The Design Files Daily

Sustainable Design

Cumulus Inc. Porcelain Coffee Cups by Ingrid Tufts

Cumulus Inc. Porcelain Coffee Cups by Ingrid Tufts – photos by Kim Brockett at Craft Victoria.

As every self-respecting Melburnian would know, one of Melbourne’s coolest cafes, Cumulus Inc. just happens to be nestled right next door to Craft Victoria at the top end of Flinders Lane.  I’m not sure if the craft has been rubbing off on the baristas, but it seems these two organisations have formed a close bond over their regular morning coffee runs(!), and this has resulted in a brilliant crafty collaboration!

The Cumulus Inc. Coffee Cup, featuring the restaurant’s iconic cloud design, was designed by Craft Victoria member Ingrid Tufts,  and was commissioned through New Craft Made in Victoria – a new product development service that matches Craft Victoria members with commercial opportunities.  Find out more about the brilliant craft initiative right here!

Ingrid Tufts is a brilliant Melbourne-based crafter who works exclusively in hand thrown porcelain. Her beautiful work is sold in retailers around the country, including the Donna Hay General Store in Woollahra, Sydney.

Each Cumulus inc. Cup is individually hand-thrown and glazed.  They retail for $20, and when you buy one your first coffee is free! (…and it is extremely good coffee!).  Cumulus Inc. is also encouraging customers to re-use their coffee cups by offering 30c off every takeaway coffee sold in a re-usable alternative.  Leeroy Kirk-Walker from Cumulus says the project has been an amazing success with one in ten of their regular customers purchasing a cup!

SERIOUSLY what is not love and this brilliant collaboration!?  Beautiful local craft, sustainable business strategy and excellent coffee.  Great work all round!  I am thoroughly impressed.

These photos by Ingrid Tufts

Urban Crop

Urban Crop plants – photos by Earl Carter

Photo – Earl Carter

Have you been spotting tulips in unexpected places recently? Last week I was dashing around sourcing all manner of gorgeous things for a shoot… and it seemed that every single shop I visited (Safari Living, Loom Rugs and Mark Tuckey… to name a few) seemed to have these luscious blooms in their windows, each wrapped in a signature brown paper bag…!

Very curious indeed. ‘What is going on around here!?’ you might ask – ‘Who is filling all these shop windows with stunning fresh flowers, and where can I get my hands on some?’

The man behind this brilliantly hair-brained scheme is of course Melbourne’s best loved horticultural dynamo, Joost Bakker. Just launched this month, Joost’s Urban Crop project involves selling tulips, hyacinths, irises and herbs from the back of a van in various locations across Melbourne’s CBD.

I guarantee you’ve never seen such vibrant blooms… but in truth, it isn’t really the tulips that Joost is peddling. What he’s most excited to share is the unique nutrient-rich ‘Urban Crop Soil’ that each plant is grown in. This special soil mix, developed by Joost himself, is made from a blend of composted organic waste, worm castings, and a somewhat magical ingredient called Bio Char. It is a miraculous concoction which ensures the healthiest and most prolific flowering plants – in the most sustainable possible way.

Joost packages Urban Crop tulips - photo by Earl Carter

Joost and business partner Renee Nutbean hope Urban Crop will demonstrate the value of organic compost rather than fertilized soil – which takes vast amounts of fossil fuel to produce and doesn’t make for healthy, happy plants. Urban Crop plants are full of energy and nutrients – not pumped full of fertilizer and water only to slump into a sad heap once you get them home. Urban Crop herbs will happily sit in your kitchen for a week or two, ready for you to harvest as you need them. Urban Crop flowers will produce the most stunning blooms that last longer than any cut flower.

The idea is to take your bundle of gorgeous Urban Crop blooms or herbs home, keep the soil and root system intact, enjoy them for a week or more, then either compost the plant when it dies, or keep the bulbs for next year. All in all, it’s a much more sustainable way to give and enjoy flowers and plants at home.

Not surprisingly, Urban Crop stockists are growing quicker than Joost can update his website! He loves the idea that bars, cafes and all sorts of shops across Melbourne are selling flowers and plants in the middle of winter…. ‘Maybe this City will become famous for being able to buy living flowers on every street corner! Anyway I’ll just keep on dreaming..‘ he says!

Urban Crop plants are now stocked at over 40 Melbourne locations – from a bike shop in Greville st Prahran, to a book shop in Elwood… of course I spotted them at Safari Living, Loom Rugs and Mark Tuckey, and also you can try Leo’s Supermarkets in Hartwell, Kew and Heidelberg. OR for the real guerilla-gardening experience, hunt Joost and Renee down in their Urban Crop van… at various locations listed here.

Please leave a comment if you have another Urban Crop location tip-off!

Renee Nutbean in the Urban Crop van!

State of Green

Some of the eco-conscious products available from new Melbourne-based online store State of Green.

State of Green is a fab new online store with a focus on eco-friendly and fair-trade products for your home and kids. Melbourne-based Jenny Tranter launched the site just in December, and has done a really brilliant job of sourcing a great variety of products from both Australia and overseas. Everything on the site has been designed with sustainability in mind – lots of bamboo homewares, organic fabrics, non-toxic cleaning and laundry products, and beautiful crafted wooden toys for kids.

I always feel Aus is so behind the US and Europe when it comes to online shopping… but little by little we’re getting there, and State of Green really does lift the bar! I have been SO in love with the Shapemaker timber block game (top image) since it first popped up last year… I really need a little person to buy this stuff for! Also love the retro-style stainless steel coloured picnic cups from Eco Cocoon – just like my Nanna used to have in the caravan!

Do pop over and lend your support to this new Melbourne start-up!

More products currently in stock at State of Green.

Wary Meyers Decorative Arts

‘Chaiseburger’ stacked beanbag by John and Linda Meyers (seen in their own fabulous loungeroom!)

Brooklyn apartment styled by Wary Meyers – love their handpainted radiator!

Awesome marshmallow window installation for Anthropologie – 9 windows, 15,000 marshmallows! Concept and installation by Wary Meyers.

More marshmallows…

And again.

Re-purposed French Dresser by Wary Meyers, including sketches from their Tossed and Found book

John Meyers

Linda Meyers in her fabulous walk in ‘closet’ (pic from Domino)

Wary Meyers studio – with handpainted canoe!

Linda and John Meyers = Wary Meyers Decorative Arts, a US-based Husband and wife team who design and create the most incredible variety of artistic projects including paintings, interiors, illustration, design and soft sculpture. (Before they formed their business in 2004, Linda was a graphic designer and art director, and John was the Corporate Display Director for Anthropologie!)

They have had lots of press in the US for their fantastic and often very wacky creative projects… but I must admit it was Kirra Jamison who introduced me to this incredible creative duo when she mentioned them in her TDF interview earlier this month…! Thanks Kirra!

Interior design (and custom re-purposed lampshades) by Wary Meyers Decorative Arts

Wary Meyers are perhaps best known recently for their Tossed and Found column in TimeOut New York, in which this supremely clever couple take the ‘reduce, reuse, recycle’ mantra to a new level, re-purposing junk into amazing furniture and homewares truly unlike anything you’ve ever seen! The pair have recently written a book documenting all these amazing creations – Tossed and Found – Unconventional Design from Cast Offs.

ps) The Meyers’ own home in Maine is seriously AWESOME and was featured in Domino Magazine a while back… (see pics below). Also, they also have a really great blog.

Linda and John Meyer’s home as featured in Domino Magazine

Custom floor painting

Interview – Max Kater of Murchison-Hume!

The beautiful, non-toxic, eco and kid-friendly, Australian-made Murchison-Hume product range!

Top – Max’s vintage apothecary bottle collection which inspired Murchison-Hume’s stunning amber-bottle packaging. Bottom – Details from Max’s beautiful bright and very organised home!

Oh Max Kater’s Sydney home is just stunning, isn’t it? How about that blackboard wall in the kitchen? You might recognise these shots from Apartment Therapy a little while ago!)


Now listen. If there is one deliciously luxurious thing you can do for yourself, your home, your family AND our precious environment… it’s switch your cleaning products. Murchison-Hume products are the most simple, natural, organic, eco and kid-friendly Australian-made cleaning products money can buy. (And they’re not expensive!). They’re grey-water friendly, they’re packaged beautifully… they’re truly the most glamourous and guilt-free way to clean your home!

Murchison-Hume is a small, Sydney-based Husband-and-wife business set to conquer the world. Truly! This inspiring young Australian business is the brainchild of LA-born Max Kater, whose ‘light bulb moment’ came initially as a response to her kids’ allergies. She couldn’t find any products on the market that were visually appealing, genuinely green and truly effective – so she made her own!

I find Max’s story so inspiring – with no experience in this area, she has grown the Murchison-Hume product range and brand to global recognition and impressive international orders! (They just got their first order from Anthropologie in the US!! Hold onto your seats!). Max is a busy working Mum, and I truly have no idea how she finds the time to run her business from a home office (which double’s as her eldest son’s bedroom!), between the hours of 9.00am and 3.00pm!

As you’ll see below, Max takes it all in her stride – she’s unaffected, family-focussed and she has a wicked sense of humour… read on for a thoroughly entertaining insight into the clean, green and very inspiring world of Murchison-Hume!

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

If someone had told me 10 years ago that I would end up making organic house-cleaning products, I would have suggested a nice cup of tea and a lie-down in a darkened room.

Having said that, my years as a Fashion Editor certainly helped to sharpen my personal aesthetic and my inner Domestic Goddess really kicked into overdrive when I became a Mother. I like to think I’ve brought that mixed bag of skills together in Murchison-Hume. Sexy styling meets domestic practicality…why not?

Tell us about the genesis of Murchison Hume.

Well, imagine the shock of working with the most beautiful clothing, shoes and accessories in the world to using yellow plastic dish brushes and Pine O’Kleen on a daily basis. Ugh! I decided then and there that cleaning products needed a makeover.

How did the concept originally come about?

I guess my “light bulb moment” came soon after having my second son Charles. We discovered that he had inherited my perfect trifecta of allergies; eczema and asthma.

A stylish Parisian friend (aren’t they all?) sent me an article about toxicity in the home and how they can exacerbate allergies and eczema and the more I read, the more I learned that it’s fairly easy to keep a clean house without using products that can be harmful (not to mention downright dangerous!) to our families and the planet. Sadly, there was nothing out there that was appealing visually, genuinely green and truly effective…so I made my own!

Max’s son Ben’s beautiful blue bedroom

What challenges did you face in realising your ideas, and making your idea a commercial success?

Really the only barrier was time. I’m sure every working Mother can relate to this, but seriously, the real challenge to starting any venture is to be able carve out the necessary time to be creative (while still managing to keep you and your family fed, bathed and clothed). And you can forget about getting your hair done. Learn to embrace the ponytail!

How is it working in a husband-wife partnership!? Can you give us an insight into the structure of the company – do you have other employees, and which significant tasks do you outsource?

Everyone says: “Oh how can you work with your husband, don’t you drive each other crazy all day?!” And the short answer is: “of course!” But I think Husbands can drive you crazy whether or not you’re in business together, don’t you? On the plus-side, I get to sleep with the boss.

Seriously though, I think we have a very complimentary skill set: Peter manages the business end of things, including our small staff of six at the factory and I do the creative bits from my office at home…I live only for art and beauty darling!

Which creative minds did you collaborate with when developing the Murchison Hume range?

I am lucky because my friends happen to be a fairly productive and creative bunch. Susan Sheller from Cotton Love Home was my constant guinea-pig from the very beginning. Shannon Fricke taught me how to enhance the subtleties of colour; Charlotte Sherston encouraged me to write like I speak (a dangerous and controversial idea) and Samantha Wagner (from Sambag) gave me the inspiration and the courage to stick my neck out and take Murchison-Hume from “hobby” into business with gusto!

Did you enlist a designer to help with graphics or packaging? It is so beautifully presented!

Pretty early on, I had a clear idea that my cleaning products would resemble old-fashioned apothecary bottles (which I love and collect). And Geraldine Ward, who is my Graphic Designer and a genius mind-reader, was able to take my ideas and translate them into a logo, labels and a perfect website for us.

Which creative people are you inspired by?

Oh, how much time do you have? Beauty is everywhere. Good design is everywhere and I cast a wide net when it comes to looking for sources of ideas.

In Australia alone, I am inspired by stylists Kristen Bookallil; Glen Proebstel, Sibella Court and Megan Morton who like me, can find beauty in almost anything.

Fashion Designers like Carl Kapp and Josh Goot for their refined take on Australian style, shops like Becker-Minty, Space Furniture and davidmetnicole represent an eclectic mix of everything that good design has to offer and even the Coca-Cola sign in Kings Cross gives me a creative jolt every time I see it!

What does a typical day at work involve for you?

Typically, I try to be up and “dressed” by 7:30am. I put the quotes around dressed because working from home, getting dressed requires little more than a clean face, a neat bun and a T-shirt dress!

After the boys have left for school, I try and make sporadic attempts at exercise (on the Wii Fit). But mostly I spend the day at my eldest son’s desk (which doubles as my office during school hours). When I’m worried or trying to figure something out, I go and do a little tidy up somewhere… I know it sounds slightly OCD, but it calms me down to fold towels or re-organise my sock drawer. Sad, but true.

By 3:00pm the house is full of noisy boys and afterschool activities, snacks, etc. I try to snatch at least another hour or two of work before it’s time to make dinner and then it’s bath, pyjamas, bed and it starts all over again the next day. Clearly I need to get out more…

Refreshing and so inspiring to her that Max manages to run a business from a home office that doubles as her eldest son’s bedroom!

What are you most proud of professionally?

Apart from the obvious fact that it’s keeping us in shoe leather, the fact that my quirky little idea is being embraced by people all over the world. Pinch me!

What would be your dream project?

Oh, easy! Re-fitting the Qantas First Class Lounge (and all of its lounges and planes) with Australian-made Murchison-Hume products!

What are you looking forward to?

Being able to entertain at home again, now that the weather in Sydney is warmer!

Max’s serene outdoor entertaining area… so very gorgeously Sydney!

NSW Questions –

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

My house: employee dinner, last Thursday. We have just employed an American, Peter Lyle, to help me manage things on the domestic front and he made a mustard béarnaise sauce to die for!

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

At the moment, Saturday morning entails trying to read the papers with my youngest son, Charles (he always hogs the Real Estate section) while his older brother is at cricket!

Sydney’s best kept secret?

I’ll tell you if you promise not to laugh…remember, I am an expatriate and we never really lose our tourist habits: I lovelovelove the Chinese Garden of Friendship at Darling Harbour. Not nearly as cheesy at it sounds (how could it be)? I have a bit of a Koi fetish and I adore sitting in the Lotus Pond Pavilion, drinking tea and throwing bits of Char Siu Bao to the fish. The boys scramble over the rocks and we can languish there all afternoon…heaven!

Max’s own watergarden, Koi fish and brand new waterlilies!

Thanks so much for Max for this interview, and for sharing such beautiful photos of her glorious home! I feel I should say, also, that I use Murchison-Hume products everyday at home and I can honestly vouch for their incredible effectiveness! My absolute favourites are the Counter-Intelligence chemical-free food surface spray (truly as effective as Spray-n-wipe – minus the ticklish nose!), and the Everyday Furniture Spritzer, which effortlessly removes sticky marks and gives timber furniture a beautiful sleek sheen. You gotta try it!

Remake it Home

Remake it Home – fab new DIY ideas book. On the right see those clever contraptions which recycle old yellow pages? Genius.

Lovely layout by Neal Whittington of Present and Correct. See the clever baskets made from recycled gas cans? So clever!

Tord Boontje‘s Transglass vases and some fabulous packing pallet creations…

Spotted this book at the Brunswick st Bookstore on the weekend and just couldn’t put it down… so of course then I had to buy it ($49.95 – I thought that was not too bad!).

Remake it Home is a fantastically exhaustive collection of resourceful household DIY design ideas. It’s in the vein of US mag ReadyMade Magazine…. but so much better. In addition to all the practical ‘why didn’t I think of that’ ideas – repurposing everything from CD spindles to packing pallets and broom bristles – the book also shares an inspiring collection of commercial design from all over the world which recycles existing materials in some fabulously designer way. (ie Tord Boontje‘s stunning Transglass vases, made from repurposed wine bottles, and my fave Log Bowls by Loyal Loot). Such simple and truly beautiful examples of sustainability in commercial design.

Log Bowls by Loyal Loot Collective (posted before here). HOW good are they? Seriously.


Remake it Home is written by Henrietta Thompson, who I notice is currently Acting Senior Editor of *Wallpaper magazine. A little googling also uncovers articles for Monocle, and the Zaha Hadid blog, if you don’t mind! So she clearly knows what she’s talking about. ALSO, the layout, by Neal Whittington of super fab UK online stationery store Present and Correct, is totally awesome.

Love the punched-out pattern in the back of this cupboard by Jo Meesters and Marije Van Der Park

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