The Design Files Daily

Lighting

New lighting from Coco Flip – Mr. Cooper

New Mr. Cooper pendant lights by Kate Stokes of Coco Flip!  Photos by Haydn Cattach.

Melbourne designer Kate Stokes has a little design studio in Collingwood called Coco Flip – you may remember her gorgeous timber / spun aluminium Coco Pendant lamps covered here last year!? LOVE them.

Ms Stokes is back on our radar this week with a brand new design that officially launched yesterday at Fringe Furniture – say hello to Mr. Cooper!

Inspired by the old-fashioned  ‘tin can telephone’, this delicate pendant light is made in Melbourne from spun copper, with a sweet woven flex cord.  Love that stuff.  Each pendant measures 250mm in diameter and 250mm high, and retails for $560.00.  They’re designed to be hung in a cluster… although I quite like the single one hanging on his lonesome below!

Mr. Cooper will soon be available to buy from select local retailers, but for now you can purchase the lights direct through Kate at Coco Flip!   If you’re in Melbourne, you can also check this out in person at the Fringe Furniture exhibition at Abbotsford Convent, which runs until October 8th.

Stunning in-situ pics of Mr. Cooper, shot at Captains of Industry in the workshop of Roberts & Hassett.  Photos by Haydn Cattach.

New Lighting by Workroom Design NZ

‘Angle’ table lamps and ‘Triangle’ pendant lamps by NZ-based Workroom Design

I am LOVING LOVING LOVING these new lights by NZ-based design team Workroom Design.   HOW great are they!?  In actual fact the ‘Angle’ table lamp has been around for a while, but the lovely ‘Lean’ floor lamp and ‘Triangle’ pendant lamp are brand new – launched just last month!  I heart them massively.  So rare to see new freestanding lamps designed and manufactured locally!  With their quirky scandi aesthetic and *Wallpaper magazine-esque styling, it’s only a matter of time before these sweet designs hit the bigtime.

Workroom Design was established in 2008 by father and daughter design team Douglas and Rebecca Snelling.   They also run a fabulous little retail store in Auckland called Douglas & Bec (I have covered once before), which stocks their own designs and other like-minded finds – including, I notice, pieces by  South Australian design darlings Daniel : Emma!

Most excitingly, Douglas & Bec have just launched a fantastic online store – so those of us across the ocean can get in on the action!

All the beautiful lamps pictured here are handcrafted in NZ using American Ash timber, spun aluminium shades in a range of colours, and beautiful woven fabric flex cords.  Need.  Want.  Now.

‘Lean’ floor lamp by Workroom Design.

Interview – Cindy-Lee Davies of Lightly

Brand new Lightly showroom in Collingwood!  Photos – Cursor Ctrl.

New Lightly products including Rope Light.

Favourite Lightly pieces – the ‘Norma’ hot water bottle-inspired ceramic vase, various silhouette mirrors, and 99 Bottles range.

OK I’m just WARNING you – If you’re getting a bit tired of hearing about outrageously successful local design businesses then you probably should think twice before reading today’s interview!  Melbourne designer Cindy-Lee Davies has done so incredibly well with her home-grown design studio Lightly, and is showing no signs of slowing down!  Since launching the company just 6 years ago in 2005, Lightly now stocks retailers across Australia and internationally… and Cindy-Lee has collaborated with major international brands including US retail giant Anthropologie and Kate Spade!  Amazingly, Cindy-Lee still designs every item herself, manufactures 90% of her product range in Australia, and maintains a close-knit team of just 6 staff.  And I thought I was busy!

I recently attended the opening of Lightly’s shiny new showroom and studio in Collingwood… WOW It is truly such an incredible space, and marks a very exciting time for this growing business.  The new space incorporates offices, warehousing and distribution centre and trade showrooms.  It’s the first time Cindy-Lee has had a centralised hub from which to base all aspects of her business, and it’s already inspired her to look into producing larger pieces including furniture (loving the new Mooo Stools!).

Perhaps most excitingly, Lightly’s new space also incorporates a retail showroom on the ground floor!  This presents a fantastic opportunity to see the entire Lightly range in one purpose-designed space, and gain a little insight into the workings of this super successful local business.  Say hi from me!

Brand new Lightly showroom!
3 Glasshouse rd Collingwood (near corner Wellington)

Open Monday – Friday 10am – 5pm
Saturday 11- 4pm

Cindy-Lee Davies.  Photograph by Paul Barbera.

CLICK HERE for the full interview and many more pics!

Interview – Pierre & Charlotte

The beautiful North Melbourne workspace of designers Pierre & Charlotte Julien, featuring a few of their signature pieces! I love that baby tree lamp in RED!

Pierre & Charlotte’s new showroom!
Pierre & Charlotte pieces spotted in Melbourne’s top secret Lost and Found hotel room!

Pierre & Charlotte tables – Bamboo Butler in the centre and Gimminy on the right.

Anyone who moves from Paris to Melbourne is, in my books, instantly credible.  North Melbourne-based design duo Pierre & Charlotte Julien made the move in 1994, setting up their design firm here after years of varied experience in set design, fashion, fine art and furniture restoration.   Their sleek, pared back designs are all 100% made in Melbourne – a rare and beautiful thing!

Pierre & Charlotte’s beautiful furniture and lighting designs are influenced by Pierre’s Scandinavian and French background, and by their shared love of Japanese design.  The focus of their design work is simplicity, attention to detail and a deep respect and understanding of quality craftsmanship.  They have been lucky to have built up a small but invaluable team of local makers over the years – including a great wood turner, steam bender, polisher and upholsterer.  The creative pair are also now expanding and beginning to train up new staff in their workshop for the first time!

Pierre and Charlotte have a gorgeous new studio/ showroom that is open to the public for the first time in 15 years! It is open on Saturdays only, between 10.00 – 4.00, and like all Melbourne’s best kept secrets, is hidden away down a cobble stoned lane in North Melbourne.  Do pop in next time you’re in the neighbourhood!

Huge thanks to Charlotte for her time with this interview!

Pierre & Charlotte
15 Purcell st
North Melbourne

ph. (03) 9329 4414

Open Saturday 10.00 – 4.00pm or by appointment

Pierre in the workshop with Ferdinand!

Tell us a little about your backgrounds – what path led you Melbourne, and to industrial design?

Started out in the fashion world, which was fun. We were in our late teens, early twenties. We got to travel and test out a few things. Pierre spent a lot of time playing music in a group, writing, singing and playing guitar.  I worked in the film industry painting sets.  I worked for some great painters and learnt a lot about colour. Pierre worked in an Atelier restoring antique French furniture – most amazing craftsmanship – carving, inlay etc. We came to Melbourne to start a business together that combined our skills and knowledge.

Why have you chosen to produce all your pieces in Melbourne, and have you found it a challenge to maintain this commitment to locally crafted product?

Very challenging. We are interested in maintaining a very high level of craftsmanship.  After 17 years we have found very few local companies or craftsmen that are capable of producing this high level of work.  We have a few local craftsmen… a great wood turner, steam bender, polisher and upholsterer.  To add to this, we realise we now need to do more in house and expand. We are now training people in our workshop for the first time and the success of this is the combination of talents where they really enjoy what they do and take pride in their work. It is important that we have quality control in the making process.

Select pieced from Pierre & Charlottess’s furniture and lighting range

What have been one or two of your favourite projects / designs?

Southern Ocean Lodge on Kangaroo Island was a great job. Wonderful site and the clients, James and Hayley Baillie , were committed to all the right things : Good design, high quality workmanship, comfort, service, the environment and also the care of all those people involved. Plus having fun…. most people forget when they are doing these huge projects to have a good time.

Favourite design: Always the one we have just finished.. so at the moment, the Indigo wall light. We wanted to use a fabric we found in Kyoto which is a magnificent indigo blue. The fabric is dyed using natural fermentation which is almost unheard of these days. Then we did one in off-white, which is gorgeous also! Very casual, relaxed light…..

Pierre & Charlotte’s Indigo Light.

Can you give us a little insight into your creative process – ie do you work first on paper, then on computer? What favourite materials and tools do you use?

We love tools and use them all the time. We have collected a lot of tools over the years from all over the world. We do mock ups and models. Often we will just start putting bits and bobs together, making a rough model with paper and tape and move it around, talking and changing it as it evolves in our hands… sketching comes into it, but more tactile exploration to get the mechanics of a piece to work and then we will do a computer plan.

What does a typical day at work involve for you?

Our whole day is about trying to get our work done while living with two french bulldogs – Ferdinand and Nancy. They have a walk morning and night and spend the rest of the day with us at work. We are constantly interrupted with various things: Toy rolled under the sofa (lots of crying), one wants to sleep where the other one is sleeping (more crying), Ferdinand must greet anyone who comes at both entrances – and if for some reason this can not be accommodated he gets very upset and sick (literally). Needs to do a wee, wants to sleep in the sun (middle of the road). They both love cars (anyone’s).  Jumps on all clients, especially the ones who hate dogs.  No road sense, no manners …. and totally adorable!!

Nancy and Ferdinand!

Where do you turn for creative inspiration – nature, travel, books, the web etc?

Nature is a big one for us, stories : we are big readers and music……. oh and of course Ferdinand and Nancy. They inspire us with all their antics and comedy.

Which other artists / designers / creative people do you admire at the moment?

• The Ganim family – Rae, Freddie and Sunday… there is something brewing with them currently – watch out for them over the next 12 months.
Paul Westlake – great photographer – best fashion photographer
Valerie Jouve - photos
Terunobu Fujimori work -love his tea houses

What would be your dream creative project or collaboration?

• Complete Hotel – Architecture, Interiors, furniture, garden…… the lot.
• Installation piece that is a complete experience with structure, colour, sound and light

A residential interior featuring some of Pierre & Charlotte’s beautiful work!

What are you looking forward to?

*Being on the east coast of Tasmania on a remote beach this summer.
*Having an exhibition of my photography. Hoping to have one in the near future.
*Two big projects in the pipeline for next year.

Melbourne Questions -

Your favourite Melbourne neighbourhood and why?

Balaclava – good mix of food shops: deli’s, fruit and veg etc – we are big on food and eating.

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

Movida – was excellent !!

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

Walking the dogs on the beach.

Melbourne’s best kept secret?

Our new studio/ showroom that’s open to the public for the first time in 15 years. Saturdays only 10 – 4. Hidden away down a cobbles stoned lane in North Melbourne

Pierre & Charlotte’s North Melbourne studio at 15 Purcell st!

Justin Lamont – LifeSpaceJourney

Lights and designed pieces by Justin Lamont – photography Giang Do

Various stools by Justin Lamont – photography Giang Do .  Clockwise from top left – Stools made from recycled packing crates, Typography stool and Spun Stools.

I got an email from Justin Lamont about a million years ago and it somehow slipped into The Design Files email vortex, only to be recovered yesterday!  Sorry Justin!  Shocking.

ANYWAY. I am really loving his work!  ESPECIALLY those spun copper (or brass?) lights at the top there…  Nice huh?

Justin is a self-taught designer (I *think* he is actually some kind of eye specialist!?), but he has recently joined forces with brother Glenn to set up LifeSpaceJourney – a property development / design consultancy based in Melbourne.   His fabulous Spun Stools (pictured above) are currently  part of the Fringe Furniture exhibition, where they were Highly Commended by the judges.  (You can still check out Fringe Furniture this Thursday through to Sunday at the Substation in Newport….!   All details over here.)

Justin’s own house in Seddon is also well worth a mention in it’s own right… Designed by Justin in collaboration with architecture firm ODR.  Jeepers.  Beautiful.

Justin Lamont’s Seddon home.  Photographs Derek Swalwell for Belle Magazine.

Photographs Derek Swalwell for Belle Magazine.

Photographs Derek Swalwell for Belle Magazine.

Photographs Derek Swalwell for Belle Magazine.

More from Milan! – Felicity Splatt’s Design Week Diary


Hey hey! Today the Milan Design Week coverage continues with this fantastic wrap-up by Melbourne ex-pat Felicity Splatt. Felicity is currently living in Austria, but makes the trip to Milan every year for design week… and this year offered to send me her highlights!

Along with her favourite design finds, Felicity shares some shots of the super-trendy Milanese locals, her pick for the best Pizza in town… and she even includes a visit to the Lago apartment (soooo jealous!). I feel so lucky to have so much fantastic first-hand news and photos to share with you all..! It’s gotta be the next best thing to being there!


Felicity Splatt’s Milan Design Week diary

To Milan for Design Week. In addition to the Salone Internazionale del Mobile (Furniture Fair) out at the showgrounds, the city hosts literally hundreds of events over this week.

One of the first stops was Established & Sons at the wonderful space La Pelota. La Pelota used to be a court for playing Jai alai, but these days is a multipurpose space used for a variety of events. Established and Sons constructed wooden warrens in which their wares were exhibited. I particularly liked the couch and the (somewhat frightening) clown lamps:


Across the road the nice Dutch designer Edwin Vlassenroot was exhibiting the latest iterations of his chandeliers. Constructed from postcard holders, these ones had hand-painted glass postcards forming the shade. Previous versions had wooden or copper cards. Edwin also had some small lamps on display. It’s nice to see his work again, only a pity that this year he isn’t exhibiting in his gorgeous apartment, because it’s great for a sticky-beak (there are some peeks on his website though!)

Chandeliers by Dutch designer Edwin Vlassenroot

At the Seoul Design Festival, some refreshing works… even if their security guard might not have been watching me closely enough (don’t worry, I didn’t touch anything!).

Pieces from the Seoul Design Festival

Then to the M’afrique exhibition with works by Stephen Burks:


In the amazing Palazzo Crivelli an interesting installation on the ground floor (below left), and a retrospective of Ettore Sottsass’s work by the Galleria Clio Calvi Rudi Volpi upstairs (below right).


From left to right: a great lamp, and the roast meat dome for Secondome and Bosa Ceramiche:


Back out onto the busy via Pontacchio, some Milanese youth:


I was exhausted from all the travelling that day, so stopped for some pizza and to try to figure out how I could possibly see so many events on foot in about a day and a half. Amazing pizza (of course) in the tiny Sibilla:

Later that night, wandered into the wonderful Spazio Rossana Orlandi where LOTS was happening. People in the courtyard/garden area enjoying apertivo (drinks + copious delicious snacks for €8 – smelled amazing and everyone was really enjoying their food) and fantastic exhibitions upstairs, downstairs, everywhere! Design Academy Eindhoven, Nacho Carbonell, Baccarat, Designhuis, Weltevree, among others.

Shots from the Spazio Rossana Orlandi garden – top photos by Felicity Splatt, bottom image Megan Morton.

Weltevrees work was really nice, particularly the Floris Schoonderbeek’s Axechair. The legs are made of axe handles, and the body of the chair of a nice solid metal. I liked the quirky work of these young designers, maybe even more so when a handsome and talented trio of them offered me some prosecco…!

Floris Schoonderbeek’s Axechair – top righ image by Felicity Splatt, the others are from the Weltevree website.

The Revolving Chandelier by Bertjan Pot was bigger than I had imagined, and impressive. The heat of the light globes warms the air and causes the transparent and reflective shades to rotate:


Next day, headed down to the crazy Zona Tortona. Always full of people and so much design down here. Hit the Superstudio Piu pretty early, overwhelmed as usual by the masses on display. Gorgeous metallic Tom Dixon lamps:


This very interesting screen made up of lots of little (slide-sized) displays. A small camera mounted in the very centre (invisible from this side) tracks movement and projects the image to the screens, in shades of grey. That’s a person off to the right. When I was there, the other visitors and I were quite bewildered by the whole thing. Very nifty in action!

Down in some basement area, the Cloud Chair by Richard Hutten, and ceramic lamps by Chung Ji Hyun.


Up on the via Tortona, the Design Virus lamps by Pieke Bergemans, draped over tables, chairs and filing cabinets:


I really liked the cup chandelier (I’m sorry, I don’t know who this is by), in one of the Superstudios:


Visited the Lago apartment, intimidating guard at the front of the building, but he encouraged me to go in (other visitors weren’t so brave!). Apparently I was quite early as one poor resident was sitting on her bed putting on some moisturizer, while another started washing a mountain of dishes. The chair on the left pulls apart to become a mattress.


Walking around a city for days is really tough, even in comfy shoes, so I don’t know how these women did it:


I grabbed some snacks in the great Taste Lounge exhibition by Richard Ginora / Paola Navone. Lots of ceramics all around, including a giant wall of plates (left), and a super comfortable leather couch area with lots of reading material (right). Perfect for a nap!

(I had to add these additional shots from the Taste Lounge website! It is too fabulous! – Lucy)

…More from the Taste Lounge website

At Sander Mulder, the Woofers (left) and U-Tube (right):


On Sunday, out to the Salone, specifically to the Satellite where young designers present their work. Great ceramic lamps with golden insides from Apparatu / Mashallah Design.


Liked the Flower Pods by Maruja Fuentes:


Three gorgeous and unusual pieces the Echoes collection of Pour Les Alpes:


Nice, very well produced pieces from Brikolör, especially the pattern-stained storage/cabinet in ash veneer.


Sciocola, a chocolate bar seat (whose tablets depress when you sit down) from Adele Rotella:

And three interesting chairs from trimodestudio:


A door which does much more! The Ping Pong Door from Tobias Fränzel:


And to finish, something I wasn’t expecting, a concrete gravestone! Designed by Ákos Maurer Klimes and Péter Kucsera and produced by Ivanka.


A huge HUGE thankyou to Felicity for all her fantastic news and images from Milan… I am completely convinced I have to be there myself next year!

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