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Friday, June 11, 2010
Thursday, June 10, 2010
15 Strikingly Beautiful Modern Style Bedrooms
The Golf furniture collection from Italian design house Colombini has some spectacular modern themed bedroom designs. After gazing at these images you can’t but feel a sense of respect for the designers behind these gorgeous bedrooms. The colors have been blended to perfection, the placement meticulous, and there is a true sense of completeness in each one of them. The only down point, if at all, is that most of them still assume you have acres of space to play around with in your room. If only our rooms were as big as the ones they show in brochures!
Saturday, June 5, 2010
Kelly Wearstler Interior Design
Kelly Wearstler has re-imagined the visual landscape of a diverse array of award-winning interior design projects. Her work with hotels and resorts, offices, restaurants, retail boutiques and residences for a distinguished clientele is frequently featured in fashion, design, travel, lifestyle and business publications. A 20-person staff under Wearstler’s direction offers a wealth of interdisciplinary skills, drawing upon several areas of expertise: interior design and artistic direction; product, textile and furniture design; graphic design; luxury lifestyle and public relations and marketing. Each of these disciplines unites to form the unique identity of each project and inspire distinctive ideas throughout the studio. The Kelly Wearstler Studio brings a multi-layered approach to each of its projects, utilizing influences in fashion, art, technology, history and travel, while paying homage to timeless notions of sophistication. This is Doheny Estate and Brentwood Estate,residential projects interior design of Kelly Wearstler Doheny Estate
Brentwood Estate
Brentwood Estate
Upper East Side Residence Interior Design
Magdalena Keck has been creating commercial and residential interiors for nearly a decade. Keck’s streamlined designs have been published in Interior Design, VM+SD and Kitchen and Bath News. She has been featured among 40 established up and coming New York designers in the book Spectacular Homes of Metro New York, published in January 2008 by Panache Partners. Her clients include well known retailers such as Maclaren and Murray’s Cheese Shop. Keck’s current residential work includes high end homes in New York and Miami.
Magdalena Keck looks for essence, taking the simple and making it special through imagination, details and finishes. With thoughtful questions and close observation, she guides clients to express their individuality and needs. Inspired by nature, art and technology, Keck’s signature approach combines immaculate craftsmanship and function to achieve a distinctive elegance through honest, clean and genuine design.
Design Stack House Home
This addition and renovation adaptively re-uses a one-storey industrial building to become an artist’s home, complete with studio and gallery. The project uses modest means to pursue an ambitious agenda of environmental sustainability, and to create living spaces which are lofty yet intimate
The design opens up the existing roof in the middle of the building with a soaring 12m ceiling and generous clerestory windows which flood the previously dark interior with natural light. Carefully calculated angles allow the south-facing windows to provide complete shading during the heat of summer but allow for solar heat gain during the colder winter months. The triple-height open living space acts as a thermal chimney for natural ventilation.
Within, the original concrete floor and white painted gallery-style walls are maintained. A “ribbon” of wood, including douglas fir timber which was salvaged from the existing structure, is drawn up the staircase and through the triple-height open living space to the second floor rooms and the clerestory window above. A high-efficiency wood burning stove is incorporated with an anthracite-painted volume of cabinetry which houses books, computer equipment, firewood, and a built-in cocktail bar. The four new roofs are each planted with indigenous plant species providing accessible gardens for the owners, and the many ecological benefits of green roofs.
New Bartlit Residence
Mature stands of ponderosa pine, scrub oak, and native grasses amongst the granite outcroppings form the natural ecology of the site. The design is a series of low granite walls threaded into the hill forming the base of the house. Superimposed on this granite base are light exposed steel and glass “pavilions” whose copper roofs tilt to catch the sun and views. A sod roof “meadow” covers the guest rooms and further merges the house with the natural landscape.
Daylesford Home Interior
The Daylesford home of graphic designer Jessie Fairweather – The kitchen is designed around some reclaimed science benches from Melbourne Uni, and Ikea! The floors are black cement. All Photos by Roma Samuel, originally published in Green Magazine.

This is the incredible new home of super talented Melbourne designer Jessie Fairweather. How GREAT is it? I am so totally jealous. You might remember Jessie’s business – The Foundry, and her brilliant papergoods range, Measure, which I blogged a long time ago? Jessie has had an insanely busy couple of years launching her business, building her new home, and then moving both her home and her business to Daylesford, about an hour and half from central Melbourne. And you know what else, Jessie did all this on her own!? Amazingness. I am totally inspired! Jessie bought her little block of land in Daylesford a few years ago whilst still living and working in Melbourne. After a few years of thinking and planning how she might build an affordable, sustainable home on her little block, Jessie engaged local builder Mat Boyle of Pumphouse Design to realise her vision. Mat’s previous residential work appealed to Jessie, as did his focus on sustainable building methods, and his use of mainly reclaimed materials. The home was designed based on a studio shed Mat had previously built in Castlemaine – essentially a 10 x 10 metre corrugated iron studio with high ceilings, exposed reclaimed trusses, and cement floor. She added a studio on the side, and kept most of the living/kitchen space open. The house has just 1 bedroom, bathroom, and separate toilet and laundry.

Jessie moved her life and her business to Daylesford a couple of days before Christmas in 2008. During the process of designing and building her beautiful, sustainable home, Jessie completely fell in love with the area, and she says can no longer imagine living anywhere else! (Neither would I!). It was such a huge, brave move for a single lady with a fledgling design business… and personally I am just so in awe of Jessie’s incredible drive to make it work!

Jessie says her neighbours in Daylesford have been so incredibly welcoming… she loves the community spirit – and the rosellas, cockatoos and kangaroos who visit her backyard daily! Oh, and ps – since making her big move, Jessie has met her lovely man, who just happens to work in Breakfast & Beer – Jessie’s favourite cafĂ© in Daylesford! Now that’s a success story. NICE work!
This is the incredible new home of super talented Melbourne designer Jessie Fairweather. How GREAT is it? I am so totally jealous. You might remember Jessie’s business – The Foundry, and her brilliant papergoods range, Measure, which I blogged a long time ago? Jessie has had an insanely busy couple of years launching her business, building her new home, and then moving both her home and her business to Daylesford, about an hour and half from central Melbourne. And you know what else, Jessie did all this on her own!? Amazingness. I am totally inspired! Jessie bought her little block of land in Daylesford a few years ago whilst still living and working in Melbourne. After a few years of thinking and planning how she might build an affordable, sustainable home on her little block, Jessie engaged local builder Mat Boyle of Pumphouse Design to realise her vision. Mat’s previous residential work appealed to Jessie, as did his focus on sustainable building methods, and his use of mainly reclaimed materials. The home was designed based on a studio shed Mat had previously built in Castlemaine – essentially a 10 x 10 metre corrugated iron studio with high ceilings, exposed reclaimed trusses, and cement floor. She added a studio on the side, and kept most of the living/kitchen space open. The house has just 1 bedroom, bathroom, and separate toilet and laundry.
Jessie moved her life and her business to Daylesford a couple of days before Christmas in 2008. During the process of designing and building her beautiful, sustainable home, Jessie completely fell in love with the area, and she says can no longer imagine living anywhere else! (Neither would I!). It was such a huge, brave move for a single lady with a fledgling design business… and personally I am just so in awe of Jessie’s incredible drive to make it work!
Jessie says her neighbours in Daylesford have been so incredibly welcoming… she loves the community spirit – and the rosellas, cockatoos and kangaroos who visit her backyard daily! Oh, and ps – since making her big move, Jessie has met her lovely man, who just happens to work in Breakfast & Beer – Jessie’s favourite cafĂ© in Daylesford! Now that’s a success story. NICE work!
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