Showing posts with label Habitus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Habitus. Show all posts

30 September, 2010

So True...

I love the smell of the paper in my new issue of Habitus [Living in Design] magazine, I can't help flicking the pages to get that fresh printed paper scent! Well we all have our'thing'/  But what really caught me as I have been perusing through my Habitus mag is the stunning & stirringly simple truth of Paola Atonelli's statement - ...'Good design is a Renaissance attitude that combines technology, human need and beauty.' What a pertinent and wonderful way of looking at design in a contemporary and multi faceted approach. It's also a concise beautiful & positive statement on design.
Maybe that statement applies to my husband's and my professions or marriage of minds - he's a software developer & IT consultant, and me - well you know I what do! What are your thoughts on Atonelli's statement?


Note. Paola Antonelli is considered by some a design expert and was recently rated as one of the top one hundred most powerful people in the world of art by Art Review. She is a Senior Curator in the Department of Architecture and Design at the Museum of Modern Art.

Loving...Simple Luxuries

I'm loving my recent issue of Habitus magazine issue 09 October -December '10. The main story is on 'Simple Luxuries' ...which made me further consider what are my 'simple' 'luxuries'? It's almost an oxymoron in that are luxuries simple? And can anything that's simple be a luxury? What do you think?
I would put these 'thing's into my list of 'simple luxuries' - spending time with my husband & daughter without laptops & mobile phones, large cakes of french milled soap [preferably gardenia], fresh sheets, breakfast at a cafe when it's sunny, a glass of chilled verdelho on a warm spring or summer afternoon, a warmed desert in front of an open fire, having a head massage, wandering around the art gallery on a weekday afternoon - and so, so, so many more things...
What about you? What makes a simple luxury for you? S x


09 September, 2010

Card Carrying Design...

I love chairs especially those by iconic designers Ray & Charles Eames... but I can't fit them all into my home -  then why not in my bag or pocket... Love this xxx by Acme Acme Studios for Ray + Charles Eames.
Card Case Eames Chairs
Acme Studios for Ray + Charles Eames
price:  AUD$60.00 / Ref #: HCE04BC


12 August, 2010

Palatial Living Loves...The Point Perry Beach House

Palatial Living Loves...The Point Perry Beach House. In a recent issue of Habitus Living magazine, is an article featuring the amazing & incredibly stylish 'Point Perry Beach House', located in Coolum Queensland, that was brought back to life in 2008 by award winning architects [2010 Australian Institute of Architects Sunshine Coast House of the Year] Owen and Vokes. Read on... an excerpt from Habitus Living. Enjoy x

+ The Point Perry Beach House


For architects Owen and Vokes it was a respect for the original 1990s beach house and the intricacies of the house site which drove the design of this Sunshine Coast home.On a sloping site in Coolum, Queensland, architect Lindsay Clare designed a classic Sunshine Coast beach house. Almost 20 years on the home, with panoramic ocean views, has been sensitively renewed by architects Owen and Vokes.


“We didn't set out to re-design the original Lindsay Clare House, but rather to preserve its character,” explains Owen and Vokes’ Emma Hodgkinson.The architects made only a few alterations to the existing house, including an extension and re-location of the kitchen and the opening of the rear wall, all helping to connect the living spaces to the landscape beyond.

“Our new work includes a garage 'bunker' with garden over, and the rear extension with verandah access to two bedrooms and two bathrooms.” Most of the original features of the house have been retained – aside from re-painting the home from the original blue to the new crisp white. “[The alterations involved] re-occupation rather than re-modeling, such as inserting new built-in joinery to re-orient the living spaces towards views or to connect with landscape spaces,” Emma says.

The whole project involved making the flow of the home, which is over 5 levels, work for its occupants, rather than a disjointed collection of separate modules. A fibro-clad rear extension has helped to achieve this with a small excavation into the hillside.

Perhaps the most striking addition is the solid timber casements overlooking the courtyard which can be opened or closed for privacy and weather – although as Emma explains, “they have actually only been closed once during a wild storm”.

It appears that with homes such as this – and perhaps this is a broader comment on life itself – it is the restrictions placed upon us, the challenges and the remnants of history that deliver the most creative results.
The project won the 2010 Australian Institute of Architects Sunshine Coast House of the Year.

If you liked this house, you’ll love the home of writer John Birmingham, also by Owen and Vokes, in the upcoming Issue 09 of Habitus magazine – out September 2010.
Owen and Vokes - owenandvokes.com
Photographer: Jon Linkins


Images & Excerpt via Habitus Living magazine.
 

08 April, 2010

Check Out - 'Thread Den'...

I am very excited - I have just received my latest Habitus e-newsletter & have already noted my next store to visit when in [North] Melbourne... 'Thread Den'. Some of you may already know of this fab store, I am in love with their sewing lounge concept and their use of vintage goods & materials - all the things I have found or been given from my Grandmother's & Mother's Singer sewing cabinet - the buttons, thread reels - made of real wood, and copious amounts of buttons - so much so I collect jars of buttons all colour blocked! Hopefully if you live near North Melbourne or are visiting the area you can drop by the store to have a good sticky or join in the sewing lounge! Enjoy. S x

[click on image to enlarge]

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Blurb From Habitus newsletter/ magazine.
+ Thread Den:
A small collective of like-minded women are resurrecting the skills of ages past with this Melbourne drop-in sewing workshop.
Thread Den is the carefully nurtured dream of four determined girls – who have turned a collection of sewing machines and over-lockers into a first-of-its-kind vibrant sewing lounge and vintage-inspired retail outlet.
Bonding over their common love of the 50s and 60s, and vintage goods, Thread Den partner Erica Menting says it all started when they realised a need for a drop-in style sewing space that taught basic and advanced sewing skills.
“I guess it is just a generational thing,” she says. “Our mothers all seemed to learn to sew - but now there is a whole generation of people who weren’t taught when they were growing up, or had no interest in it and didn’t pursue it because clothes are reasonably cheap to buy.”Originally set up on Errol Street in North Melbourne two and a half years ago, the business has recently doubled in size, to include a new sister premises in Fitzroy, and a bi-monthly designer market also in North Melbourne.
“When it was first started, there were only about 3 or so classes a week,” Menting says, “But now there are classes every night, and up to four on the weekend days – we are just trying to keep up with demand!”
She says they get a broad mix of people, including older men, who come in not only for the classes, but also to use their machines and cutting tables to mend clothes and complete creative projects.
Add to this to their covetable collection of vintage clothes and accessories, and unique range of Australian-made designs, and there is no doubt these girls will be influencing more than just one generation of consumers.
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Visit - Thread Den
threadden.com & North Melbourne Marketnorthmelbournemarket.com
Images from Habitus magazine e-newsletter. For more info on Habitus magazine or to subscribe visit this link

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