Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Christien Meindertsma



Shots of Christien Meindertsma's incredible rugs, handknitted from the wool of 18 merino sheep (on very oversized knitting needles)... I want one! - All images from Christien Meindertsma's Flocks website

After seeing Christien Meindertsma's gorgeous 'Urchin' knitted poufs in all the Milan photos around the place, I found myself googling to find out a little more about her. She's done some amazing projects... I love Dutch Design! The more I read, the more I am engrossed by the work coming from this part 0f the world...

Dutch design is well documented for being kooky and playful. On a deeper level, I also find that so many Dutch designers have a really thoughtful, considered and almost holistic approach to their work. I often read of designers and companies working on projects that would almost be considered art installation or performance art elsewhere... yet in Holland they are encouraged and embraced as respected and marketable products and ideas! A great example is Marije Vogelzang's work in food design (I mentioned her fantastic company Proef a while ago). The same can certainly be said of the work of Christien Meindertsma. (note - I just discovered both of these fantastic young designers studied at the famed Design Academy Eindhoven... interesting...)

Christien's ongoing Flocks project sensitively explores issues of consumerism and the lost connection between primary industry (farmers) and final consumer. Christien works with farmers to create garments from individual animals - ie the wool of one sheep is used for the creation of one cardigan, and the fur of one rabbit is used for one pair of mittens... The animal's ear tag and details are then attached to the final product made from it's wool. The result are simple, beautifully designed knitted garments and homewares, with a real sense of history and connection to their origins on the land.

Flocks cardigan (above) and close up details of sheep 006 from the cardigan (below)


Mittens - notice the rabbit's eartag attached!

Urchin Poufs knitted in heavy felted wool (as seen at Milan Design Week this year)

Oh, and I don't know why this is important but on Christien's website is says she was born in 1980. AAgghh! Over-achiever alert! Little details like that always make me sit up and take notice!

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Milan 2008 favourites

Lampara by Rodolfa Gracia Yus for Cafe Bistro - seen at the Remade in Italy exhibit - via DesignBoom

As I mentioned the other day, Milan Design Week came and went this year with lightening speed... I'm still catching up on all the photo galleries, and can't understand how the lucky Salone-goers get to everything in 5 days... and still party all night! It seems to me like you'd need at least 2 weeks to see it all!

Core 77 has the best coverage of Milan Design Week 08, in my opinion. Features include a comprehensive photo gallery (306 images) and a great little collection of 'drive by' videos of individual exhibits (the closest you can get to being there without being there!). Core 77 coverage always maintains a great balance between all the big-name important stuff, and the fun stuff - parties, kooky satellite events and, of course, a fair chunk of all-important people watching! This year they've also got a round up of ALL their Milan posts in one place, listed by category and content. No more wading through advertisements to get to the good stuff. Love it.

Other great round-ups at Inhabitat, DesignBoom (massive photo collection here grouped into categories by designer) and MocoLoco.... some more of my fave pics from all over below.


Urchin hand knitted woolen poufs by Christien Meindertsma - shown at TuttoBeNe - top image via inhabitat, bottom image from Core 77

Bouquet Chair by Tokujin Yoshioka for Moroso - via Inhabitat

Guerrilla Containers by Stone Designs - from the Spanish design exhibit - via Core 77

Layers by Richard Hutten - via DesignBoom (look familiar??)

Merijn Van Essen’s Grow Sphere encourages human interactions with plants by lighting up when you approach the sphere - via inhabitat

corian loves missoni - via designboom

Veneer Bag by Cecilie Manz for Japanese company E & Y - via Core 77

Plaited Fence (those are plastic bags...!) by Martin Azua for Droog - via Inhabitat

Saving Grace glass light shades (designed around energy saving light globes) by Adrian Rovero for Droog - via Inhabitat

George - oak three tiered chest of drawers by Gareth Neal

Monday, April 28, 2008

Interview - Lara Cameron

Melbourne textile designer Lara Cameron - photo by Marcel Lee at Bulb Studios

Lara's latest pattern design (just posted on her blog last week)

my favourite of Lara'a patterns - 'Riverside Birch'

more pattern design - 'seaweed'

cute kitchenny pattern design

a gorgeous lamp Lara made using one of her own prints - this pattern is 'adventures with riverside friends'

'Riverside Birch' lamp

gocco-printed notebooks printed by hand

Somehow, Lara Cameron slipped under my radar until only a few weeks ago. I've seen her stunning work around town and on the web... but for some crazy reason, it took me a little while to stumble across her blog. How does this happen? Shameful! I must make more effort to keep in the loop!

Lara studied Multimedia at Swinburne in Melbourne, and after graduating started work as an interactive and graphic designer. She still does all that grown-up computer stuff... but her true love is fabric design, and her stunning work is gradually gaining her a lot of fans. Her work is a careful balance of Japanese-influenced playful illustration, with Scandinavian-inspired clean lines and unfussy patterns. Her colour combinations are always spot-on - my favourites are her mustard yellows and deep teal greens... but I've always got time for a bit of dusty pink too!

Melburnians (and possibly Sydney-siders too?) probably saw Lara featured in The Age's M magazine last weekend in a feature about young Australian designers to watch! There's also a lot of Lara on the web.. get your fix at her gorgeous blog, her online shop, or trawl her beautiful photos on Flickr. But first - read the interview! An insight into Lara's creative inspirations and her blossoming business, plus, of course, a round-up of her favourite spots in Melbourne.

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

I started off studying for a Bachelor of Multimedia majoring in Media Studies, at Swinburne Uni. Once I graduated I worked for myself as an interactive and graphic designer, which I still do on the side.

Then about 2 years ago I started a design blog, where I was posting about random creative stuff that I was doing. It was supposed to be a means of encouraging myself to experiment more – I was feeling a bit stale. I began experimenting with pattern design, and really enjoyed the mix of creative & technical skills that it required to get a design to repeat seamlessly.

Anyway, I got so many positive comments from my blog reader about my patterns, that I decided to do something about it! Textiles was actually the most viable – I could start off with a short run, unlike other printed products. And hence my textiles business began!



Your work is so varied! From illustration to corporate graphic design work, to working on your own range of gorgeous fabric designs… How do you balance these different elements of your business? Do you find they complement each other well?

I really enjoy working on a wide range of projects – it keeps me on my toes. Currently it’s a good mix of the more ‘boring’ work that pays well, and then the more rewarding, personal work that doesn’t pay quite so well. There’s a lot of overlap in the skills required which is good.

Lara's workspace - photo by Marcell Lee at Bulb Studios

You are one of a growing number of home-based designers with popular blogs! Do you see your blog as a way to connect with other like-minded designers, or with potential customers/clients? How much of your web-presence is a personal outlet, and how much of it is based on promoting your work?

My blog is definitely a key way that I connect with both like minded designers, also potential customers. I’ve met some fantastic fellow textile designers through my blog (Shannon Lamden, Kristen Doran, Bianca Van Meeuwen, Danielle Smeets) and heaps of other lovely creative folk around the world. I do also use it as a way to connect with potential customers, but I try to just be myself at the same time. I don’t use it as a place to talk about my personal life and problems, but I do try to keep it from being too salesy.

You have had some really interesting international collaborations – such as your letterpress cards printed in the US, and your work available through Moo in the UK. How have these international contacts come about? Do you have plans for any other creative collaborations in the future?

All of my international collaborations have come about through blogging / online communities. Lynn from Satsuma Press and I used to read each other’s blogs. As for Moo, I uploaded a photo of some Moo cards I had printed to a Moo Flickr set, and they contacted me as a result!

How do potential clients/customers find you? Do you ‘market’ yourself?

Apart from posting on my blog, I do no promotional work at all – it’s great! People find my blog and my work through word of mouth. If they like it they keep coming back and tell other people. ‘Sidebar links’ on other people’s blogs also help people to find my site.

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

All of the other designers in our little fabric mafia (Shannon Lamden, Kristen Doran, Bianca Van Meeuwen, Danielle Smeets). Also Cloth Fabric Australia, Spacecraft, Holly Daze and Heather Moore (Skinny La Minx) from South Africa.

Where else do you find inspiration?

I’m generally inspired by Melbourne city: it’s people, architecture, cafes and fantastic art/craft/design communities. I’m also inspired by nature & organic forms, and urban environments. Most of all I’m inspired by all of the fantastically creative folk in the blogosphere.


some of Lara's sketchbook pages

What does a typical day at work involve for you?

Ooh I’m not sure if there is such a thing as a typical day! When I’ve just received some fabric back from the printer my days are spent rerolling bolts of fabric, taking product photos, listing items in my shop, cutting and packing orders and lugging them to the post office. It’s a nice change from the other days where I spend a lot of time at the computer.

What are you most proud of professionally?

Hmm that’s tough! I guess I’m most proud of how much I have developed professionally in the last year. Where I was then and where I am now are two completely different places – it’s changed me as a person too. I’m a lot more confident and content in myself.


What's the best thing about your job?

Complete creative freedom and control :)

And the worst?

Currently, probably the isolation of working alone. But that’ll change soon when I finally move into some shared studio space.

What would be your dream project?

Oooh, probably to collaborate with someone like a wood worker who I could make awesome homewares products with. Like beautiful wooden handmade benches with printed seat cushions on them, and lampshades with beautiful wooden bases or lampshade frames.

What are you looking forward to – professionally or personally?

Just seeing where my business goes next. I can definitely see how it could grow and improve, and I look forward to making that happen, bit by bit.

Melbourne Questions –

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

It wasn’t the fanciest meal ever (still delicious), but it was the environment that totally did it for me – a bowl of soup for lunch at the new Auction Rooms café in North Melbourne. The fitout is awesome.

Best fabric shop in Melbourne?

Hmm, I don’t actually frequent fabric stores that often! Some of my favourite crafty stores in general though are Meet Me at Mikes, Thread Den and Patchwork on Central Park (they’ve all been very supportive).

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

Ideally, having brunch with my girly friends at The Hot Poppy in North Melbourne :)

Melbourne’s best kept secret?

The derelict yet beautiful, parquetry floored ballroom inside Flinders Street Station. I’ve only ever seen photos but I would LOVE to set foot inside that room one day.

Thanks so much for your time Lara! - Lucy :)

Friday, April 25, 2008

anzac day

Mina Perhonen fabric... I think? forgive the vagueness - this gorgeous print has been sitting on my desktop for quite some time...

A little apology to all the lovely readers who visit here from all over the world... I feel guilty not posting but today is a public holiday here in Australia (Anzac day), and I have gotten into the habit of not posting on public holidays! Probably quite silly given that so many readers are elsewhere in the world but anyway...

I'll be back next week with many exciting things in store... not 1 but 2 interviews with a couple of very talented young ladies... a fair whack of textile design... the usual Melbourne recommendations, and a round-up of my favourite web-finds from Milan Design week... Exciting stuff!

Have a great long weekend... mine will be all about home cooked dinners, bathroom DIY and hot water bottles. Mmmm toasty. See you Monday morning! :)

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Journal Canteen



Sooo... Journal Cafe was already my favourite cafe in the CBD... great food, relaxed atmosphere.. busy but not too busy... and, of course, a fantastic fit-out. So it's surprising it has taken me this long to finally visit Journal's lunchtime offshoot - Canteen.

Journal Canteen is the successful result of a very simple premise. It's a no-nonsense lunch spot - it's tucked in a room upstairs off the main street (the clientele aren't passers-by, they're regulars), it's only open for lunch (12.00-3.30 weekdays), it has a limited but very tasty menu, and the service is super-quick (you can be in, fed, and out again in 30 mins). On offer daily is an antipasto selection, a soup, 3 mains and 1 dessert option. The staff are great, but they don't encourage lingering - there's no reading material... and not even a coffee machine - but you can order a stovetop espresso, or pop downstairs to Journal after your meal for a caffeine fix. Canteen is all about great food, plain and simple - no fanfare, no fuss.

Design-wise, Canteen has all the hallmarks we've come to expect from the CBD's boiling pot of independent cafes and eateries... The interior is typically utilitarian - the space is furnished mainly with communal tables and school chairs (yeah, getting a bit everywhere but they do look good). The large, older style windows offer excellent natural light... and the kitchen is open and visible to the dining room - so you can see, hear and smell the chefs at work. Love that! In fact, apparently the CAE offers cooking classes and demonstrations in this very space in the evenings... which would be great! Must research that.

Overall... a great lunch-time experience. I recommend the entree-sized antipasto. The perfect combination of meats, cheeses and vegies... just enough variety for 1 hungry person, and the best value on the menu at just $15.00.

Journal Canteen
Level 1, 253 Flinders Lane
Melbourne CBD

pssst - another great review by Gourmet Traveller is here

Delicious antipasto. highlights - thinly shaved marinated zucchini, creamy eggplant in a napoli-style sauce, and roasted red capsicum with tasty salami... mmm..

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

technical difficulties...

Yikes... I'm having some technical difficulties with blogger... it seems many of my photos are invisible. I am working on it!

In the meantime, all photos seem to work if you click on the article's header, to view each article independently.

Sorry for the inconvenience! I think there are just too many photos on here at the moment... it's stressing blogger out. Will probably need to shrink and re-upload a lot of them....boooorring. :)

Vogue Living May/June

My favourite shot this issue - so stylised... love the limited colour palette too. Can't go wrong with black/white/red.

More red spots here, in the form of 'Growing/Falling' wallpaper by Ilias Fotopoulos. I love the gradual dissipation of those tiny dots into nothing... beautiful, brave and unique.

Both shots above are from the stunning Bachelor-pad of famed New York interior designer Thomas O'Brien. I'm sure I've seen this exact spread before... must have been in an international mag. Oh well... still gorgeous.

This shot from a feature on the Sydney home of Interior Designer Michael Bechara

The latest Vogue Living arrived at my door yesterday... this issue is all about polka dots and spots - on everything from fabrics to wallpapers (love it!), Aussie expats with extravagant homes in France (gorgeous yes, but 'bohemian'... not really), and Sydney-siders with just a tad more money than taste (yes that means you Justin Hemmes).

This issue is a smidgen(?) less exciting than usual... generally the features drip a little too much $$$ , whereas I tend to prefer a bit of balance by inclusion of the odd creative, eclectic, vaguely attainable-looking interior. ANYWAY can't be too scathing... it's still choc-full of the eye-candy we've come to know and love from Australia's best interior magazine.

One of the best shots in this issue... this little image was hidden way up the back in the social pages. It's taken from the opening of Hub's new-ish store in Sydney, and features a pom-pom installation by Sandra Foti. I want one!

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Milan 2008 - Anouk Omlo

Helica Carnea by Anouk Omlo (profile view)

Helica Carnea by Anouk Omlo (top view)
All images via Inhabitat

ooooh another year of Milan Design Week has already been and gone, and once again I haven't made it there! Maybe next year. Luckily there's so much coverage on the net, you can get your annual fix of international design without the jet lag (or price tag).

Inhabitat's 2008 Milan coverage started with the gorgeous ceramic work of Dutch designer, Anouk Omlo. Her ‘Helica Series’ reflects the shift in high end design towards handcrafted, decorative flourishes, and a gradual move away from the minimalism that has saturated the market in recent years.

The Helica Series is inspired by the mathematical repeating patterns found in nature. I love the soft pink/brown hues, and the delicate shapes of each pointed petal... gorgeous stuff. What do you do with it? I don't know. Does it matter?

Omlo's work is exhibited as part of the Dutch collective Design Factory Brainport Eindhoven, and can be found in the Zona Tortona area. (actually the Design Factory website is worth a browse for more kooky dutch designs...)

Monday, April 21, 2008

Interview - Wei Ying Ang









Ever since she picked up a camera, Melbourne-based photographer Wei Ying Ang began to see things in a new way. The world around her became a richer place, suddenly full of moments she felt an urge to record and remember. Ying sees her craft as a way of glorifying everything that is beautiful and worthy of notice and appreciation in the world - a child's effortless and beaming smile, a twinkling green expanse of ocean, or the simple beauty of a tangled string of light globes.

Ying's passion is travel, and travel photography is her first love. Her website and Flickr account are full of stunning travel shots so candid you feel almost part of the scene. Her fashion and corporate work, though, is no less engaging - again, the shots are characterised by a candidness, and an almost voyeuristic feel. The framing of each shot seems so unstructured - spontaneous, even. These shots aren't perfect - the figures might blur with movement, the location might be grubby, the stylist's hand might be visible at the edge of the frame... but it's these imperfections that give Ying's work a natural-ness not often seen in high-end fashion photography.

Ying discovered photography quite by accident - she never intended to pursue such a creative career... and it took some convincing to show her parents that a career in photography was a worthy outcome after years at uni studying business and political science! I think it's so brave to step away from years of training, and pursue something completely different, based only on a burning passion that you can't ignore! It's also inspiring to be reminded that you can make a career out of what you love - regardless of your training or experience. Just get started!

(But read this interview first!)

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

I actually never went to university to study photography. In fact, I had never envisioned myself in a creative field as a working professional at all. All my tertiary education was originally in the general sciences, business and political science. Photography was a by-product of a trip to Europe after I finished my post-grad in Asian Studies, when I was 22 years old. As soon as I started taking pictures, I knew I was hooked and nothing else could come close to matching this desire to paint with light, so to speak.

What are some of your projects/clients that we might be familiar with?

I’ve participated in a few general group exhibitions in Australia, including the CCP Autumn Kodak Salon and the Schubert Ulrick Prize, as well as 2 solo exhibits – one in New York and one in Queensland, where I went to high school. A couple of my clients include Circle on Cavill and one of my favourites, the girls behind the fashion label Sewn.


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 marketing yourself? Do you collaborate with other creatives?

Working for myself has actually been wonderful. I never intended to start my own freelance photography business in the first place, so it was a pleasant surprise when everything just seemed to fall into place and people started to hire me to do the thing that I loved the most. I began my website almost in the same fashion as one would print a book. Its purpose was merely a viewing platform for pleasure, not commercial purposes. It eventually evolved to fill the growing demand for clients to see a wider variation of my work and a way to keep updated with my portfolio. Also, I think that I’ve been exceptionally lucky with the business side because I was originally trained in that industry and am used to meeting deadlines and working to a brief with clients. I’ve always been a people person as well, so there are definitely plans in the future to collaborate with more creatives, especially other photographers.

which designers, artists or creative people you look up to or are inspired by?

I am so inspired by other photographers that work in all different sectors of the industry. Photographers like Nan Goldin, Henri Cartier-Bresson, di Lorcia, Juergen Teller, Dominic Nahr and Ryan McGinley, not to mention countless others that put themselves on the very edge of what they do to bring different perspectives on the great variation and diversity of human life, never fail to amaze me. Film directors have a huge impact on me as well, particularly the music video work of Chris Cunningham, Mark Romanek and Michel Gondry. I am also having a little love affair with documentary photography at the moment and would like to do more of that in the near future.

What does a typical day at work involve for you?

No days are typical! I travel so much and am always in a different place doing different things and each job is always different because as a creative, you are always called upon to bring something new and fresh to the table. I spend a lot of time taking pictures, even when I’m not “working” on a client job. I will probably go and take up to 100 photos a day, just by seeking out or creating situations that are a little left of centre, with everything from costume hire and getting friends to dance around in the streets to ice-skating on a Friday night in the suburbs. It also keeps me from getting bored… which can happen pretty quickly.

What are you most proud of professionally?

I would say I am most proud of winning acknowledgment from my parents that photography is my chosen career. It was a long 4 years of dogged determination before they would accept that 5 years of tertiary education in several “respected” fields had yielded a photographer… a skill set that I ended up teaching myself and learning on my own anyway. In terms of being proud of my actual work, I find that my ego tends to take a back seat to my passion for the actual craft. I’ve always known that even if I was so bad that I couldn’t get any work as a photographer, I would still be taking pictures in every spare moment of my day, in and around my “day job”.

Where do you find inspiration?

I find inspiration in my personal life. My photography tends to reflect the best parts of me. When I am at my most positive and inspired in my personal life, you can see that clearly in the pictures that I take. It’s generally the human experience that I draw the most inspiration from and I find that as I delve deeper into the field, the greater the scope of experience seems beautiful to me, even if the general consensus is negative.



What's the best thing about your job?

I don’t know if my job is any better from anyone else’s. It depends on what really makes an individual tick, doesn’t it? Photography for me is just another voice for me to speak with, and also a way of pointing things out to my viewers, things that I love or am interested in or would like to explore further. It’s also a necessary conduit for me to experience the world at a safe distance that has more to do with my own psyche than gaining pleasure from the actual act of taking a photograph.

And the worst?

The growing demand of photoshop overkill and unrealistic expectations from clients that have very little knowledge of what it takes to put together a particular image.

What would be your dream project?

Wo… I have so many that I’m not sure I could be unfair to all of them by choosing one and calling it the best… I suppose it would be pretty cool to land a job that essentially took me to all the various, obscure hidey-holes of the world to document the different rules of engagement laid down in various communities and sub-groups, whilst emerging with a clear body of work that unified the whole in a collective blanket of the human condition. Did I also mention a huge budget?

Where do you see yourself professionally in 5 years time?

I’m actually not very sure. I’m at a bit of a curve in my career at the moment where I can feel an imminent change in direction, but I am just not so sure about the direction that it is going in. It’s very exciting though, because as I get older and more experienced with the medium, I am more confident about the different capacities that I can work in.



What are you looking forward to – professionally or personally?

I’m looking forward to evolving. Photography is a long-term visual project for me and I find that it’s importance lies more in retrospect than the immediate results. In a more tangible sense, I’m looking forward to bringing more depth into my work and choosing projects that will take a longer and more intimate look at my subjects, instead of the fleeting observation of a passer-by.


Melbourne Questions –


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

At home. I invited a very fussy foodie friend of mine to come over and cook a birthday dinner for me and some friends. Duck and mushroom risotto with a seared scallop and beetroot salad.

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

That word again, typical… Perhaps at breakfast somewhere in South Melbourne with my family and a copy of The Age.

Melbourne’s best kept secret?
Don’t know if it’s much of a secret, but I love Industria on Gertrude St, Fitzroy. The only place worth going to buy test tubes and old anatomy posters!


Friday, April 18, 2008

Tom Kane







Tom Kane is a successful advertising art director with secret ambitions of being an artist/illustrator. After 25 years in advertising he is finally pursuing this original dream.

I always like to peek inside artists/designers sketchbooks... I often prefer seeing these 'working drawings' than the finished product. Tom's blog is full of colourful illustrations that are super detailed yet almost somehow almost comic-book in style... I like the international aspect of this work... these sketches are taken from his travel journals.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Miriam Bereson

A-Z art frieze - Miriam Bereson

I got a lovely email last week from Adam Nissen, who is one half of Melbourne based design and manufacturing team Miriam Bereson. (Miriam herself being the other half!) Their quirky timber address books/diaries/photo frames were well known throughout the 1990’s, but towards the end of the 90’s they stopped production for a while to start a family. Since 2005 Miriam and Adam have been back in action, and they continue to distribute their products throughout Australia and around the world.

All Miriam Bereson products are manufactured in Australia, and its a high priority of Miriam and Adam's to maintain this. They are currently working on an online shop -
at the moment their yearly wall planner is the only product available for sale online. I love their kooky wooden cut-outs, available as gift cards or magnets... cute for a kids room or bedroom door... check out their website for more.

assorted magnets

Brunswick Bound





Brunswick Bound is no secret to the Northsiders of Melbourne... Susie and Rob Arambasic opened this great bookstore in Sydney rd, Brunswick in June last year, and its quickly become a firm favourite. It's the only bookstore of this calibre in the area (the closest similar options being Readings in Carlton or Brunswick st Bookstore in Fitzroy).

Susie and Rob both surprisingly come from backgrounds in the financial sector(!), but have always harboured an ambition to open a bookstore like this. They've got 3 kids, and have lived in Brunswick for 12 years.. so when the opportunity came up to lease this generous space on Sydney rd, they jumped at the chance to realise their dream!

Brunswick Bound ticks all my boxes - a great selection of books, (a particularly great design section), a couple of comfy chairs to curl up with your favourite finds, friendly service and a fantastic fit-out. Love that counter-top! Susie and Rob's good friend, architect Christie Petsinis helped them out with the interior design of the shop, and that fantastic counter was her idea.

But the icing on the cake is the gallery upstairs, which regularly exhibits the work of local artists. Actually, apparently it's free for artists to exhibit there. How great is that? This large, sunlit space above the bookstore is managed by Melbourne artist Arlene TextaQueen. She curates the exhibitions, and puts on an afternoon tea party for each new opening! What more could you want?

Brunswick rocks. :)

Brunswick Bound 361 Sydney Road, Brunswick 3056 ph. 9381 4019 Open Mon-Sat 10.00am-6.00pm, Sunday 11.00am-5.00pm

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Julien Valee



Stills from an animation made for Black and White (a division of Montreal ad agency Bleublancrouge.)

Custom image for manystuff.org - created in response to a brief set by Manystuff, questioning the relative roles of the computer and hand-made processes in design.

If I spoke better French, I would know more about Julien Vallée. As it stands, all I know is that he's a graphic and motion graphic designer based in Canada, and he does some super-cool stuff with paper and cardboard. I hope you'll excuse the sketchy details and settle for a peek at these gorgeous pictures from his website, and the FANTASTIC little video he made for Black and White. His many talents include:

1) Incredible animation combining computer and in-camera animation techniques:

animation made for Black and White (a division of Montreal ad agency Bleublancrouge.)
via notcot.org and viacomit (and lots of other places)

2) creating fantastic 3D models from cardboard and paper:



Cover for Grafika - the 2008 Quebec annual graphic design studios guide



Custom images for manystuff.org

3) ...and displaying large collections of items in neatly ordered patterns:


Cover for Print magazine

This mag cover was also Published in Tactile - High Touch Visuals (A book from Die-Gestalten - Berlin - 2007)


Wow! I love this combination of hand-made elements with computer-based techniques!
Or perhaps I am just obsessed with paper.

hmm. I worry this blog is in danger of becoming all about paper and fabric... ;)


Interview - Joel Adams

Custom lining design - Crumpler limited edition Soup & Salad Messenger Bag - The Reliable Gordo

Custom lining design - Crumpler limited edition 5 million Dollar Home Bag - The Rufous Whistler


Crumpler US trade show stands - photos Ben Richards


The Croft Institute


Crumpler shop Hawthorn, Melbourne

Remember my post recently about the Crumpler US trade show stand? The stand was designed by Crumpler's in-house designer Joel Adams, and won them many accolades, including an award for best stand at Outdoor Retailer Winter Market 2008 in Salt Lake City.

Joel's role at Crumpler seems like a dream job for a designer - his work is so varied - from illustrative and graphic designs (like that great custom lining design in the top 2 product shots), to
shop fit-outs, catalogues, product design, and packaging. Joel manages to divide his time between sketching up concepts from home, to hours spent in front of a computer screen, to (more exciting) time spent in his workshop knocking up prototypes etc. Never a dull moment!

Joel has had an interesting and varied background - before jumping on the Crumpler bandwagon he had a hand to play in the fantastic interior fit-out of Melbourne bar 'The Croft Institute', which (for non-Melburnians) is kitted out like a kind of hospital/scientific laboratory. Joel has had many jobs in the
manufacturing and building areas, from welding and carpentry to landscaping and shop-fitting. Seems like the perfect varied experience to bring to the table at an exciting company like Crumpler.

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

In 1992 I started a Bachelor of Arts degree, majoring in sculpture, which is where I met Stuart Crumpler (current employer) who was also studying sculpture. After uni I spent several years focused on making art. During this time I worked several different jobs in different manufacturing and building areas, from welding and carpentry to landscaping. For several years I was self employed doing general building and shop-fitting work, which led to opening a bar in Melbourne, for a couple of years. After leaving that I lived in the country for a couple of years, just making art and odd jobs for people. I moved back to Melbourne to go back to study a masters degree in sculpture, during which I bumped into Dave (one of the owners of Crumpler) who offered me a job. A couple weeks later I dropped out of study and started work as a designer.

What are some of your projects/clients that we might be familiar with?

Apart from the work done with Crumpler, the most familiar would be my involvement in the design of The Croft Institute, a bar in the back alleys of Chinatown in Melbourne.

Where do you find inspiration when beginning a new project?

I find that the project will sometimes define the direction of where the inspiration will come from, but usually I am just looking at a lot of books, at previous work, websites, toy shops. Thinking about function and material influence the way in which I will be thinking about the project.

Are there any particular designers, artists or creative people you look up to or are inspired by?

I am inspired by many different creative people across a lot of fields. Early on the Dadaists were a big influence, especially Marcel Duchamp. Artists such as Wim Delvoye, Joseph Cornell, Bonk Industries, probably too many to mention. Designers such as Piet Hein Eek, and many of the designers who are part of the Droog Collective.

Are you influenced by trends in the broader design world – like fashion, architecture etc?

I am lucky in that most of my friends either are in fashion, architecture and design or are artists, so I’m immersed in this world which influences and informs the way I work.

What does a typical day at work involve for you? How is your time divided between drawing with pencil and paper, sitting in front of a computer, and knocking up prototypes in a workshop/studio?

These days I find myself spending more time in front of a computer, but I still manage to get into my workshop once a week. Depending on my projects at the time I will be meeting up with manufacturers and testing prototypes. A lot of my early prep work will take place at home just sketching ideas. My job involves so many different areas - I could be working on a shop design, a new catalogue, product design, or packaging. It changes a lot and has a lot of variety.

Do you ever feel disadvantaged or limited by being based in Australia? Do you have experience with international manufacturing or distribution?

I don’t see any disadvantage currently by being based in Australia. Since working with Crumpler I have travelled throughout the US setting up tradeshows, spent time in Toronto working on shop designs, and spent some time in China working with our manufacturers based there.

What are you most proud of professionally?

The last two tradeshow stands both received a good response at all the shows we attended. One was constructed out of cardboard boxes, to resemble animal cages. The latest is a highly detailed etching-style print of a city scape, printed onto building-shaped shelving units. Both stands included elements such as customised flooring and hanging mobiles.

What's the best thing about your job?

The variety of projects I get to work on and the freedom I have been given to explore ideas.

And the worst?

The hours when deadlines need to be met.

What would be your dream project?

Probably designing and building my own home.

What are you looking forward to – professionally or personally?

Setting up my workshop and creating and exploring my own ideas further.

Melbourne Questions –

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

Pizza Mein Leibe in Northcote.

Where do you shop in Melbourne for workshop supplies, art materials or other tools of your trade?

Brims and Gunnersons for timber etc, Deans art for art supplies, Carba-tec for woodworking supplies and Hafele for all sorts of cabinet making supplies.

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

Hopefully in the Grampians, having a coffee and staring at the mountains with my lady friend and our little girl.

Melbourne’s best kept secret?

Order and Progress, in Curtin House

Monday, April 14, 2008

IKEA train interior in Kobe, Japan

image montage - pink tentacle

image - Kiyo

Image - Kiyo

Image - Kiyo

I don't think I'm the only one who has a love / hate relationship with Ikea. Such great designs at fantastically cheap prices... but the quality is a little questionable, and it does get a bit boring when everyone you know has the exact same bookshelf.

HOWEVER, you have to give IKEA some credit - their recent(ish) foray into selling fabrics by the metre has been a triumph - great designs, at incredibly cheap prices. They've also done an amazing job of marketing this product range. The latest example is the fit-out of a train from the Portliner Monorail in Kobe, Japan, to promote the opening of IKEA's new store at Port Island. They've fitted out the entire carriage with their latest prints and patterns - inside and out. The train will carry passengers in style until May 6.

via pink tentacle

(Also, I remember seeing some great shots last year of IKEA's temporary exhibit/concept store 'Everyday Fabulous', which coincided with New York design week. Another fantastic marketing concept, showcasing the best of IKEA's fabric and accessory designs, with a pinch of very effective guerilla marketing thrown in for good measure. Pics below.)

Ikea 'Everyday Fabulous' temporary concept store in Manhattan - image Apartment Therapy

More cute IKEA guerilla marketing pop-ups in NYC


Brian Dettmer

It's been an interesting weekend with lots of interest in the interview with Nicholas Jones... I'm so glad his work has received such a great response from so many people, and has reached a such a wide audience! Thank you for all your comments and emails... :)

A lot of people have drawn parallels with the work of US artist Brian Dettmer, so I thought I'd throw in some shots of his work today.






The similarities are clear... although Dettmer seems more concerned with the subject matter of the books, and his work is more illustrative I guess. Beautiful all the same.

more images here

Friday, April 11, 2008

Thankyou Design*Sponge

Thankyou Grace Bonney! You made my day with this link... :)

Also... I just realised Grace was on Good Morning America! Sorry I'm not too quick on the uptake with these things, being on the other side of the globe. ANYWAY how exciting is that? Congratulations Grace! You are an inspiration.

Inside Out magazine - May/June Issue

Inside Out 'in store' furniture round up

Australian Stylist Sibella Court's New York loft

Sibella Court again

Li Edelkoort's restrained Parisian warehouse apartment

Haven't even had a thorough read yet... but I always feel a sense of urgency to post my favourite pages from the latest magazines the moment they hit the shelves. Actually, I was mildly irritated because a colleague at work bought her current issue of Inside Out this week and had it sitting on her desk BEFORE I'd even received my subscription copy. The cheek of it! I had to avert my eyes from her desk for a whole day until I got my own :)

Anyway... This issue its all about busy, eclectic interiors... and people to be jealous of. There's Australian stylist Sibella Court's gargantuan New York loft filled to the brim with with antiques and kooky ephemera, Supermodel Natalia Vodanova's lavish New York pad, trend forecaster extraordinaire Li Edelkoort's stunningly minimal Paris warehouse... to name only a few. It's all stunning, of course... in an infuriatingly perfect way!

Must quibble on one teeny thing though. There is also more than one interior in this issue which prominently features those vintage tram destination scroll signs. (and when I say prominently, I mean, fills up most of a full page photograph). You know the ones I mean. Seriously. Twice in one issue? Come on people.

Andrew Egan's New York apartment

Thursday, April 10, 2008

The Dieline packaging blog

Just a quickie today... because I am tired... and because I don't want to detract from the gorgeousness of yesterday's Nicholas Jones photos :)

Here we have some super cute 1950's bath foam packaging design. How about that nozzle in the eye of the guy on the far right? Fun huh?



This image via The Dieline package design blog - which by the way is a really interesting site with photos of the best packaging design from all over the world. I also really like their current post about the Huni range of skincare products from NZ. The pattern, logo and typeface were designed by Auckland-based company Design Works.


You can't go wrong with that grey and yellow combo. What do you think?

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Interview - Nicholas Jones

One of Nicholas Jones' beautiful book sculptures


Full desk!

Nicholas talks about his work

Another of Nicholas' pieces (this image from Daily Imprint)

my favourite piece... isn't it beautiful?


Work in progress on Nicholas' desk


The Flinders Lane studio Nicholas that shares with jewellery designer Marcos Davidson

I'll admit it. I have a tendancy to get over-excitable in certain circumstances. I just can't contain my enthusiasm if I feel genuinely inspired by something or someone. In fact, it has been brought to my attention that I have a habit of gushing if I encounter someone I truly admire. Ouch. BUT in my own defence, this time it's seriously warranted.

I first saw the work of Nicholas Jones recently when Natalie profiled him on Daily Imprint... I was immediately taken with his stunningly delicate sculptures made of beautiful old books. Nicholas contacted me after I left a comment on Natalie's post, and he kindly agreed to an interview for this site. I was lucky enough also to visit Nicholas at his studio in Flinders Lane in the city last week... I think 'kid in a lolly shop' would be an accurate description of my excitement.

Nicholas' work is truly stunning. The delicate cuts and folds, the attention to detail, the mathematic intricacy of such a repetitive creative process... the soft, faded colours of the bookcovers, and the gently yellowed surface of each aged page....

Nicholas was such a charming host on the day I visited his studio. He answered all of my inquisitive questions patiently and thoughtfully, and encouraged me to handle his delicate works, even though I was initially nervous to touch them! I feel so lucky to have had the chance to chat with Nicholas first-hand about his work, and to have been invited to visit his treasure trove of a studio. Wow.

See. Gushing.

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

I come from a fine art sculpture background, studying from 1995- 1997 at the VCA. For the majority of my course, I made work from the expected media such as bronze, aluminium, clay, wood etc…, but when I got to my final semester, I started experimenting with books and found paper as a potential sculptural material. One of my lecturers, Elizabeth Presa had been working with folded books, wax and mixed media and these were media I empathised with. The more I read about deconstructivist theory as expounded by Jacques Derrida and the Baroque and the Double Fold, by Deleuze and Guattari, the more I started to feel that my chosen medium had relevance. The idea of divesting a book of its utilitarianism and forcing it into the realm of the surreal and futile was confounding and enticing at the same moment. Books become objectified rather than useful and beautiful, rather than taken for granted. The Japanese theory of Wabi Sabi also inspires me greatly and the notion that nothing is perfect holds a great deal of weight.

What have been some of you recent projects/exhibitions? Which galleries/shops can we find your work at?

At the end of last year, I decided to dedicate myself full time to making my Art work for at least a year, or as long as I can survive without any money! This has forced me to chase after opportunities rather than taking the usual Rastafarian notion of “Soon come” to the extreme. I have shown work at Craft Victoria consistently for the past six years or so and a lot of interesting projects have sprung out of this. Last year I had a major show at Australian Art Resources in Southbank and a small show at Third Drawer Down in St Kilda. I have also shown at Perth Institute of Fine Art, The State Library of Victoria, Westspace Gallery, Australian Galleries and many other galleries.

How would you describe your artistic style? How has this style developed over time?

I would describe my artistic style as book sculpture, although it has been referred to as altered book making, book surgery and other things. It has developed very organically over time. I have let the ideas come out very naturally, rather than using too much force. I make work at a reasonable pace, but I realise that if I try to work to quickly, the subtlety of the process is lost. Also, I can sometimes cut myself if I rush!

Another shot of Nicholas' latest work in progress... can't get enough of his fantastically messy desk!

There’s been a lot of discussion recently about the distinction between art and craft. What category would you say your work falls into? How would you distinguish between art and craft?

I know this argument very well, but try not to get caught up in the politics of the Art/Craft divide. I have always aimed to make beautiful, interesting objects and if people say that it is Craft, rather than Art, I have no problem with it. Craft is such a nebulous and all encompassing notion; from doilies and baskets, to ceramics and knitted scarves. There is also a utilitarian notion attached to much Craft such as vases, tea cosies and beanies. My work has no utilitarian value. It is made purely to be displayed and enjoyed.

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

I have always been inspired by the work of artists such as David Mach and Buzz Spector. Large scale installation work which questions the notion of space and content. I studied with Ricky Swallow and always enjoyed how his work has evolved over the past ten years. Sharing a studio with Jeweller, Marcos Davidson is wonderful as he is extremely knowledgeable about many styles of art and is a great problem solver.

What does a typical day at work involve for you?

I work in the studio five or six days a week, usually from 10 am until late, depending on what needs to be done. I spend a fair bit of time on the email, the phone and running around. I will often travel out to the suburbs to look through secondhand bookshops to find interesting books. Also I have the wonderful Basement Books just around the corner in Elizabeth St. I will try to do at least some cutting, tearing or folding every day to mix it up.

Nicholas with a collection of pieces

What are you most proud of professionally?

I am proud professionally each time I sell a work or get invited to be a part of an exhibition. Making work is very gratifying in itself and now that I have been doing it full time, it is getting so much more enjoyable; less stressful. I was interviewed on the Sunday Arts show on Channel 2, which was a highlight and being written up in magazines and books is always fun.

Where do you find inspiration?

I find inspiration all around me. From the patterns in nature, seed pods, shells and nests, to music, other Art, conversation, food, drink, everything. Inspiration is everywhere, it is just a question of coaxing it out! It can sometimes be quite shy!

What's the best thing about your job?

………Don’t have one!…………………….

And the worst?

……… Don’t have one! …………………….

What would be your dream project?

My dream project would involve a very large collection of books being at my disposal to arrange them in a strange manner in a European setting like a 12th Century church or 18thC French palace…something like that!

What are you looking forward to – professionally or personally?

I am looking forward to having a solo exhibition of recent works at the new Sydney Gallery, Pablo Fanque, in Paddington. I always work better when I have a deadline.

Melbourne Questions –

Best and Worst things about having your studio in the CBD?

The best thing about having a studio in the city is that I am close to everything. Bookshops, galleries, record shops etc… I have lots of friends who work at cafes and shops in town, so there is a strong social network. The worst thing about the Flinders lane area is that there are people who stand in clumps outside like a bunch of tourists and I can be a little grumpy at times. People blocking the street does not sit well with me.

Nicholas Jones / Marcos Davidson Studio

Nicholas Jones / Marcos Davidson Studio

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

I had a delicious dinner the other night at Comme in Alfred Place, where Mietta’s was many years ago. Terrific service, food and atmosphere.

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

I am usually found having breakfast at Small Block Café in Lygon St, East Brunswick. A great place to go with your children and friends. Well priced food and great coffee.

Melbourne’s best kept secret?

Melbourne’s best kept secret. Such a difficult question to answer. There is a great number of great bookshops such as Collected Works in the Nicholas Building. Also the wonderful little parks which are hiding around corners in the suburbs. Also the incredible examples of Architecture, the Town Hall, Princess Theatre, Windsor, Forum. Superb.

A big thank you to Nicholas for his time and for the invitation to visit his amazing studio.

If you're in the market for a beautiful, unique artwork, I must recommend Nicholas' work. Please visit his website, or you can contact him on bibliopath@excite.com. He's currently working on pieces for his upcoming exhibition in Sydney, but I'll be sure to post when he next exhibits in Melbourne.


Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Aunty Cookie






all images - auntycookie

AMENDMENT - the gorgeous large red swirl fabric in the photo below is a Hollabee design (Another talented Melbourne-based designer! so sorry I didn't pick up on this sooner!)

I just noticed a link to my site from auntycookie.com! What a nice surprise... Thankyou!

So, a perfect opportunity to showcase the gorgeous hand screenprinted fabrics and soft furnishings that Auntycookie makes... They're all made in Melbourne and are printed on on 55% Linen /45% Cotton woven fabrics.

More bits and pieces by Auntycookie at her Etsy shop. Also her Flickr site is well worth a browse for more gorgeous hand-made-ness not to mention general Melbourne prettiness.

Head Case - Call for Submissions


My friend Skye Luckins is organising / curating an art exhibition called Head Case, to raise awareness about Acquired Brain Injury. The exhibition is a collaboration with Brain Injury Australia, and will take place in September at the Sofitel Hotel in Melbourne. The artworks will be auctioned to raise funds for vital research into ABI, and there will also be a People's Choice Award with a cash prize of $5000 for the winning artist.

If you're in Melbourne you may have read this article about Skye and her Mum, Carol, in the Saturday Age over Easter. The article tells the heartbreaking story of the Luckins' experience with Acquired Brain Injury. Five years ago, at age 55, Skye's Mum, Carol, was struck by an extremely rare virus — herpes simplex encephalitis — which attacks the brain. The virus can occur any time, at any age, and affects one in 500,000 people. Because the virus is so rare, diagnosis can be difficult, especially when the onset is rapid, as was the case with Carol. The virus nearly killed her and left her with an acquired brain injury. She slipped into a coma for 3 months, and when she opened her eyes again, Carol could no longer recognise her family, could not swallow, chew, speak or walk.

Skye's experience with this debilitating illness has driven her to raise understanding and awareness of the condition. She is inviting artists / designers / illustrators and photographers to respond to the theme of loss, with works that are inspired by the experiences of people affected by acquired brain injury. A panel of judges will select the best 30 pieces to be exhibited at The Sofitel, Melbourne in September.

The Head Case website is under construction but should be up later this week. In the meantime you can contact Skye (skye@buronorth.com) for more info. If you're a creative person please consider donating an artwork to this very worthy cause.... You'll be in the running for a generous cash prize, your work will reach a wide audience, and you'll be supporting a fantastic initiative.


Monday, April 7, 2008

Stefan Sagmeister - Things I have Learned in My Life So Far





Images from the Hillman Curtis film which documents Stefan Sagmeister's exhibition in New York
(that 'Self Confidence' billboard is made up entirely of bananas!)

Stefan Sagmeister is a supremely talented designer, whose work blurs the distinctions between art and design. He also seems like an incredibly humble, thoughtful and generally nice guy. His ongoing project 'Things I have learned in my life so far' is such a simple, powerful idea. In its simplest form, its been described as a 'typographic project'... but its become more than that.

Stefan's design studio in New York have transformed these simple sentences into typographic works, from billboards in France to sign-toting inflatable monkeys on the streets of Scotland. People from all walks of life have also contributed their lessons learned on the website. It seems these simple truths have resonated with many, and have in some ways taken on a life of their own.

A reader sent me a link to this amazing little film by Hillman Curtis, which follows the set-up of Stefan's exhibition in Soho New York, as part of this ongoing project.

There's something incredible about this little film. The universality and sheer simplicity of Stefan's life lessons? Stefan's delicate voice-over, that sounds somehow like the voice of an old friend? Or is it the glimpses of New York reflected in the gallery windows?

They seem elementary, but there's something in the re-telling these age-old lessons that gives them more meaning...

Worrying solves nothing
Self confidence produces fine results
Helping other people helps me
Having guts always works out for me
Starting a charity is surprisingly easy
Being not truthful always works against me
Everything I do always comes back to me
Money does not make me happy
Trying to look good limits my life

Such lovely ideas to start your week...!

watch the film here
buy the book here


Friday, April 4, 2008

Angelucci 20th Century - New Shipment!

leather butterfly chair, arc lamp

slimline lounge, eames desk chair
Photos - Angelucci 20th Century

Just in time for the weekend, some shopping inspiration...

As if you didn't know(!), Angelucci 20th Century stocks a fantastic selection of classic 20th Century pieces, as well as some beautifully made reproduction pieces. I love their made-to-order repro slimline couches (pictured above), and also their butterfly chair with a variety of covers... (top image).

Their website is really worth a look, it's exhaustive - lots of photos of all their vintage and repro stock, with prices and clear details/dates.

After much anticipation Angelucci have also just received a new shipment of stock from France - a collection of stunning lamps, side tables, glassware, tables and chairs. A selection is currently on the shop floor and in the coming weeks more will be on display....

Can you think of a better way to spend your Saturday morning than browsing beautiful furniture in a stunning showroom? No. I didn't think so.


French 1950's desk lamp, French 1950's tiki-top table, Hans Wegner Sofa

Angelucci 20th Century
92 High st, Windsor
ph. (0)3 9525 1271 or 0414 339 001

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Interview - Carl Jones

Rackless Pannier bags for Knog - images from Knog catalogue

Rackless Pannier initial prototype - all remaining images courtesy Carl Jones

Pannier design drawings

Signage for NAB (client - Harkess-Ord)

Speaker Concept for Quest Audio

Pogo-Loco concept(!)

(TWO interviews in one week? You betcha!)

I must admit I didn't know much about Carl Jones until he responded to my interview. It was a case of someone at work saying 'you've gotta interview this guy'.... and I really didn't know much about him except that he had designed some stuff for Melbourne bag company Knog. ANYWAY after reading his interview I took an instant liking to this mysterious Carl Jones character. He seems like a truly great guy. He's a thoughtful designer, with a real interest in sustainable design and using his craft to make a difference in the world. What could be more inspiring than that?

(I'm also a sucker for a good technical drawing, and his website's got plenty!)

I loved his story about the communities in Africa with access to underground water, but with no source of power to pump it up. Carl recounts how the designers on this project solved the problem by building human powered merry-go-rounds. By playing on this play equipment, the kids in these communities were able to simultaneously provide a constant source of power to draw water! Wow. What a great project!

The PlayPump System - image PlayPumps International

Read on to find out more about Carl's job, his inspirations his favorite spot in the
public toilet on level 35 of the Sofitel on Collins Street!

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

When I finished school, I felt that I wanted to do some sort of design. I applied for architecture, interior design, landscape architecture. I had never heard of industrial design. I eventually got into construction management, which sounded similar on paper to architecture... after all it was about building buildings right?

Anyway, to cut a long story short, I found out that was about the only similarity... there was no creativity anywhere in this field. All it required was interpreting someone else’s creative endeavours & then getting it built.

As a hobby, I always kept a sketch book & would be coming up with little inventions... solutions to problems or things that could be done better. I eventually decided to take a leap of faith & turn my hobby into a career, so I researched what would best help me achieve this. ‘Industrial Design’ came the answer back. So I put a folio together & applied for the course & was accepted into RMIT.


During the course I became friends with Mike Chijoff, another mature age student & together we started up a partnership, JONESCHIJOFF. We aim to specialise in green product design & are currently formulating our design process to ensure that the most sustainable product / system is achieved. We are working as consultative product designers with a handful of good clients & have started up our own product development. We are also both teaching Industrial Design at RMIT (to stay creatively fertile).


What are some of your projects/clients that we might be familiar with?

The more familiar named ones are; Knog (bike accessories), Quest audio, Anamalz (environmentally-friendly toys), The Condom Kingdom, Harkess-Ord (who do signage for NAB, MLC, Nielsen, Kodak, VW)

When you approach a brief initially, where do you turn for inspiration – do you scour books, magazines or the web? Do you pay attention to trends in the broader design world like fashion, architecture etc?

I suppose it depends on the project. They vary wildly. We usually begin most projects with a brainstorming session, because you can come up with so many solutions in such a short space of time. For inspiration, we usually get hints from the client or the decision-makers, as to what they like & where they’d like to see things going & then head off from there. No point designing something that you think looks ultra-sleek & minimalistic when the client was expecting something Baroque.

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

I’m not much into the big household design names (who are more names more for their unique styling finesse), although I think Raymond Loewy was an incredible designer. I’m more into amusing designs, like most of the stuff Droog do. My favourite product at the moment is the ‘Terra-Grass’ armchair.

Terra Grass Armchair via inhabitat

It is die-cut cardboard that all slots together like ribs. All you do is plonk this down on your lawn in a nice shady place, add soil between the ribs & sprinkle grass seeds on top. I think the packaging even becomes the ribs, so no waste. It’s got everything I like in good design; sustainability, humour, simplicity & a great idea turned into a reality.

What does a typical day at work involve for you? How is your time divided between drawing with pencil and paper, sitting in front of a computer, and knocking up prototypes in a workshop?

Administration & emailing counts for a fair whack. Design time involves brainstorming, hand-drawn 3D sketching, 2D sketching on Illustrator, photo-visuals / overlays for signage projects, sanding blue foam for form concepts, 3D CAD modelling, producing technical drawings, filling out specifications & BOM’s, putting packages together for the client or the manufacturer.

Do you ever feel disadvantaged or limited by being based in Australia? Do you have experience with international manufacturing or distribution? Do you have aspirations to reach more of the world with your designs, or are you happy to design mainly for the Australian market?

No, on the contrary... I feel at an advantage. One of the main things is that you need to offer a broad range of services & be a ‘jack-of-all-trades’, which means that no two projects are exactly the same & that you don’t get pigeon-holed, becoming just a ‘sports-shoe designer’. Variety is the spice of life. With communications & transport as it is, it is possible to do business anywhere. We talk to manufacturers in China on a daily basis over Skype, email & ftp.

For our own product development, we intend on selling this to already established brands, who already have a trusted brand name & a worldwide distribution network. We would like to gain some international clients though, as I think one selling point is the ability to do work while they are asleep & then have it ready for them at their start of business.

What are you most proud of professionally?

My first product on the market... a rackless pannier bag that I designed & sold to Knog. A standard pannier bag requires a metal rack permanently installed to your bicycle. You then buy usually a pair of bags that you hang off either side of this rack. What I designed was a bag with an integral aluminium frame in it, initially dubbed the Calzone as it folds in half like the pizza of the same name. The frame connects to the bike at 3 points via nylon jubilee clips or hose clamps; 2 fitted down near the wheel axle & 1 above the brake callipers. The bag’s frame has legs at the bottom that slot into the bottom 2 jubilee clips & a slide out hook at the top that slots into the top clip. When you have finished riding around, you simply unclip the top hook & lift the bag out, zip the 2 compartments together, pull out the backpack straps & attach them & wear the bag like a normal backpack. The clips stay on the bike. You can even buy separate clips to fit to a second bike & you can swap the bag between them.

These are now commercially available through Knog & can be found in most bike shops. They are part of ‘the Dogs’ range of bags & are now 2 products: the Boxer & Neat Dog. The Boxer is the backpack version & the Neat Dog turns into a suitbag, so targeted towards the white-collar bicycle commuter. Both bags cater for up to a 15.4” laptop. Development sketches & prototypes can be found on my personal website.

What's the best thing about your job?

Being my own boss & doing something that I love.

And the worst?

Accounting & doing BAS statements.

What would be your dream project?

I like a challenge & coming up with a unique solution to a tough problem. One of my favourite design projects that I have read about was a problem in remote parts of Africa that had no power. Communities in these areas had access to underground water via wells, but had no source of power to pump it up. The designers on this project solved the problem by building human powered merry-go-rounds. The kids of these communities, having no other source of childhood entertainment played on them all day long, providing a constant source of power to draw water. I would love to work on something like this.

What are you looking forward to – professionally or personally?

Personally, I’m looking forward to one day starting a family with my wife & being a father. Professionally, our goal is to become leaders in sustainable industrial design.

Melbourne Questions –


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

Ginger Boy in the city. Had a banquet there... tried a bit of everything. It was sensational.

Where do you shop in Melbourne for workshop supplies, art materials or other tools of your trade?

Melbourne Artist Supplies or Eckersley’s for paper, pens, Copics, etc. Dinkum’s to get stuff printed out, Solid Solutions for blue foam. For rapid prototypers we use Rapid Concepts, Concentric, RapidPro, Arptech.

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

Down at the Richmond market on Gleadell street or riding down Beach Road on my racer (training for Round the Bay this year).

Melbourne’s best kept secret?

The public toilet on level 35 of the Sofitel on Collins Street. It has to be one of the best urinating views of Melbourne.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

maps x 3

Oberg White, 2006 by Ian Hundley

I got some lovely comments about my illustrated map for the Gertrude st Shopping guide... and it got me thinking about maps in general. Don't know why but everyone seems to love a hand drawn map. Seems I'm not the only one.. here are 3 more nice examples...

ONE
Brooklyn based Canadian artist Ian Hundley makes amazing quilted artworks based on Maps.

Bray Lake, 2001-2006 - by Ian Hundley

Neuringe Red, 2003 - Ian Hundley

TWO
Paris-based photographer Ami Sioux' is the author/photographer of REYKJAVIK 64°08N 21°54W - a book in which she asks 50 people from Reykjavic, Iceland to hand-draw a map leading to a special place in their local area. Sioux then follows their directions, finds and photographs these secret places. The book documents each map alongside the resulting photograph. Great little concept, and more books are planned for Paris, New York, Berlin and London. Available from Scintilla Ltd.




and THREE
Did you all see this gorgeous illustration by Lena Corwin for Elle Decor Magazine (Lena recently posted this photo on one of her contributions to BlueLines). I love it! I would like my shopping guides to look more like that. One day in my dreamland perhaps I can commission gorgeous illustrations from Lena for this site. yes please.

Image - Lena Corwin

(Also... just spotted Matthew Picton via MocoLoco, if you haven't had enough already)

Anyone got anymore? Let me know :)

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Thankyou Desire to Inspire!


Many thanks to Jo from Desire to Inspire for her response to my plea for bathroom inspiration! I have had such trouble finding classic, white contemporary bathroom reference for my own home. Strange I know. Anyway, Jo scoured her vast library of references and pulled together a gorgeous collection, which she posted on her site today. Thanks Jo!!

Wow. I feel special.

Wolveridge Architects - via desire to inspire

ps) The Wolveridge site doesn't seem to be working... and I can't find a good alternative site about them... very sorry. They're based in Collingwood in Melbourne.


Interview - Kristina Karlsson of kikki.K.

Kristina Karlsson

Over 10 years ago, Kristina Karlsson came home one day and announced to her partner Paul: “I’m going to design and manufacture designer stationery, and sell it via retail boutiques located in my favourite cities all over the world!”. He thought she was a little crazy. But she was determined.

Kristina Karlsson is Managing Director and Owner of kikki.K, a business that has gone from strength to strength since opening its first store in Melbourne Central in 2001. Kristina’s original concept has grown into a multi-million dollar business with 25 gorgeous boutiques in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane and Auckland. Kristina still has a very hands-on role in her booming business - she's Creative Director, heading up the design, production and visual merchandising team, and she still oversees the business strategy and manages her team of senior staff. She's always looking to the next challenge - currently she's plotting world domination(!) with a plan to open her first store in New York... and is also due to have her first baby any day now! Wow. Now that's multi-tasking.

Kristina has received overwhelming accolades for her success with kikki.K. Some of these include - receiving the Lord Mayor’s Award for Retail Innovation (Melbourne Central store) in 2002 only 6 months after opening her first store, receiving the Young Entrepreneur Award at the 2003 Women Chiefs of Enterprise International, receiving the 2007 Yellow™ Business Owner Award (For owners with a 50% share or more in a business with responsibility for key management decision-making), and more recently she was named Victorian Young Business Woman of the Year at the 2007 Telstra Business Women's Awards.

How does one store in Melbourne Central turn into 25 stores across Australia and New Zealand? A lot of ambition and a lot of hard work! But aside from her many achievements, I was most inspired by a simple statement Kristina makes in this interview - 'I had no idea where to start, but that was almost ten years ago… and I just LOVE what I’m doing'. Her excitement and energy just seems to bounce of the page! Its that genuine excitement for the next challenge that seems to propel Kristina's business forward. Now that's what I find inspiring.

Read on to learn a little more about Kristina's background, her inspirations and passions in life, and her newest challenges! Also, be sure to check out the kikki.K. website for more than just gorgeous product to drool over - in the 'Magazine' section you'll find tips for de-cluttering and organisation, inspiring articles featuring (amongst other things) Scandinavian design features, 5 minute snippets with Australian stylists Megan Morton and Glen Proebstel, and a round up of one of Kristina's many inspiration trips to Sweden. It's really worth a browse.


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


I arrived in Australia from Sweden at the age of 22, and once I had decided that I wanted to stay it quickly led to the question, ‘What am I going to do here?’ I became quite restless trying to work out what ‘my thing’ was. To cut a long story short, I decided it had to be something that: made me excited driving to work on a Monday morning; had something to do with design; that I would be totally passionate about; kept me in touch with family & friends in Sweden; and that I could make $500/week doing. After searching for a while I hit on the idea when I was setting-up my own home office and couldn’t find products that reflected my taste & style. I knew I’d found ‘my thing’ and decided I would design, manufacture and sell gorgeous stationery and open stores all over the world! I had no idea where to start, but that was almost ten years ago… and I just LOVE what I’m doing!


Where can customers buy Kikki K products?


We currently have 25 gorgeous kikki.K retail boutiques in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane and Auckland – after starting with one gorgeous little boutique in Melbourne Central. We also have an online store at www.kikki-k.com.au and we ship worldwide. It’s my dream to open kikki.K boutiques in all my favourite cities of the world… New York, Tokyo, Paris, Copenhagen, Stockholm, hmmmm!


Some of the kikki.K. range - all images courtesy of kikki.K.

Kikki K is now a household name in Australia - how has the word spread over the last few years?


People either stumble across our stores, or one of our many passionate customers tell them about us. We’ve also had lots of interest from magazines who often feature our products. I’ve always felt that the best fashion and design brands are built by what other people say about you rather than what you say about yourself through advertising.


Are there any particular designers, artists or creative people you look up to or are inspired by?

Being from Sweden I just love the Scandinavian design aesthetic – I can’t help it! I’m a huge fan of Arne Jacobsen, Efva Attling (jewellery), Fillipa K (fashion)…and I’m also a lover of Australian artist David Bromley. But it’s my own kikki.K design team who constantly inspire me.

What does a typical day at work involve for you?


There’s no such thing as a typical day! Quiet moments are few and far between. However in the beginning we had a very small team – just my partner Paul & me - and we did everything. From working in the store, to packing boxes and managing accounts and payroll. Not forgetting actually designing the products too! A typical day for the first 5 years was at least 15 hours long – usually 7 days a week – but it was a labour of love so that came easily. These days things are a little more controlled. As we’ve grown, so has our team, so now there’s more time for me to focus on product design which is what I love the most. …and I just jump up and down with excitement when new samples arrive!!


What are you most proud of professionally?


Being named Melbourne’s Most Innovative Store just six months after opening was personally very satisfying. We knew we had something unique, and something that people responded to – and I’d convinced Paul to sell his house to finance it(!) so we had lots on the line. But to receive the award from the Lord Mayor really cemented the fact that we had something special and it really was just the beginning.


Where do you find inspiration?


Everywhere. Like any creative I never switch off and am nearly always open to be inspired. Travel back to Sweden is is something particularly inspiring for me. Just hanging out with family & friends, going to cafes, restaurants, forests, lakes, beach, galleries… has me bubbling with ideas. I’m also constantly reading magazines from around the world, blogs and beautiful books. I’m an absolute ‘cook book junkie’! One thing I’m never short of is inspiration and ideas! I also travel regularly to places like London, Copenhagen, & Tokyo – all places that I just love and which fuel my creativity.


What's the best thing about your job?


Designing & developing new product for sure. I get so excited and inspired doing that. It’s such a rewarding process to start with a blank page and create beautiful objects that people use every day and come to love. Then to work in one of my stores and see people’s reactions to them is just so much fun. On a personal level that gives me masses of enjoyment.



And the worst?


Not having enough time to fit in everything I want to in one day!!!!


What would be your dream project?

Opening our first store in New York! I’m working on that one now…

What are you looking forward to – professionally or personally?

Right now I’m two days over-due with my first child – so I have to say I’m looking forward to meeting my beautiful little baby!

Melbourne Questions –


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

Breakfast at Eurodore this morning (Bay St, Port Melbourne). Fantastic coffee (being pregnant I only could have a little sip), delicious menu …and I love how passionate they are about food, great ingredients, great service, nice deli-style atmosphere. Couldn’t resist buying some Simon Johnson pasta sauce on the way out.

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

Hmmmmm. Often a little sleep in and some relaxing pyjama time at home. If I’m lucky I’ll get a little fruit salad in bed! Then a wander around Albert Park – breakfast somewhere, lose an hour in the bookstore… then home to read papers and what-ever the latest book is that I couldn’t resist!

Melbourne’s best kept secret?
The Bay? Find a vantage point looking our across the Bay on a gorgeous day and you’ll know what I mean.

…but you know what, there is no one best kept secret in Melbourne – there are hundreds. I remember coming from Sweden over 10 years ago and missing Scandinavia & Europe… but I’ve been totally in love with Melbourne for years – and discover new reasons for that all the time.

ps) I must say a huge thankyou to Kristina and her partner Paul for taking the time to respond to this interview whilst expecting the birth of their first child! Thankyou and congratulations Kristina and Paul! - Lucy :)