Archive for the ‘inspiration’ Category

fave 5 interior ideas

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

I was chuffed to be asked to guest post for Calico & Co’s first birthday week today (happy birthday to youuuu!). I wrote about the 5 decor ideas I’m loving right now and how I’ve incorporated them into my home as well as how the pros do it. Here is a peek…

Wall Display Pro
Wall Display Belinda

1. 3-D picture walls
I love photo and picture walls, but to make them a little more interesting I mix them up with something other than frames – wooden letters, paper birds, handpainted words or decorative elements, jewellery or single pegged photos. I especially like sticking up a single flower or small bunch of lavender with masking tape on the wall amongst the frames. The inclusion of a little life is a nice surprise and always makes me smile.

You can read the other four ideas I love here. And also be sure to check out Amanda’s blog of all things crafty and cool, and her new eco-friendly stationery store – Lemon Tree Lane – which has a great range of cute cards and prints for all occasions. I love the In Any Language prints, $US10 each – sweet idea!

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Images: 1. VT Wonen; 2. Belinda Graham for The Happy Home; 3. Lemon Tree Lane

3 things you need to know about

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

… and they all come to me (and to you) via Natalie Walton, my (former) colleague, friend and late-night email-chat buddy.

frontliners1. It was during one of said late-night chats I discovered yet another one of busy-bee Nat’s side projects (she has several on the go at the same time. It’s quite exhausting thinking about them, let alone actually doing them, as she is). Although I’m sure it doesn’t count as a side project when it takes up the best part of this year so far and interferes with sleep time! So it was with great excitement I finally got to see what I’d heard so much about: Frontliners.

Natalie and equally-clever-and-busy photographer Kata Varga have teamed up to style up, photograph and interview families doing what families do: playing, working, eating, living at home. These are inspiring spaces by inspiring people who seem to have it all – including the daily struggles and juggles all families do. I especially love the spaces of The Searls (they’re behind Pony Rider – another label I love) and Amanda Mahoney (both below).

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It’s nice to see a little imperfection and a little life in home shoots – something magazines seem to inexplicably leave out. I think you’ll like it – go forth and flick through now.

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One the same night I scored a sneak peek of the some of the Frontliners shoots, Nat naughtily sent me through two links to two new online stores – both of which I’m passing on to you so I won’t be alone in spending cash I shouldn’t be spending on pretty things. Emerald + Ella is one, started by a former food editor from Donna Hay. I immediately clicked through then spent $40 on goodies – all before Nat had even replied to my last email.

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But that’ll learn me for being so quick and implusive – I somehow managed to order TWO packs of pink and white striped paper straws instead of just one. Oh well, they should last about 5 years worth of birthday parties for Layla! I also picked up some wooden cutlery and glassine bags. Bestest place for party supplies as well as pretty things for the home and garden – coloured twine, patterned cupcake cases, candy-striped candy bags….

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And lastly, on my future hit list is this store – LetterboxCo – by freelance stylist Bianca Spiegel. It’s got all sorts of pretty stationery bits and bobs in a similar style. I love the ampersand cushion, numbered bottles and laptop bag. Check it out here.

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All images courtesy of Frontliners, Emerald + Ella and LetterboxCo

5 bargain boredom busters + some waffle on online mags

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

BABIEKINS

There are some days when you wish you never had children. Horrid, but true. They’re usually the exact same day you have a thousand things to do and they’re not listening, are bored and not one of the 4126 things you’ve bought them in their lifetime is exciting, stimulating or remotely interesting enough to distract them for more than 2 seconds. Before you stick the “free to good home” signs on them and pop them on the kerbside (it’s sooo tempting at times) make a big hoo-ha about these activities – for some inexplicable reason, they work every single time for my two.

You can read what these five bargain boredom busters are over at Babiekins magazine which I wrote the article for. This kids-related mag has just been released this week and it’s a goodie, filled with all sorts of lovely images, hot buys, easy makes and cute fashion shoots, such as these, below.

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I’m loving all these online magazines – it’s incredible what some can do with a little passion, determination and creativity. And what’s more, the talent involved! It takes an editor, deputy editor, stylists, writers, sub-editors, graphic artists, digital production specialists, production editors, editorial coordinators, advertising managers and sales staff, marketing managers, researchers, focus groups, publishers and more (printers, more scary production people etc) to put out a physical magazine. And these online mags are made with the smallest team multitasking to take care of all this between them – a lot of the time without publishing experience. Some of them are one-(wo)man bands. I bow to them all.

I do love that as a blogger I get to play all these things too. I’ve often thought about creating a one-off mag or small self-published book or something; just for fun. And just because I think it’d be so satisfying to get to create something physically beautiful from the images and words to the way it’s laid out. It’s certainly doable as many have proven – Fryd + Design is one that  comes to mind. All her own work.

I often wonder how long it’ll be before mag publishers cotton on to this multitasking and cut costs even more by hiring one multi-talented person instead of one trained-in-one-field. I know I used to pretend I was a graphic designer in my time as a subeditor and deputy ed – although not creatively, mind you. I’d just sneakily move the margins or increase the box to give myself more copy room. Got away with it a lot of the time, too! And I know at Real Living now the art director doubles as a photographer, the deputy editor styles, the sub-editors write and the digital production guru plays the dreaded production editor who harasses everyone to make deadline. Although this isn’t solely a cost-cutting exercise; these are creatives who have other talents and passions and are lucky enough to have a boss, Deb, who supports and encourages them.

I don’t think online mags will ever replace a real magazine, but I do think they could learn a thing or two about putting one together on a budget and with limited staff – the two biggest complaints in the publishing industry!!

Congrats to Priscilla and her little team on Babiekins. Thanks for letting me be a part of it! Want more online mags? Here is a quick list…

Lonny
Southern Flourish
Fryd + Design
La Petite

Glossy

Uppercase

What do you think about the slew of digital mags hitting the web? Think they’ve lessened the need to pay at the newsagent? Or do you still prefer to physically flick through a paper version?

{images and illustration courtest Babiekins magazine}

random inspiration

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

7bDeadline is over, my children are not quite as neglected as they were last week and after a complete do-nothing-day yesterday, I feel slightly alive again. I’ve been soooooooooo tired, thank you pea-sized child growing inside me; it’s an achievement to get out of bed! I’m giving myself one more day off and then I plan to get back into project mode tomorrow. To fire me up, I like clicking through the inspiration folder on my computer. I thought I’d share a few of the images I’m loving right now, though I really need to get surfing the Net to find some more – these have been in there for a l-o-n-g time! Apologies for lack of credits.

Which is your fave?

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gallery wall 2

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STUDIO-WALL

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{images that I can remember: 1: SFGirlByBay; 2: Moomah; 4: Papier Mache; 7: Skona Hem}

shop style: few and far

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

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If I ever have a homewares store, I hope it’d look a little something like this one. I found Few and Far in one of our fave little places: Huskisson. We had a mini break earlier this year (yes, it’s taken me this long to write about it -bad blogger) and found ourselves back on the south coast. While Steve wrestled with the kids at the park, I grabbed half an hour to get lost in this store. It was really, really hard to leave without buying everything and totally refurnishing my house, but I managed to. I did manage to buy some nice wooden salad servers with mother-of-pearl handles (below). They’re purdy.

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The newish baby (it opened in September) of a creative couple – graphic designer Danny and interior designer Tara (can you tell!?!), Few and Far is a little shop of heavenly pieces of furniture and homewares from around the world. And while I oohed and aahed over Samantha Willis’ gorgeous ceramics, Papaya, and lots of one-off pieces (like the white Bamileke stool in the window… drool), I was mostly drawn to the actual store’s design – it’s very warm, inviting and earthy with a slight natural beachy vibe to it. Is there ever a bad place to put Cole & Son’s Woods wallpaper? No (in fact, I’m considering it for the new nursery). And combine it with real 3D versions of tree stumps as supporting poles and it practically comes to life. I love that almost everything is for sale – the furniture and the items its displaying – and how easy they’ve made it to see how the piece might look in a real home, thanks to the little “room set ups” within. And if you can’t see how something might look, or can’t work out what’d go best together, Tara runs her interior design business from the store, so you can always hire her for advice from colour to decorating – even renovating. The store is proof in itself of what this duo can achieve – check out the before pics, below (a slideshow of the complete renovation can be found here).

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And here is a “during” pic of my fave thing in the store: the counter. I LOVE the pressed metal base and the benchtop is made up of goodness knows how many tiny pieces of wooden blocks all stuck close together onto MDF then blasted with a sander until smooth. I’m stealing it for my future business (an idea that’s very much just swirling around in my head, changing and growing and getting more complicated and expensive by the day).

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Want to visit? Few and Far is at:
1/46 Owen Street
Huskisson NSW 2540
(02) 4441 8244

Few and Far plan to offer open an online store soon selling a selection of items – watch out for when it launches at their blog. I will be!

{store images by Belinda Graham for The Happy Home; renovation pictures via Few and Far}