & Patricia ox
Modernist Australia

Interview – Biddy Maroney of We Buy Your Kids!

Illustration for an article on bullying in the workplace – Australian Financial Review’s Boss magazine, August 2008.


Illustration for an article on stem cell research – Harvard Divinity Bulletin, April 2008.

Illustrations for Tourism Victoria – Melbourne Theatres print campaign (detail)

Illustrations for Tourism Victoria – Melbourne Theatres print campaign. OH my how much do you love this Melbourne map? Wish I could afford to commision such brilliant illustrations for my TDF shopping guides!

This one’s been in the works for a while now… unfortunately New York kind of got in the way! But I am so excited to finally share an interview with an INCREDIBLE Sydney-based illustrator and designer – Biddy Maroney!

You may remember me gushing about We Buy Your Kids here earlier this year? Well, Biddy Maroney is one half of WBYK – the other half being her partner Sonny Day. I cannot get over their awesome comic-book style names. ‘Biddy Maroney’ sounds to me like some kind of crime-fighting bounty-hunter or film noir detective, and as for Sonny (Sunny?) Day? Come on.

But aside from that, I cannot get over their super-awesome work! Wowsers.

Sonny and Biddy’s collaboration started with band posters for Popfrenzy records back in 2006… and it’s quite incredible what they’ve achieved in only 3 years since then! These days the prolific pair churn out an amazing variety of creative work including websites, Tshirts, animation, interior design, retail display, and anything you can put an illustration on, basically. I love their eclectic style – at times deco and very graphic, other times fluid and painterly, and often cartoony, gothic and creepy kitsch. It’s no surprise to learn that the pair are inspired by a synthesis of varied interests, from Italian horror flicks to 1970′s science fiction books!

Other places to see the amazing work of Biddy Maroney and We Buy Your Kids -

We Buy Your Kids work website
We Buy Your Kids ‘news’ site (blog-style)
Jacky Winter folio page
Biddy’s folio site

Big thanks to Biddy for her time and all the links! Please note all work shown here is by both Sonny and Biddy :)

I’m Not There – poster

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

I did study Graphic Design at Canberra Uni a million years ago but I was a terrible student who left without a degree and with absolutely no computer skills or idea of what the real world of working design was like. While I was there I would turn every design project into an illustration project and spent my time making comics with friends, which was fun and I drew A LOT but I had no qualifications or clue. So I was super lucky a friend got me a job at a design studio where she worked and I was the office helper – I got coffee and did scans. But I ended up working there 7 years and when I left I was a Senior Designer and building websites (which is hilarious). So that’s where I learnt my technical skills I guess – on the job. Then I went to work at Mathematics for a few years and while working there I was introduced to the world of animated music videos and I taught myself to create digital illustrations reaaaalllly fast. I had always worked with ink before that – and would colour in Photoshop, but about 5 years ago I started doing more digitally. Then I started collaborating with Sonny in about 2006 and soon started working from home on those projects fulltime.

What have been some of your favourite illustration projects that we might be familiar with?

I am always happy with the album covers for Youth Group – mainly because its been a span of a few years working with them. Also because when Toby asked me to do their Skeleton Jar album he said he knew I’d never done any album art so he thought it might be fun for me to do. Since then I’ve worked on a fair bit of album art, so I like that it started with that one, which is an album I love. Also I feel quite close to all those covers and the albums and they have changed in style as my drawing style has changed, so I like that sense of a timeline.

Youth Group – Skeleton Jar poster

Youth Group – Casino Twilight Dogs poster – a Sydney show which was basically a fantasy line-up of Youth Group , Belles Will Ring and Bridezilla all together.

Other than that I like the Mecca Myer windows cos it was exciting to see my drawings turned into something so big and lit up with fancy city folks walking past in their fancy suits and hairdos.



Illustrations for Mecca Cosmetica / Myer windows – a collaboration with designer Christie Hunt / Houndstooth, and Don McQualter.

Also any of the animations that I’ve been involved with, they are my favourite jobs. The “Clementine” video we did for Washington is a favourite – the drawings are all collaborative between me and Sonny and he also did a lot on that job and I was amazed at his ability to solve some problems and his weird imagination etc.


Tell me about ‘We buy your kids’!? Awesome work! How did the collaboration with Sonny Day come about…? How much work do you do independently and how much as a duo?

Thanks! We have known each other about 7 years but we didn’t start working together until Sonny started doing posters for Popfrenzy – I kinda just invited myself in to work on those, taking his sketches and working on them on the computer. And then he screenprinted them. Since then we’ve just found a good way of working where a job passes back and forth between us. Sonny does a lot of the initial ideas and sketches. When it gets to me I might put forward a few ideas but often he has something there that works really well so we just start building it up. And it goes back and forth. He helps me a lot when I am doing my own illustration work – he often suggests compositional ideas and new ways of approaching things. We really do most stuff as a duo. Sometimes we make our own individual work for exhibitions, but when we work as Webuyyourkids the style we work in is sort of a third personality – its not exactly Sonny’s drawings and its not exactly mine – it’s a hybrid monster.

What does a typical day at work involve for you?

We work from home, so it pretty much starts the moment we’re awake. We’ve had a third designer in working freelance with us the last month or so and that’s been great for many reasons but one is that it helps define the “work-day” rather than just being sat infront of a computer or a desk 20 hours a day 7 days a week. I have to say I’m really bad and get waaaay too caught up in work. I just don’t leave the house for days and days and days, but I’m working on that, so there’s a bit of the day where I just go for a walk through Sydney Uni and look at some mad buildings. Gargoyles!

We usually are working on a few different jobs every day – always involving crazy deadlines. For example our work day today was me sending off some poster files to print, skinning an artists Myspace page, then I got stuck into a movie poster we’re doing which is a lot of fun, and that is what I spent most of the day on. And then I just finished up some fixes to a illustration we just did for The Jacky Winter Group. Sonny’s been working on some Tshirt designs for an artist, some illos for a pitch for a band’s album art, a comic for Faesthetic and some early ideas for a couple of group shows we are in very soon in Brisbane. Hunmi was helping us on the Tshirt designs as well as some layouts for a website. So you can see its all a bit all over the shop, and very rapid.

How would you describe your illustrative style?

I would say its very camp. And Gothic, but in a Vincent Price sort of a way, not in an Anne Rice sort of a way. Working with Sonny has made my stuff lately more graphic and less girly, and that’s a really important part of Webuyyourkids stuff.


Which designers, artists or creative people are you inspired by?

Sonny Day (those images are all about 5 years old though)
Joe Allen (his artwork and also the community he fosters)
Garry Trinh (his series work is beautiful and looking at his blog will often astound me that he sees those moments and captures them)
Zeloot
Raymond Pettibon
Shary Boyle
Steak Mountain
Shynola
Tim Burton
Siggi Ergetsson

They are all illustrators or visual artists but that is what I like! Sonny has been introducing me to the movies of Dario Argento and we are both inspired by that a lot.

I like this question – some people don’t like to get asked who their influences are but I could list you names and links all day. Actually this is my favourites page on YouTube – it’s a good long list of things that inspire me.

Where else do you find inspiration – ie books, fine art, your environment, travel, your family and friends?

Well recently its been a lot of movies. Like I said Sonny’s got me onto his whole Italian horror land at the moment and its reminded me heaps of stuff I liked a long long the ago – like Hammer Horror and I love looking at stills from Kenneth Anger films. And a lot of old stuff my Dad has always been into – TV shows like The Avengers or Night Stalker. My Dad has always collected old movie posters and been into quite kitsch old cult stuff – so I guess his tastes and collections have been my biggest inspiration cos that’s where I got my appreciation for some of my favourite stuff like Vincent Price, Aubrey Beardsley, Night On Bald Mountain, Saul Bass, Dr Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine, Death on The Nile, EC Horror comics, Flash Gordon, Robert Crumb, The Monster Mash…. And animated video clips oddly enough.

What’s the best thing about your job?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rp7jp5H-xWU

And the worst?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rp7jp5H-xWU

What are you looking forward to?

I wanna go to Cornwall next year. Rurally seaside Cornwall. And solve crime. And go to the pub. And visit the witch museum.

Sydney Questions

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

Apart from the amaaaaazing lamb stew Sonny just made I would say Bodega – I cant get enough of that place and their Fish Fingers! (Toasted sour dough, rubbed with garlic, topped with raw kingfish, finely sliced onion and cuttlefish cervice)

Best gallery space in Sydney to see the work of great Australian illustrators?

China Heights or Monster Children.

Where do you shop in Sydney for the tools of your trade?

We go in the King St Secondhand Bookshop (the one with the cat, near Istanbul on King) to buy old paperbacks with really amazing covers. Lately we’ve been looking for 70′s science fiction wonders. That bookshop window serves as one of my favourite gallery spaces in Sydney actually – they display some amazing covers there.

Paul Dempsey – Out the Airlock single cover (inspired by 70′s Science fiction book illustration)

Kids Today (Limited edition of 4 prints for the Kids Today exhibition at MTV Gallery 2008) – We don’t want your corn and London Dungeon (Giclee prints 2008).

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

Still working or sleeping in. Possibly sitting up in bed watching giant murder-mysteries projected on the bedroom wall. If I was awake I’d be patting a cat.

Sydney’s best kept secret?

The Golden Cobra Coffee. It’s very very good coffee. You can get it at:
Pure Bronte Pistachio, Bronte Beach
Cordial, Newtown
Paddington Market Cafe, Paddington
Tiger Mottle, Paddington
The Falconer, Darlinghurst

Interview – Joost Bakker

Love these stools created by Joost from garden stakes! So simple and so great.

Birdcage installation at the GPO in Melbourne

More work at the GPO

One of Joost’s most recognisable designs – these freestanding plinths are used to display vases/bottles of single stem flowers en masse You might have seen these at Journal cafe in the CBD… or the windows of Aesop stores?

Very exciting interview today! If you’ve been reading for a while you’ll know I’ve been chasing an interview with Melbourne florist/event/installation superstar Joost Bakker since his incredible sustainably-built pop-up bar/cafe The Greenhouse was installed at Federation Square over Summer. If you didn’t get a chance to visit, you might remember my coverage and photos here. It was SUPER amazing. Like, Milan-Design-Week-style amazing, or Marije-Vogelzang-style-amazing…! Temporary design projects on this scale rarely happen in Melbourne, which is why The Greenhouse won my heart (and so many more!).

Anyway as you can imagine, at that time Joost was super busy, but luckily things have calmed down slightly and he has kindly taken the time to do an interview! Yay! It’s great to learn a little more baout Joost – he’s been featured a lot in the media (remember that Vogue Living feature earlier this year showcasing his beautiful home?), but I feel in this interview Joost has really given us a more personal insight into his motivations and the passion behind his work. :) Aren’t we lucky!?

For more background info about Joost check out his website – lots more photos of his stunning floral pieces and larger scale installations.

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

Migrating to Aus at age 9 had huge influence on me. Learning the language and culture, but the most profound impact was from learning, watching and being involved in our family business- growing flowers. My father tried planting all sorts of different varieties of flowers, this was important to watch, this way of trying to make different things work, testing assumptions. They became successful and the business quickly evolved, I observed sheds, greenhouses, glasshouses being constructed around me. The most complex construction happened in ’97 it was a glasshouse from Holland. That set my thoughts in motion about different housing, more efficient ways of doing things.

You have gained an incredible reputation and received many accolades for your unique approach to floral design and installation. What were you initial plans when you first embarked this career? Did you ever expect to be working on the great variety of projects you are now so well known for?

No I definitely didn’t expect to be working across the different variety of projects that I am now, and I definitely didn’t plan to be working as a florist. For as long as I can remember I’ve always questioned how florists worked and always thought about different ways of doing things and being true to the product/materials. Having an understanding of the effort that goes into growing flowers makes you aware of their total beauty. I began wholesaling flowers and the whole journey evolved from there.

What have been some of your favourite or most memorable projects in recent years?

Without question my family (Jen and I have three beautiful girls) and building our family home- the prototype for the Greenhouse project. I was away for 7 days on business over Christmas and all I wanted to do was be back with the girls in the space we’ve created. We bought our block in 2001 just before Jen and I were married. We then spent 3 months traveling, dreaming about what sort of home/structure to build. In 2002 I spent a lot of time on the bock understanding the winds, light, soil, rhythms, clearing dead trees, composting, planting grasses and 15,000 trees (I hate to think how many different species) and thinking again about what sort of home we would build. We began building in Dec 2006 and the house was finished in Aug 2007.

The Greenhouse by Joost at Fed Square

Which designers, artists or creative people are you inspired by?

For me my main inspiration comes from nature. Things that inspire me are plants growing out of crevices of buildings (I love how ferns are growing out of Queensberry bridge above peoples heads at Riverland). How quickly disused spaces in cities are transformed into bird and plant filled oasis’.


Where else do you find inspiration – ie books, magazines, your environment, travel, your family and friends?

National Geographic - I have almost every copy from the last 50 years. Passionate growers, builders, architects, photographers- people like Earl Carter, he makes me view my own work in a different way.

What does a typical day at work involve for you?

Early starts (which I love).. I have a little more time these days (post Greenhouse Melbourne). Last Wednesday is was up at 4am picking Sedum flowers, I had noticed that by the early morning these flowers are covered in bees making them impossible to pick, so I had to pick them lit by the headlights of my truck. I then did my Wednesday route… Wall, Batch, Riverland, Rockpool, Vue de Monde and some private clients. At 10am I had a meeting to discuss Greenhouse Perth, at 12pm I passed by Waste Converters to look at some timber for flooring that I can possibly use for the next Greenhouse. By 2pm I was on the property again weeding, maintaining and cultivating our trees. At 5pm I’m a family man (showing the girls how to weed!).

What are you most proud of professionally?

The relationships I’ve developed with my collaborators.

What’s the best thing about your job?

The best and the worst: that my job is forever changing and evolving, I have to remain adaptable to all possibilities.

And the worst?

I never seem to be satisfied with my work!


What would be your dream project or creative collaboration?

In all honesty I’m living it. I love the people I collaborate with, my clients, the diversity of things that I do and the freedom to express/ create what I believe in.

What are you looking forward to?

Holidays with my family! Hopefully after Greenhouse Milan is installed (fingers crossed!) we can tour around Italy together.

Melbourne Questions –

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

Now you’ve got me going.. I’m very fortunate that one of my good mates is also a fantastic chef. He’s always experimenting with new tastes and textures and on occasion, when I’m doing the flowers for his restaurant (Vue De Monde) Shannon will call me out the back and ask ‘what do you think about this?’ as he hands me a morsel of something incredible. This is how lucky I am: this week alone Jason Chan at ‘Batch’ made one of his childhood favourite dishes, Johnny at ‘Journal’ gave me some amazing prosciutto with olive oil great bread and some fontina, down the road Aleks at ‘Mille’ (named after his beautiful father who helped me with my bookkeeping for years!) gave me some Mozzarella di bufala de Campana sliced with fresh tomato and olive oil (un-fucking believable), then to top it all off Shannon made a tart with fresh cream and the biggest blackberries you’ve ever seen! Every second Thursday I head off to ‘Innocent Bystander’ early to do their installation- I came home with Pip’s fresh casalinga and strawberry and aniseed jam from the ‘Jam Lady’… life doesn’t get any better than this!


Which Melbourne people/companies do you like to collaborate with?

As mentioned I’ve been extremely lucky to have such an amazing circle of people that I’ve worked with for a long time. People like Nonda Katsalidis who I regard as having one of the most beautiful minds (when I asked him why all his buildings were on La Trobe St he replied:”I’ll only do buildings within walking distance” so progressive – as a city I wish we would realize what a creative talent he is, truly original). I would also have to say though that Georgina O’Connor is one of my favourite collaborators we work together seamlessly.


Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

In amongst the trees on the block.

Melbourne’s best kept secret?

The people.. and their willingness to back an idea. I’ve spent a lot of time recently talking to people from other cities about the Greenhouse project and they all consistently say: “Wow.. how amazing that Melbourne supported your idea and that you were able to get the project up.”


A huge thankyou to Joost for his time, and to his colleague Viviana for facilitating this interview!

Interview – Vanessa Colyer Tay


All photos from Inside Out styled by Vanessa Colyer Tay, and photographed by Sam McAdam

Vanessa Colyer Tay has your dream job. Truly. She’s Style Editor at Inside Out magazine. It’s Vanessa’s job to develop concepts for Inside Out’s gorgeous interiors shoots, source and gather the most beautiful furnishings and interior accessories, and pull everything together to achieve that all-important perfect shot – time after time after time!

Agghh. See? Dream job.

But even dream job’s have their moments, and in this case that can mean long hours, tight deadlines, and a lot of lugging furniture around! Vanessa takes it all in her stride… she’s supremely talented and utterly passionate about her craft, and handles the demands of her job with finesse every time! She’s also super friendly and approachable (if our email conversations are anything to go by!), and in this interview she’s been so generous in sharing some of her tips for interiors fossicking in Sydney! Not every stylist shares their sources so openly, so I feel very lucky to be able to pass a few of Vanessa’s shopping secrets on to you guys!

If you’re interested in a career in styling (who isn’t?), read on for an insight into Vanessa’s background, creative inspirations and fabulous job!

ps) Did you know Inside Out now have their own blog? Immediate bookmark material! (Lots of behind-the-scenes action and contributions from all different Inside Out staff including Vanessa… )

Tell me a little about your background – what did you originally study, and what path led you to what you’re doing now?

I completed the diploma of interior decoration at Enmore Design Centre in Sydney. Whilst studying I assisted some magazine style greats who showed me the way. I worked as a freelance assistant/merchandiser/stylist for a while, and then landed the role of Senior Stylist at Australian Home Beautiful Magazine, I then moved across to my all time favourite interiors publication Inside Out, as their Style Editor.


What does a typical day at work involve for you?

Every day is different however there’s a few that reoccur.

Sourcing: I spend these days hunting and gathering the coolest interior gear, finding inspiration and interesting people along the way.

Shooting: I rock up to the studio or location, build sets and compose the shot with all the product I’ve just sourced. Setting up shots is of course the fun part, there’s also an abundance of packing, moving furniture and taking good care of fragile props.

Other days: include countless hours of writing captions, developing concepts and shoot ideas, attending product launches, and the usual administration duties.


How would you describe your interior decorating/styling aesthetic in your own home? How does this compare with the aesthetic you bring to your commercial styling work?

Minimal eclecticism, at home I collect and gather things I love, pieces of sketched cardboard from street artists, cute coffee cups, pretty feathers, photos of meaningful things and auction finds. I have lots of ‘stuff’ but display my finds in a unified manner so that it’s not too crazy. There are snippets of my personal style in my commercial work; however each job takes on a personality of its own. My personal touch is just the icing on top of fulfilling the brief as thorough as possible. I like to ‘tick the boxes’ of a brief, but take it further with my personal style.

Which designers, artists or creative people are you inspired by?

Right now I’m loving Zaha Hadid’s concept drawings, Sarah Maingot‘s photos, Established and Sons furniture, The Hotel Everland: a moving capsule, art installation come hotel that was placed on top of prominent buildings throughout Europe, Christine Rudolph’s styling and of course Australian styling greats Glen Proebstel, Megan Morton, and my Inside Out editor Karen McCartney.


Where else do you find inspiration – ie books, magazines, your environment, travel, your family and friends?

International magazines, foreign films, pretty countries, colourful underground tunnels, smart hotels, urban artists, grey skies, fallen leaves, welcome swallows, city skylines, people who are ‘made to create’, pets, friends and partners plus more. Seriously, there is inspiration everywhere, I like trying to find it.


What are you most proud of professionally?

Sustaining good work.

What’s the best thing about your job?

The constant reward it offers.


And the worst?

Moving furniture around.

What would be your dream creative project?

Right now I have a thing for conceptual translation, I’m inspired by an artists execution of a particular concept, and how their execution can be completely different to another persons. I’d love to host an exhibition in which there are a number of artists, all whom use a different medium ie. Installation, painting, sound, video. The first artist is given a concept; they create and then pass their work onto the next artist who uses the previous artists work as their concept…. So it’s like Chinese whispers of the art world…. Art whispers, or lost in translation, that’s what I’ll call it! Now, I just have to find a sponsor.

Sydney Questions –

Your favourite fossicking spots in Sydney for unique furniture and home accessories?

For a quick fossick it’s to Balmain’s Lola Et Moi (quirky and lovely pieces sourced from out of the way places incl France and NY) and then next door to Quintessentials (well sourced vintage and antique pieces, incl the white storage carousel you see here in one of my shots) For something more timely and thrill seeking for the urban fossicker, It’s to Mitchell Road Auction House to dig through the trash and hopefully treasure downstairs, then upstairs to browse the many stores housing 20th century design pieces. Ken Neale in Darlinghurst is also brilliant for 20th century design bits.

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

Strolling along my local river on the way to indulge in coffee, handmade chocolates, and the morning paper.

Sydney’s best kept secret?

My friend and co worker Grace Lee’s post it note illustrations. Via Alley’s new store on George st is also pretty cool.


Thanks so much for your time Vanessa! x

Interview – Danielle Sanders

Ella Sanders winter 09 scarves and beanies

Dresses from the Ella Sanders 08/09 summer range


You guys must know the work of Melbourne-based textile designer Danielle Sanders… I’ve featured her stunning knitwear and accessories a few times here over the last year, but I just realised I had never interviewed Danielle properly, so this interview is long overdue!

In addition to consulting for various homewares and fashion clients, Danielle runs her own freelance textile design business under the name Ella Sanders. (Originally the label was called Ellka when first launched in 2007).

All Danielle’s stunning designs are made using the highest quality yarns, and natural fibres where possible. Her deliciously cute winter beanies, caps and cosy hot water bottle covers are created using pure lambswool and merino yarns, whilst her popular 08/09 summer range combined crocheting techniques, offering trans-seasonal scarves, camisoles and dresses in beautiful soft cotton/bamboo yarns.

Before starting her own business, Danielle worked for many years for Country Road Australia, first as a textile designer, and later as Textile Design Manager. Her work there included textile design across Womens and Menswear, Homewares, kids wear and accessories.

A huge thanks to Danielle for her time with this interview. :) Do check out her website for more info on Ella Sanders stockists all over Australia!

Details from Danielle’s office / studio


Tell me a little about your background – what did you study, what path led you to textile design initially, and how did the launch of your own business come about?

I was really drawn to knitting as I grew up with my mum knitting various items (mostly 80′s jumpers!) I also have 3 very creative sisters who I guess influenced my passion for art and design from an early age. After completing a degree in visual arts in 2000, I began to knit scarves mostly and sell them to a few Melbourne boutique stores. That really got me interested in the textile/fashion area . I went on to study a BA in textile design at RMIT melbourne, graduating in 2003. After working as a textile designer for various companies including CountryRoad I took the plunge and started Ella Sanders in 2007.

Some of Danielle’s homewares


Where is Ella Sanders stocked in Melbourne and Australia-wide?

Currently it is stocked throughout VIC, NSW, QLD, SA, WA & TAS. Some stockists include – Morrison (nationally), Lulu (East St Kilda), Winkle & Drift (Sth Melbourne), Emia – Sorrento , Belki (carlton), Mac Pelican (Hawthorn), Syrup (hampton), Miss Lau (CBD)

The current winter 09 range is being delivered nationally over the next two weeks and will be available online at hardtofind.com.au.

(For all stockists details visit www.ellasanders.com.au)

A lot of independent creative professionals say they love the creative side of their business, but hate the paperwork and ‘business’ side of things. How do you balance the paperwork, accounting, and marketing side of your job?

It is definitely a tricky one! I think as you go you have to be prepared to make mistakes and work out how to do things more efficiently. I have now got an accountant to work on the finance side of things and tax/bas statements which is absolutely the best (no more late nights with excel!) I always dedicate at least one day per week to marketing and following up on things – making lists at each day and prioritizing is definitely a good habit.

A peek into Danielle’s Melbourne home

How is your business structured?

Currently I am operating the design and production and my husband is managing budgets, some marketing and finance. It’s definitely important to share the workload as much as possible and establish who does what and when. I also have someone helping me out on a casual basis during very busy times with invoicing and delivering orders.

How would you describe your design aesthetic?

Very influenced by simple natural elements and textures, as well as a strong Scandinavian design feel and colour palette. Ella Sanders draws upon this aesthetic to offer effortless, high quality accessories.

Winter 09 hot water bottle covers! Love them!

Which designers, artists or creative people are you inspired by?

Missoni – for the amazing knitwear and textiles. Danish label Malene Birger – for the knitwear and designs. Marimekko – finnish textile house for prints and use of colour. Maagali Pascali – Balinese designer. I love Aboriginal artist Gloria Petyarre – the use of colour and pattern is trully stunning. Other artists include Louise Bourgeois, Arthur Boyd, Brett Whiteley.

Where else do you find inspiration – ie books, magazines, your environment, travel, your family and friends?

I love scouring op-shops and markets in hope to find a random vintage knitwear patterns or textiles, a lot of designer blogs such as The Sartorialist, Print & Pattern & of course The Design Files!*

I have many print pattern books from Amazon (they have a great range) and my favorite spot for inspiration is Bali. We try and get there each year for a good break!

* Aw shucks! Thanks Danielle! – Lucy x

New gorgeous kidswear from the Winter 09 range

What does a typical day at work involve for you?

A lot of emailing, invoicing, sketching ideas and always working on the next range. Most days there aren’t enough hours in the day!

Ellka 08/09 summer scarves – from left, George Scarf in antique white, striped Madeleine Scarf and George Scarf in blush

What are you most proud of professionally?

Actually starting the business in the first place – seeing someone in the street wearing one of your items definitely gives you a great feeling.

What’s the best thing about your job?

Doing what you love – designing and being your own boss!

And the worst?

Not being able to switch off very easily – I’m definitely guilty of letting it creep in at all times no matter where I am.

What would be your dream creative project?

For my last year at Uni we had a great creative project where we could design any knitted textile for a garment. I machine knitted (on a very old singer machine) knitted fabric, then felted it, cut it up and rearranged it into a geometric pattern and turned it into a dress – it was a lot of work but I really loved the whole process. It ended up winning Object Gallery – Designer award 2004, Surry Hills, Sydney.
I’d love to be commissioned to do something like that again!

What are you looking forward to?

I’m currently working on winter 2010 range, which is very fun and exciting. I’m also looking forward to some cooler weather so I can wear some winter woolies myself!

Melbourne Questions

The best shops in Melbourne for gorgeous knitwear and/or yarns?

Wondoflex – Malvern, Yarn Barn – Brunswick & Marta’s Yarns in Caulfield.


Melbourne’s best bookshop for creative inspiration?


The Avenue Bookstore in Albert Park and love Magnation for all the international mags. The Ian Potter gallery bookstore is also great.

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

Nacionale – Mills street Albert Park. the best polenta chips going around – I have been looking for a while!


Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

On the bike going for a ride along Beach Rd, then at a cafe with the girls for a breakki afterwards.

Melbourne’s best kept secret?

Dandenong Savers – it never fails to deliver or surprise

Interview – Andrew Elliott

Plane 2

Jump

Restaurant

Scientists, CSIRO Australia

I am constantly impressed with the talent of Australia’s emerging photographers… I guess at times we struggle to find our way in the international design scene in certain creative fields… but we do sure do produce some awesome photographers. Andrew Elliott is another young Australian photographer to watch, but unfortunately for us (fortunately for him!), he’s based in New York City.

Andrew is great friends with recent interviewee Louisa Bailey, and in fact it was Andrew who helped her out when she first got to NY, hooking her up with Craig McDean for some assisting work. It was also Louisa who suggested I chase Andrew up for an interview… and I’m so glad she did!

Andrew’s work is so incredibly varied… his travel shots and dreamlike night-time landscapes are mesmerising… his portraits of family and strangers are thoughtful and considered, and yet his spontaneous snapshots (often of his gorgeous model/Ivy League student girlfriend Cameron Russell) are so natural and unstructured. (I guess it helps when your subject is as beautiful as Cameron!)

The other thing I find so inspiring about Andrew is his success as a young photographer in New York… it can’t be easy being a little fish in such a big city… but Andrew seems to have cemented his position there, and it’s clear he’s in for the long haul! He recently went out on his own, after assisting high profile photographers Craig McDean and Steven Meisel for the last few years. I’m sure Andrew is destined for big things… watch this space!

ps) Andrew also has a photo blog here.

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

Like so many photographers I’ve read or seen interviewed, I became interested in photography between the ages of 12-14. In my case it was on a trip to China when I was in 8th grade. My high school had a good darkroom, which made it easy for me to experiment with photography through to the end of 12th grade. I’ve had countless fleeting interests ever since I was born but when the time came to choose what to study further, photography was the only thing that I’d honestly maintained a consistent interest in for several years. So in a way, by a simple process of elimination, deciding to study photography at university and put my energy into being a photographer was one of the easiest decisions I’ve made.

The Factory Office, Taiwan and Cameron above Tokyo

You left Melbourne in 2004 and headed straight to the Big Apple to study at Parsons School of Design. What prompted this courageous move, and how has NYC treated you as an emerging photographer?

I’d been fascinated with New York culture – music, art, film – since my early teen years, so when I finished my undergrad studies and was itching to get out into the world and live in a different city, New York was at the top of the list. And it seemed like a logical idea for a photographer because it was – and is – the capital of the photo industry, at least economically speaking. There’s a great creative community in New York, and it’s been exciting to often be in such close proximity to people whose work I’d admired from Australia. During my time in New York I’ve met many people whose work I’d admired from afar back in Australia.

Sunset, New York

After a year at Parsons, you dropped out to work for photographer Craig McDean. This must have been a big decision at the time! How do you feel about that decision in retrospect?

It wasn’t the easiest decision at the time because I like to finish what I start if possible, but I recognised it as a good learning opportunity for me and have never looked back. And when I say learning opportunity, I don’t really mean in the sense of learning how to light subjects or how large shoots are structured and organised for example – I mean in the sense of meeting people and gaining life experience, regardless of what particular path I would follow with my own photography. Going from the MFA environment to working on fashion shoots was quite a shift, but working in fashion at that level was often fun, challenging, and allowed me to meet so many interesting people from all around the world. Craig was great to work with, and since he’d started out in London as Nick Knight’s assistant there was a lot of valuable photographic knowledge being passed down and that was a privilege to be a part of. I then went on to work for Meisel, which was totally different but also great experience.

There are many things about fashion that aren’t so great, but to me the best thing about it is that it can be really international. The stereotype of the fashion industry is that it’s shallow and fickle, and there is some truth to that, but it’s easy to overlook the more positive aspects – and they are very real. If you were sitting at the lunch table on any given shoot, you could be surrounded by people from Hungary, Russia, Brazil, Germany, Italy, Belgium, England, America, or places you’d never even given any thought to, like Martinique or Slovakia. I can’t think of many work environments you could be in that are international to that extent. You have a lot of time to talk to people while you’re working, and you really do learn a lot from exposure like that and watching people interact with each other. It reminded me of meeting my father’s students at graduation parties in our back yard in Melbourne when I was younger (he was an English as a Second Language teacher) where there were people from all corners of the world packed into a small area. There’s something ideal about that.

Cameron Looking West, New York

Working for yourself can be really difficult for creative people. What are the challenges you have faced working for yourself – do you struggle with the business side of things, for motivation to get started on a project, or networking etc? How do you tackle these parts of your job?

I haven’t been on my own for very long at all, so I’m really a novice at it. Motivation is the easy part – I’m interested in and motivated to do so much more than I would ever be able to find time for. When it comes to personal projects, funding and access are the key difficulties. Commercially, the difficulty is building a reputation for yourself and convincing people to see financial value in your work. The ultimate challenge really is all about developing and improving your work, and the reason I think that’s so difficult is because that’s really about developing and improving yourself. There’s no substitute for life experience, and it takes time and a lot of experience and reflection to make that kind of progress.

Curtain, 2am Tokyo


Bedtime at the Hotel, Tokyo


Which photographers, artists or creative people are you inspired by?

Tibor Kalman – for me, the early issues of Colors magazine were the pinnacle of the magazine publishing industry so far. I can remember reading them at the local newsagent when I was a schoolkid, and even back then I knew I was looking at something really special. I dare somebody else out there to make something that good.
Gerhard Richter – formally, technically, and aesthetically there’s no better artist working today.

James Nachtwey – is especially admirable in terms of the subjects he covers and his personal investment in them. The documentary ‘War Photographer’ is a must-see for anybody interested in photography, conflict, or the social politics and moral complications of photographing suffering.

Wolfgang Tillmans – the breadth of his work is especially impressive. There have been only a handful of photographers who have covered such a broad scope of subject matter and made it as interesting, beautiful, and unexpectedly coherent as he does.

Jonas Bendiksen – is a great young photographer with Magnum. His project ‘The Places We Live’ was one of the best things I saw last year. I came across a short video interview of him online where he was saying something along the lines of how the people who will inherit photography will not necessarily be making the best compositions, but rather have the best ideas, or be telling the most poignant stories. I thought that was a great attitude to have towards photography, and it’s something that shows through clearly in his work. I’m eager to see what his next big project will be.
Robin Schwartz – makes amazing, funny pictures of animals.
Bruce Davidson – has been around a long time, and has done many great documentary projects. ‘Subway’ still amazes me – especially since the small world it documented doesn’t exist any more. There are quite a few photographers at Magnum, like Josef Koudelka and Martin Parr whose work I’ve followed and admired since my first year studying photography.

Where else do you find inspiration (books, particular magazines, the net, everyday life?)

Novels – Don Delillo, Jonathan Lethem, and J.M. Coetzee are great. Internet – NYTimes, Funny and Interesting, 5B4, Arts and Letters Daily, Facebook, Magnum blog. In general – travel, talking to friends, watching action movies, walking. I like to keep up to date about what’s happening in the Japanese photo/publishing industry in particular – there’s a lot of good work happening there that gets little recognition outside Japan.


What does a typical day at work involve for you?

Coffee, then in no particular order: time online reading and emailing, photographing whatever project I’m working on, going to the lab, editing and scanning, bouncing ideas off people, sending my folio out, walking, and the occasional protracted internal dialogue.

Cameron

What are you most proud of professionally?

I try to avoid professional pride as much as possible. Dissatisfaction with your work is a great motivator to be making progress.

Grandparents

What’s the best thing about your job?

The fact that I can make an actual adult living through my teenage hobby.

And the worst?

Finding the right balance between making a living and making the right work.

Field, Melbourne

Plane 8

Plane 4

What would be your dream project?

Taking a simple picture of the earth from orbit. Anything in space, come to think of it.


What are you looking forward to?

Photographing an upcoming portrait project for a non-profit start up called Interview New York. Visiting Melbourne in august – it’s been more than two years since the last trip. Getting film back from the lab tomorrow.

NYC Questions –

Best design/art bookshop in NYC?


Dashwood on Bond Street.


Colin in Maine


What/where was the last great meal you ate in NYC?
Akamaru Modern ramen at

Ippudo.

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

Tandem biking to Café Orlin to eat malawach.

NYC’s best kept secret?


Doyers on Doyers lane is great. The section of the Berlin Wall on 53rd street. The Russian souvenir shop on 14th street that’s never open.

Cameron, Rajasthan
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