The Design Files Daily

window shopping

Spring in DUMBO!

Spring – a design store / gallery in DUMBO, Brooklyn

Ok… so clearly I am quite behind with all my NYC posting… I am not even there anymore, and am still catching up with all my photos etc! Thank so so much for all your patience! Also a huge huge thankyou for all your comments and a few emails too! I really appreciate it and am so sorry I haven’t been able to reply to every single comment!

These photos are from an area in Brooklyn called DUMBO. New Yorkers love to abbreviate. DUMBO = ‘Down Under Manhattan Bridge Overpass’ (ie just at the base of the Manhattan bridge, near the river).

I wish we had been able to discover more of DUMBO… but we did visit a fantastic design store / gallery called Spring. So lovely – and the owners are also super super nice. They support a lot of emerging design talent, and have regular exhibitions showcasing the work of both local and international designers and artists. The current show is called Lost and Found, and was curated by Spring owner and co-founder Anna Cosentino.

Top image – products at Spring, including the Zip Tie Chandlier by Joe Ponciano. Bottom image – Good Eggs ottoman and Drum Stool by Inna Alesina.

Spring stock so many unique designs I had not seen elsewhere – that light fitting in the window (top image) is constructed from cableties (such versatile little things!). In the bottom shot, Inna Alesina’s fantastic colourful stools are made entirely from egg cartons – tightly packed and simply held in place with tight cables. They look amazing! Beautiful pieces in their own right – aside from the brilliant eco-friendly concept.

Downtown DUMBO.

more NYC favourites…

Even the ‘garbage’ in Soho is special.

So sorry for the irregular posting of late… been a a bit all over the place. Left NYC few days ago and spent three blissful days in South Lake Tahoe, on the border of California and Nevada. Such beautiful scenery! All snowcapped mountains, emerald pine forests and glistening water. Only downside was struggling with somewhat unreliable internet reception!

Anyway still trying to catch up on all my NYC posting… so here, in no particular order, are some more of my favourite finds in and around Soho and Nolita…

ps) Thanks so so much for all your lovely comments – and even a few emails with tips and recommendations! I’m really sorry I haven’t been able to respond to all… but thankyou so much for making contact :) It is so lovely to hear from you!

Moss150 Greene street, Soho

The current exhibition at Moss showcases Bavaria – a range of limited-edition furniture by Dutch duo Studio Job, featuring a a rosewood finish with folk-art inspired decorative inlay. It was totally AMAZING. This range was commissioned exclusively for Moss.

Moss blurs the distinction between retail design store and gallery… no price tags, stunning one-off pieces displayed individually in glass cabinets like works of art or ancient relics. Beautiful space, incredible concept… but… how do they make any money? I guess perhaps at these prices, one sale a month is enough to pay their rent?

Anyway, Moss is absolutely a must-see if you’re a design junkie (like me!). Also, here it kind of feels ok to gawk at all the high-end design without any intention of making a purchase – the staff are mildly snooty… but they’re clearly more accustomed to browsers than buyers.

Moss shows pieces from the ‘Smoke‘ range of furniture by Dutch designer Maarten Baas.

Paul Smith – Greene st, Soho

Right next door to Moss, Paul Smith is absolutely worth a visit for the interior design and layout alone. I promise! The layout is similar to a residential home – you wander from room to room. greeted by a slightly different feel and aesthetic in each new space.

One room, in particular, was absolutely covered in original artwork and paintings, hung salon-style all over the walls. The effect was amazing! Also in the entrance area, open books were artfully strung on fishing line and hung across the ceiling… I really love Paul Smith’s eclectic decor – no two stores are the same, and yet they all share a distinct aesthetic unlike any other retail environment.

Kisan Concept Store - Greene st, Soho

This store is just across the road from Paul Smith and Moss… a French ‘concept store’ – the shots on their website really don’t do it justice – this store is truly beautiful. An artfully curated mix of ultra-feminine clothes and accessories (ridiculously expensive, of course), cuper-cute designer kids stuff, and slightly quirky yet completely gorgeous home accessories. Interesting, carefully considered mix. Very pricey.

Kelley & Ping – 127 Greene st, Soho

Kelley & Ping is in Soho right near Moss, Paul Smith and Kisan… tasty, quick-as-flash Chinese food (noodles and noodle soups mainly). Cheap and cheerful, in a really lovely industrial meets Hong Kong hawker-bar inspired space. Great for a cheap, casual feed (not always easy to find in this area). Also you’re unlikely to have to wait for a table, which is also somewhat of a rarity at lunchtime in NYC.

Kelley & Ping

Kate’s Paperie – 72 Spring Street, Soho
(between Crosby and Lafayette Streets, also other stores across New York – see website for details)

BEAUTIFUL paper / stationary / gift wrap and gift card shop. Truly beautiful. Eat your heart out Zetta Florence.

Kate’s Paperie

The MOMA store – Soho

Definitely worth a visit in Soho, because trust me, the last thing you feel like doing after 5 hours on your feet at MOMA uptown is killing another hour browsing in their store. Another great reason to visit the Soho store BEFORE you head to MOMA itself, is that you get a free pass to the museum if you spend over $50 in store (I think?). Which is pretty easy to do – especially once you head downstairs to the bookstore! It is AMAZING. I could have seriously spent all afternoon in there. Also a great little selection of designer furniture and lighting, all of which appears to be much cheaper than in it in Aus. Go figure.

John Derian Company – 6 East Second Street (Bet. 2nd Avenue and The Bowery), East Village.

John Derian is a quaint little French-inspired vintage, antique and repro furniture, homewares and kitchenware. They specialise in decoupaged things (apparently)… which seems a little strange to me, and these were certainly not my favourite things in store… but there’s enough treasure to uncover here to make it worth a visit nonetheless.

John Derian Company

Maryam Nassir Zadeh, 123 Norfolk (at Rivington Street), Lower East Side

FANTASTIC new clothing /accessories / randomly fabulous things, all pulled together like museum artefacts in a stunning minimal white retail space. A truly unique and perfectly curated collection of international pieces. Don’t miss it! I mean that.

A great, detailed review with more product info is here.


Maryam Nassir Zadeh – Top and bottom photos by me, other shots found here. The bottom shot is of the bar across the road from Maryam Nassir… unrelated, but so photogenic I had to include it!

Le Labo - 233 Elizabeth st, (between Prince and Housten), Nolita

Le Labo is an NY brand with a French name, and a very French sensibility. No off-the-shelf perfume here… instead you create your own fragrance from scratch, for a truly unique olfactory experience! Cute concept, very cute shop, even cuter website.

On a side note, Nolita was absolutely my favourite window-shopping / people-watching spot in all of Manhattan – quaint little cobbled streets, lovely little boutiques and gorgeous cafes on every corner (including the wonderful Cafe Gitane!).

NYC – first impressions

Didn’t actually go inside (yet) but MAN I am so excited to visit the New Museum of Contemporary Art, designed by Japanese architects SANAA. It’s on Bowery, right near where we’re staying. AAgghhh. It is so beautiful. My photos and the dodgy photo-stitch effort just don’t do it justice. Better shots here.

dodgy photo-stitch. Sorry.

Just walking around in the sun. The bottom shot is right near where we’re staying in the East Village. What is it that makes those NY fire escapes so beautiful to look at? They shouldn’t be beautiful but they are.

Oh it appears I have already fallen behind here! Whoops. How neglectful. New York City is a busy and distracting place! However I am making the most of my jetlag… been wide awake since 3.00am, so figured I might as well be blogging :)

We spent day 1 wandering around the East Village and Soho, walking around in a total daze… There is so much of everything. Seriously – you go to buy a bagel and an orange juice and there’s, like, 48 different bagel flavours and 18 different orange juices! Not kidding! Decision-making is quite an effort in New York City! Anyway there is too much to filter… but will try to summarise my first impressions -

Jonathan Adler store in Soho – Super-cute, super colourful and super kitsch homewares and furniture. Bit twee and over-decorative for me, but that’s their schtick I guess. Still, gorgeous little space with lots of eye candy and pieces ot make you smile! The sales girls were also the friendliest in the whole of Soho!

Droog NYC
– High-concept just hit a new level. Amazing space – see shots below. I don’t know what was actually for sale, it was more like a museum of kooky pieces… no price tags in sight. Super snobbish staff, so taking photos was pretty terrifying… hence most of the shots here are from the Droog website.



Loved Droog’s flat-pack furniture… cute also how they’re displayed the pieces alongside the flat-pack sheets.

Crate and Barrel and CB2 (Crate and Barrel’s more contemporary offshoot?) – not so inspiring. Kind of Freedom-furniture meets Ikea? I was a bit disappointed. :(

Bloomingdales – Awesomeness. Bought some sunnies. Marc by Marc Jacobs for US$98. !! that seems cheap to me..? Good things on sale – up to 40% off! Great for menswear actually. Makes you realise how lacking good menswear is in Melbourne! Gord had his eye on the Helmut Lang and APC jeans…

Design Within Reach – Eames and lots more licensed twentieth century stuff. Gorgeous showroom, nice staff (there was lots of snobbishness in Soho so anyone who smiled at me gets a mention!). I don’t quite get the ‘within reach’ thing though. Is that supposed to mean it’s affordable? It seemed pretty swish to me. Confused.

Taschen bookshop Soho – brillant. SO cheap, so good. How do they do it? Gorgeous design books starting at US$15.00. And that’s not even a sale price! I fell in love with New New York Interiors. Why are books so big and heavy?

APC – everyone said to go here, and Gord swear by APC jeans so we had to visit. But… must say… I don’t quite get it! Don’t get me wrong – it’s a gorgeous loft-like space, characterised by wide rustic floorboards… (so rustic and uneven, in fact, that they were quite a tripping hazard!). Amidst all the other Soho retail offerings, APC definitely stood out for its stylish yet restrained feel and classic, super-simple fit-out. But… the clothes…. so young and girly and floral…! I don’t know.. they didn’t grab me.

APC shop. Love those rustic floorboards! Shots from here.

Does this look like a film-set of what? The sun hitting the cobble stones… the huge floor to ceiling windows in this shopfront. I love New York windows! That truck on the left with the steam coming out it’s exhaust looks totally staged. Then on the right some dude is sitting on a chair on the ‘sidewalk’ just working on his laptop…?

I think this is the sales office for the Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA) / Rem Koolhaas’ ambitious development at 23 East 22nd st. I just liked the Neon signs, really. Also the proposed tower they’re designing is pretty cool too… see below. (Shots from ArchDaily, more info there.)


Interview – Phillip Graham of Tarlo and Graham

Taxidermy + industrial furniture + vintage French posters + antique medical paraphernalia + art deco lighting = Tarlo and Graham!

Love T&G’s antique iron gates…



Wowsers. Lots of eye-candy to share this morning!

Today I feel so lucky to be able to share with you an interview with Phillip Graham, co-owner of Melbourne’s wonderful Tarlo and Graham in Chapel st Windsor.

I would venture to say that there is no other store quite like Tarlo and Graham. Whilst vintage and industrial furniture is becoming more and more popular and collectable – no one quite does it like Phillip Graham and his business partner William Tarlo! A visit to T&G always uncovers something unexpected. Don’t be surprised to find yourself coveting a tangled collection of traffic lights or a pair of antique skis after a visit to their store! Phillip and William have an incredible knack for buying and styling their store in a way that makes you see the most unusul of objects in an entirely new light. Truly! There’s no one else who brings together such an eclectic and varied collection in the most spectacularly beautiful way.

Below Phillip shares some of his styling secrets (volume and repetition – simple, genius!)… AND we get a little peek into his own home, which showcases his passion for Australian contemporary art.

Ooh la la. It’s all a bit much. Too beautiful…. Agghh!

ps) If you’re hungry for even more images there is a great set of Tarlo and Graham photos on Flickr. (They belong to Daniel Neville of the Nevolution blog).

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

Tarlo & Graham opened 5 years ago, and for 8 years prior to that I ran The White Elephant in St Kilda. Previous to this I worked mainly in retail, originally at Country Road in the late 80’s and Giorgio Armani in London in the early 90’s. As well as sales I was involved with visual merchandising for both companies, which helped me develop my own skills in the importance of store presentation and understanding the power of placement.

I have always been interested in design, interiors, collecting, brands, trends etc. I am most interested in searching out ‘the different’. I appreciate it when people make an effort to present their stores in a way not seen before. There is too much bland out there and not enough newness. I like it when people push their imagination to create truly unique stores, interiors etc.


There are more and more shops selling vintage and industrial furniture these days…. but Tarlo & Graham truly stands out from the crowd. What do you think sets you apart from other stores with similar stock?

Come on Lucy, that’s an easy one, that’s the whole point of the interview isn’t it?! That’s what I want to come out most strongly from this whole thing. We are determined to be different, we work hard to present our business in such a way that the market can come in and really embrace and enjoy.

It’s all about -

1. product selection
2. presentation

3. placement

4. point of difference

And of course our windows. That is an area of self-expression which we push sometimes as far as we can depending on what we are interested in at the time.

For me, with interiors retailing for a business such as ours, the main area of focus is in the grouping of objects. It’s almost like picking a group of five completely different things (trying to select items that have no clear relationship with each other) and then throwing them up in the air and seeing how they land. Well, not exactly, but if you imagine the concept you will know what I mean. The message is putting items together that will really contrast with the next. If the piece in question is beautiful enough, or has some intrinsic quality or rarity, it should always stand up and easily find its place. Then there’s our obsession with volume and repetition. What I mean by that is the impact created by multiples is much stronger than a single item. Take for example a bag of marbles, compared with a table full of 2000 marbles. Or a collection of 50 matchboxes compared with 10 large glass vessels containing 1000 matchboxes – which looks better?


What does a typical day at work involve for you?

There is no typical day. We generally buy furniture and objects everyday, if we don’t we will definitely look at something. This could come from appointments we have organised with people, or working with other dealers and collectors to obtain stock. Going to auctions, markets, shops, homes – anywhere we can come across the next big thing.

Then there is time spent in the store. William (Tarlo, my business partner) and I divide the week and work 4 days each. We may also spend time preparing stock for sale, dealing with restorers, framers, upholsterers etc.


How are the tasks at the shop divided between you and William? Do you share the fun stuff (ie window display etc) with the boring stuff equally? How are your different strengths balanced within the business?

William and I share the job of styling/presenting the shop and creating windows. This is important for us both to be involved in, as this is what we both enjoy, are good at, and it is our form of self-expression. We share the boring stuff too.

How would you describe your own style of interior decorating at home – as compared to the eclecticism of your shop?

My interior has a strong focus on Australian art. I have been collecting contemporary art for over 10 years now and spend a lot of my spare time researching, going to exhibitions and acquiring some truly beautiful paintings, works on paper and sculpture. Subsequently my apartment walls are filled ‘salon style’ head to toe with as many as I can fit in. There is barely a square centimetre left now. My collection gives me immense pleasure and in a way gives me a break from what we concentrate on at Tarlo & Graham.

In saying that there is still a strong connection with what you would see in our store. There are a lot of objects, ideas at home that are represented in the shop. I sometimes need to live with something before I let it go.

Phillip’s apartment is filled with contemporary Australian art… Wow. Beautiful.


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

I could probably write a book on the answer to this question. Where do you start? Is it artists, designers, architects, musicians, actors….I could probably write a page on each, but as I have to summarise and give a definitive answer, the top of my list would be David Bromley. I started selling furniture to David some 10 years ago whilst he was still living in Adelaide. He, like William and I, is an obsessive collector with a wonderful eye. These days we just swap things, we always have something the other covets. My apartment is full of objects, furniture and art from David, and vice versa. David’s workload, drive and output are immense; he is a true artist whose mantra is ‘there is much to be done’. I have had the pleasure of sitting through the night watching David paint. These are truly memorable experiences – to see a canvas come to life is a real joy. He once said to me he has about 20 years of sleep to catch up on! And he has taught me ‘anything is possible’. There is virtually nothing in the creative field he will not explore. Aside from paintings, sculpture and ceramics, David has and continues to create furniture, films, lighting, music videos, interior projects, wallpaper, fabrics – the long list goes on. He is currently working on a luggage and accessories range all covered in his typical painted style, as well as a series of childrens books. It is this list, and the person, that I find truly inspiring.

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

Inspiration is everywhere, isn’t it?

What’s the best thing about your job?

Having a job that allows me to constantly create interesting installations, and seeing literally hundreds, if not thousands, of different things each week and being able to buy a select few. It’s like constantly shopping!


And the worst?

There’s not much about my job I don’t enjoy.

What are you looking forward to?

The future.

Melbourne Questions

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

Dinner at the Windsor Castle.

Best shops in Melbourne for furniture and interiors pieces (except your own shop!)?

Art: Karen Woodbury Gallery, Helen Gory Gallerie, Galerie Montmartre.

Furniture: A Day On Earth, Angelucci, Geoffrey Hatty (Malvern rd, Prahran), Industria (Gertrude st Fitzroy), Le Contraste, Workshop Industrial (Abbotsford).

Incredible clothing: Eastern Market.

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

I always work Saturdays.

Melbourne’s best kept secret?

If I told you it wouldn’t be a secret!
The beautiful taxidermy giraffe at the Carlton Hotel in the city.


Tessuti Fabrics – new Melbourne store!

Tessuti Fabrics – recently opened Melbourne showroom!

Tessuti fabrics – these currently available in the Tessuti online shop


Received a lovely email recently from previously Sydney-based Tessuti fabrics, who have just opened a gorgeous new store in Flinders Lane, Melbourne! The space looks stunning doesn’t it?

Tessuti Fabrics was established in Sydney in 1992, opening their first store in Chatswood in Sydney. Since then, the company has expanded with stores in Surry Hills, Bondi Junction and now Melbourne!

Tessuti has an incredible range of fabrics including local designer ends such as Josh Goot, Karen Walker, Zimmermann, Cue, Veronika Maine, Collette Dinnigan and Mad Cortes! In addition to these, a high quality fabric range is regularly imported from Europe (Chanel, Missoni, Armani, Etro, etc.) and Japan… aaagghhhh.

Tessuti caters for dressmakers, fashion students, lovers of fashion and crafters alike… and all fashion students are entitled to a 10% discount! Nice.


Tessuti Melbourne has a lovely blog too… and if you can’t make it into town just yet to visit the brand new showroom, you can also shop online here.


Tessuti Fabrics
Ground Floor, 141 Flinders Lane

Melbourne CBD


03 9654 4566

Newest sponsor – CoutureLab

Snow Stefani Evening Bag by Bea Valdes for CoutureLab

Maharlika evening bag by Bea Valdes for CoutureLab

Fleurs du Mal necklace by Bea Valdes for CoutureLab

Hey hey! :) Just a quick post today – I want to introduce my newest sponsor, CoutureLab! CoutureLab are a super-high end ‘luxury lifestyle company’ with a difference… all the products they showcase are hand-crafted by well-known designers and artisans from all over the world. No mass-produced items here – instead CoutureLab are focused on reviving the traditional meaning of ‘couture’, producing one-off and limited edition items for a very discerning market.

It’s not cheap – but it sure is a stunning range of unique products, spanning fashion, homewares, jewellery, accessories and even childrens wear – for seriously well-dressed tots!

White Tulle Ruffle Dress from the Bonnie Young collection

Aside from their online shop, Couture Lab also have fantastic editorial content in the ‘Magazine’ section – check out this fabulous article about German-born fashion icon Ann Demeulemeester… and another one about incredible French up-and-coming haute couture fashion designer Alexis Mabille

Red Highball Tumblers from the Artel Collection
Related Posts with Thumbnails