The Design Files Daily

interiors

Christmas in print

Inside Out – special Christmas issue


Shots from the beautiful (and slightly Christmas-ified) home of Sydney stylist Lynsey Fryers…. ahhhhh… love. it. Photos – Petrina Tinslay.

I know I know… Christmas is just another marketing ploy to make us buy more stuff. Possibly… but Christmas is also such a good excuse to indulge your creative side – its a stylist’s heaven, and needn’t be all about the $$$. Both Inside Out and Real Living have special Christmas issues out at the moment… and before you pounce on me for perpetuating the Christmas PR machine, both these issues are really, really good!

Both mags offer some seriously stunning content and photos to drool over… really gorgeous and carefully considered stories that certainly don’t feel like the left-overs from previous issues (as can sometimes be the case with ‘special issue’ publications). Inside Out shares some beautiful Aussie homes all dressed up for Christmas, some incredible food spreads, as well as simple DIY decorating ideas from the likes of fashion designer Lee Mathews and stylist Lynsey Fryers.

Real Living has a more level-headed, budget-conscious approach to the holiday season. They offer a really great, thorough article on how to ‘give back’ at Christmas time (volunteering, mentoring and fundraising etc), as well as the obligatory gift guides and creative, cost effective decorating and wrapping ideas. Of course, there’s also a great collection of gorgeous Australian homes to peek at.

Go and get ‘em.

Christmas wreaths from Inside Out. Styling – Vanessa Colyer Tay, Photo – John Dennis.

Bohemian-esque Christmas party at the studio of Sydney artist (and Inside Out favourite) Lisa Cooper. Photo – Sharyn Cairns

Gorgeous Christmassy prop styling from Inside Out. Stylist – Glen Proebstel, Photo – Sam McAdam.
Real Living’s summery Christmas cover

Love this retro-style living room with Christmas flourishes from Real Living. How about that gorgeous little couch? Styling – Rachel Brown, Photo – Amanda Prior.

Real Living round ups the best in wrapping papers

Real Living cute, inexpensive gift wrapping ideas


Sydney Home – Tamarama House


Whilst in Sydney last week I received an email from Melbourne reader Anthea, who put me in touch with her sister Tina in Sydney… I think her words were “She’s got an amazing house in Tamarama by the beach… and she’s a bit of a design tragic too, she’d be able to give you cook’s tour of design shopping in Sydney!”… or something along those lines! Anyway, curiosity got the better of me, so of course I got in touch with Tina and arranged to meet!

Tina gave me so many great suggestions of design shops to see in Sydney (Surry Hills Shopping Guide to come!), and was also kind enough to show me her beautiful home so I could take some shots to share.

I hope you enjoy these photos of Tina’s gorgeous home. Thanks so much to Tina (and Anthea) for getting in touch, and for letting a complete stranger with a camera into your home!

light-filled loungeroom, featuring a beautiful collection of original artwork

I loved this little window seat area. Also love the modern hammock-style chair Tina bought from a local young designer

5 Eames black plywood chairs encircle the frosted glass dining table

Tina said she wanted to design her bathroom to look like a hotel bathroom. Mission accomplished! Love the slick marble finishes and those gorgeous, generous sash windows.

more lavish bathroom details

Tina’s understated bedroom with a feature wall of ornate wallpaper in aqua/bronze tones behind the bed, dark floorboards, classic white walls and blinds, and that gorgeous Eames rocker in the corner! Lovely vibrant touch.

I loved this unique hall runner! A great contrast to the white walls and dark / floorboards. I would never have thought to use a chequered style like this but it works so well!

Tina’s second bedroom, entirely wallpapered in silver ‘Horses Stampede’ wallpaper by Florence Broadhurst. So brave! Love it.

wallpaper detail

A stack of stuff in the second bedroom. Those tram/bus scrolls are a little bit everywhere but I do still love them. Wish I has ‘styled’ this shot a little more! Was rushing a bit at this stage but in retrospect I wish I’d removed that hand-towel on the left!

The rear of the house

The lush back garden – it was a wet day…. on a clearer day the view would have been amazing…

Front entrance

Other people’s books

If there’s anything better than house-sitting a beautiful apartment in Sydney for a whole week… it would have to be having unlimited access to the most incredible library of design books during your stay!

Below are my favourites from Bec’s extensive collection… just thought I’d share… after all, it is my birthday month… ;)

Burley Katon Halliday by Heidi Dokulil, published by Thames and Hudson (also spotted at Kinokuniya!)

Burley Katon Halliday page spreads to follow




Italian Designers at Home by Alessandra Burigana, published by Verbavolent

Italian Designer at Home page spreads to follow








Vogue Living Houses, Gardens, People page spreads to follow



Sydney home – Republic 2 apartment

striking glass and ceramic vases by Italian designer Ettore Sottsass.

Due to popular demand… Some shots of the stunning apartment in Darlinghurst’s Republic 2 Apartment building by Sydney architects Burley Katon Halliday, which we were lucky enough to house-sit last week. As usual I am frustrated by the 500px width limit of this layout, therefore I have uploaded most of the wide-shots at around 8oopx – double click to see a larger version!

Ahhh too beautiful. A big thankyou to our very generous friends for letting us stay! Don’t they have the most impeccable taste you’ve ever seen? Also should mention that most of the timber furniture you see in the apartment was custom-made by my very talented (and very modest) partner Gordon Johnson. That’s the dining table and benches, pretty much all the white shelving and drawer units, the kids beds and storage systems, entertainment unit etc.

Anyway, as you can imagine, arriving home yesterday was somewhat of a disappointment. ;)

The wonderful light-filled living area, featuring the beautiful B&B Italia couch and Cassina‘s Le Corbusier LC2 leather/chrome armchair on the right-hand wall.

Solid timber dining table and benches in Tasmanian Oak by Gordon Johnson, Le Corbusier cane chairs at either end from Thonet.

Vintage butterfly chairs on the balcony – available in Melbourne from Angelucci 20th Century and in Sydney from Ken Neale’s Twentieth Century Modern.

On coffee table – Alessi’s Cohncave Bowl by Australian designer Susan Cohn, and Thames and Hudson’s beautiful The Way We Live interiors book by Stafford Cliff and photographer Gilles De Chabeneix.

view of the pool area from the balcony

Reading corner featuring a vintage Antonio Citterio Diesis Chaise (B&B Italia, available new from Space Furniture).

Vertical drawer unit in gloss white two pack finish by Gordon Johnson

Kitchen – stainless surfaces and splashback.

Bedroom details featuring delicate trinket dishes by Karin Eriksson (available in Australia at Space Furniture). Also scattered throughout the apartment are sweet-smelling French Diptych candles, available in Melbourne at Manon Bis, 568 Malvern Road Hawksburn.

Bathroom detail. Slate-grey tiles cover floor and all walls, chrome laundry basket, pale grey towels from Country Road. Aesop handwash and moisturier (beautiful stuff).

Child’s bed and storage system by Gordon Johnson

Baby’s room – modular shelving unit by Gordon Johnson.

Space Furniture Sydney

Space exterior and lower level

Space Furniture in Sydney is huge. Set over nearly 4 levels, the showroom oozes refined international appeal, showcasing many more products than the Melbourne showroom can offer.

I was quite impressed that the styling and merchandising throughout was so slick… The sheer quantity of floorstock could easily have resulted in a cluttered-looking showroom, and can sometimes dilute the quality and appeal of each individual piece. This is certainly not the case at Space in Alexandria… every item were perfectly displayed and complemented by its surroundings.

So much interior eye candy in one place… it was a little overwhelming.

ahhhh… love those illuminated display shelves in the entrance area.

top – more of those stunning illuminated display shelves. bottom – Moooi’s Random Lights are one of my favourite Space pieces, shown here in a concentrated cluster.

Poltrona Frau’s very special Oceano Trunk by Andree Putman… whilst it appeals to the nostalgic idea of a 1920′s ocean cruise, this one’s strictly for the bedroom – the sales consultant said it takes around 4 guys to lift it! The detailing is stunning… a drawer for every conceivable trinket, and a fold-out mini desk with a little pouf to sit on.

A perennial favourite – Patricia Urquiola. LOVE her outdoor stuff…. such contemporary shapes, but always with a twist of traditional detailing. Those white chairs (below) are so stunning! Angular yet organic in shape… at $2000 each I’d be a little worried about leaving them outside…. The Canasta series above is also beautiful… I first saw these at Space in Melbourne at Saturday in Design.

Wide shots to give a sense of the amazing space! Below – playful freestanding Zanotta bookshelves.

kooky stuff. Top – ever-popular colourful Cartell chairs. Below – Ingo Maurer’s LED glass table… a table with tiny LED lights embedded into its glass surface – powered very mysteriously, with no visible wires at all! Perhaps the glass somehow carries an electrical current? more info here.

old favourites beautifully displayed… I love the display of the loose fabric covers using meathooks… the various textures/patterns look so good all lined up like that.

Great selection of books as always… also loved this shallow colourful bowl made of recycled magazine/newspaper pages.

Yes – a knitted clock. Ingenious!

Space Furniture
84 O’Riordan Street
Alexandria
NSW 2015

ph. 02 8339 7588

Gothenburg Highlights

Gothenburg, Sweden

Just to shake up this week’s Sydney-centric focus, here is another article from international contributor James Conway, who recently visited Gothenburg in Sweden (aka “the Melbourne of Sweden”). Must say, his lyrical and very entertaining writing style puts me to shame! Please enjoy, and I’m sure James would appreciate any feedback if you enjoy his article! – Lucy :)

Sweden’s second city is number one for design – James Conway points out some Gothenburg highlights.

Look, I generally know my geography. My nerdy childhood habit of poring over maps and atlases means I’m usually good for a blue wedge in Trivial Pursuits. But it was only after my friend Sheryl suggested a trip to Gothenburg that I discovered a) it’s on the west coast of Sweden, not somewhere in Germany as I’d always thought, and b) that it’s the same place as Göteborg (as the locals call it, pronouncing it something like “yerteborry”).

Not that they tend to make a big deal about themselves; Gothenburg’s half a million inhabitants go about their business with minimal fuss, pausing from their cheerful industriousness every now and then to give us Volvos, Hasselblad cameras and Björn from Abba. And behind many of the Swedish design classics we admire today there’s a good chance you’ll find a graduate of the city’s world-renowned HDK School of Design & Craft.

Among Swedes themselves the city has a reputation for being friendlier and more progressive than Stockholm. Consider this alongside the significant migrant population, enviably high quality of living and a few trams, and you’re basically looking at the Melbourne of Sweden.

Our visit coincided with what Swedes traditionally refer as “the rotting month”, the tail end of summer when – back in the day – food tended to go bad in the heat. Modern refrigeration aside, the autumnal temperatures and persistent rain which marked most of our week there made the idea of climate-related spoilage seem a little fanciful.

We started our explorations on Avenyn, the main shopping street, but it was dominated by the kind of shops you could find anywhere in Western Europe. More promising is the local branch of Swedish chain Lagerhaus, with its chic, affordable tableware, and decorative bits which allow you to outfit the rest of the home in various degrees of tastefulness, from bland beige to Bangalore brothel. Some of the trashy novelty items on display make you suspect that their typical customer is buying a leaving gift for a colleague they don’t particularly care for. But tear yourself away, if you can, from the Hello Kitty soap dispenser; the real treat in this store is when you look up to discover you’re actually in a converted Art Deco theatre.

Older still is Haga, a handsome neighbourhood of pedestrianised streets lined with grand 19th century timbered houses. Here you’ll find cafes, bookshops, antique stores and independent galleries like Sintra, which has a rotating programme of contemporary crafts and design, with an emphasis on ceramics.



To put all of this into context, head for the Röhsska Museum, the country’s only museum dedicated to design. The collection traces the evolution of the Swedish aesthetic over the centuries but really comes alive for two key eras: late 18th century Gustavian style, which took French interiors, dropped a lot of the frills and lightened up the colour scheme to make the most of the wan Nordic light, and post-war pieces of the kind which dominate international auction sales these days. Across town, the light-filled blond-wood expanse of the Museum of World Culture, designed by London firm Brisac Gonzalez, was opened in 2004, and its goal of intercultural dialogue is a legacy of the city’s outward-looking maritime history.

Top – Museum of World Culture, bottom – sculpture by Korean artist Suh Do-Ho at the MWC

Installation outside the Museum of World Culture


But for me the real gem of Gothenburg’s institutions is also its smallest – the Kortedala Museum, a completely preserved example of ’50s and ’60s interiors in a modestly proportioned apartment in the most non-descript building imaginable. It’s like being on a movie set; everything, from the bric-a-brac on the occasional tables to the toiletries in the bathroom, is authentic to the era.

The Kortedala

Kortedala was home to a forward-thinking housing project which reasoned that a social democracy had an obligation to provide quality accommodation to all. The teak table in the apartment, for instance, came from Denmark, as it was then acknowledged as a world leader in design. The lovely couple who welcome visitors to the apartment had themselves moved into the development in 1957, and proudly displayed the television with peek-a-boo wooden screen which was introduced in the early 60s, and the then-radical inbuilt refrigerator.

The Kortedala

A little hunting in the city’s fleamarkets can turn up your own time-travel souvenir; our expedition yielded a hand-held cake mixer with in-built egg separator. OK so I’m not much good in a kitchen but according to Sheryl, who knows more about baking than I ever will, this is apparently a stroke of design genius.

ingenious cake mixer

Heading north out of the city, pausing briefly to goggle at the Bräckbod factory, which sells imperfect biscuits at drastically reduced prices to coachloads of tourists (I am not making this up), we were soon in a shampoo ad wonderland. Around every bend there were breathtaking vistas of rolling pine-covered hills, wild rocky outcrops, serene bays and lush green fields grazed by happy cows.

shampoo ad wonderland

You could spend weeks exploring the little fishing villages up and down the coast, with the islands and inlets along the way offering endless visual variety. Water is key to everything here – the frequent downpours, the fish-heavy diet, even the art; the Nordic Watercolour Museum, designed by Danish architects Niels Bruun and Henrik Corfitsen, has a dramatic setting in the town of Skärhamn. Its oxblood façade echoes the traditional farmhouses which dot the landscape in this region. The museum has thoughtfully erected live-in studios for visiting artists, in the form of wooden cubes weathered to match the rocks they perch upon.

Nordic Watercolour Museum

Gazing out over the bay through the soaring windows in the gallery’s restaurant, we agreed that we would wholeheartedly recommend Gothenburg and the surrounding area for anyone who wants a crash course in Scandinavian design, some spectacular scenery, or just to pick up some less-than-perfect biscuits at knockdown prices.

Nordic Watercolour Museum restaurant
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