Wednesday, 13 March 2013

Eye spy - resin jewelry from Luddite Made


Today on Etsy I found... resin jewelry from Luddite Made in Melbourne Australia

When I was a teen I had a resin hair accessory with pretty pink flowers in it.  The flowers suspended in plastic, that looked like ice cubes, were kind of magical and I was secretly disappointed when I got too old for it.  Here is something even more magical and very sophisticated.  I would love to make something like this.  But I just know that once I start encasing things in resin, I won’t be able to stop experimenting.

You can see Luddite Made’s Etsy shop here and you will also find other jewellery and screen printed textiles. 

Pansy Resin Ring. Real Flower Jewelry. Pressed Flower Ring. Botanical Jewelry. Resin Jewelry. Purple Yellow.Chunky Feather Resin Ring. Resin Jewelry. Limited Edition. Yellow Black. Bubble Ring. Size 17 mm 7 USA.

Parrot Feather Resin Ring. Resin Jewelry. Limited Edition. Orange White Green. Size 6 1/2 USA 17 mm.Feather Resin Ring. Resin Jewelry. Limited Edition. Red. Size 16 mm 6 USA. Statement Ring.

Rose Bud Square Resin Bangle. Real Flower Jewelry.  Botanical Resin Bangle Bracelet. Red Pink. Resin Jewelry.

Tuesday, 12 March 2013

Wallpaper - the bold and the beautiful


Let's celebrate: wallpaper is here to stay!  And that's a godsend for aesthetic and practical reasons.  Firstly, the practical; not every house is blessed with smooth, paint ready walls.  Sometimes you peel away that lurid or dowdy paper and discover an ugly surface.  Then, wallpaper can cover a thousand sins and no one need ever know what lies beneath.  With walls, sometimes beauty really is only skin deep!  If it's really awful, lining paper can be used under wall paper for extra camouflage.  Lining paper can also help if you're papering over bright paint with pale paper, so that the colour doesn't show through.

Fashion aside, high end wallpaper has always been a thing of beauty.  For absolute, jaw dropping, mind blowing opulence, you can't go past De Gournay.  De Gournay bespoke wallpapers are hand painted onto silk.  Some papers are covered almost entirely with gold or silver leaf. 

Left to right: Badminton on 22k gold guilded silk, Portobello
Left to right: Temple Newsam, Willow on sterling sliver
Above and below: Windswept Blossom, Erlham in custom design colours


De Gournay's designs are not subtle but they are the best example I know of, of what can be achieved with wall paper if you bold.  As with desserts; the full fat option is just better! 
For those of us who are not Marie Antoinette  here some wallpaper options that are (more or less) affordable and very inspirational.

One of my all time favourite wallpaper sources is Spoonflower.  Spoonflower is one of the most amazing online shops (more about that another day).  Here you can choose from a range of wallpaper and fabric patterns or upload your own designs and they will print them onto fabric or wallpaper for you. 

 In my opinion, one of the coolest designers on Spoonflower is Holli Zollinger.  Her colour schemes are genius.  They're different, they're exciting, but you could easily live with them (or I could anyway).  Her Elephant and Umbrellas and Foxen designs are whimsical but contemporary at the same time.  At last count there were 544 different patterns and colour ways in Holli’s shop; more there than I could hope to represent.  So hop on over to Spoonflower and check them out!





It would be impossible to talk about wallpaper and not mention legendary Australian designer Florence Broadhurst.  Broadhurst opened her wallpaper business in 1959 and continued producing paper until her death in 1977.  As much as 54 years on, her designs still look as though they could have been created yesterday.  If you want to go bold with wallpaper, Broadhurst is a fail safe way to go.  You would be hard pressed to make these designs look bad.

Horses Stampede is one of my all time Broadhurst favourites.  The design has a beautiful undulating movement to it that conjures up thoughts of brumbies wild and proud.  Guaranteed to add energy to any room and to make you walk a little taller every time you see it.

If you are a fan of De Gournay's designs, then Broadhurst's Egrets will strike a chord. 

Japanese Floral is the first Broadhurst design I ever saw and I still love it.

Cockatoos would be at home in any house

I can’t pretend that Broadhurst papers are cheap, but buy a roll and use it creatively.  Paper a wall, an alcove, frame a piece or lay it underneath glass on a table top or behind glass on a kitchen splash back.  A little of something wonderful is so much better than a lot of something passé.

Wallpaper is not quite as popular in New Zealand as it is overseas (especially in Britain) but Vision Wall Covering's Fantail is my kiwi favorite   It has been around for a while now and has all the makings of a classic; it's bold but liveable and that fantail reference really resonates. 

Resene Walltrends II 75130

 So there you have it.  An ode to wall papers.  Searching for wall papers on the internet is a scavenger hunt; one brilliant find leads to another.  How anyone ever commits to hanging just one on the wall, I don't know!

Saturday, 16 February 2013

Eye spy - Jewelry by Claire Allain of lovebird


Claire Allain of lovebird

Claire has been making contemporary jewelry for 15 years.  She moved to New Zealand from the UK five years ago and opened her shop lovebird on Felt in February 2012.  Claire uses precious metals (including silver she recycles herself) and annodised aluminium. Claire's designs are simple and contemporary but the lines and shapes are exquisite.  My absolute favorite is the Tui necklaces.  The bird earrings below have a child-like simplicity that is enchanting; they make me smile every time I see them.  Now that might be just what I need to walk into work on Monday morning with a smile on my face!   

You can buy Claire's jewelry at lovebird on Felt or at claireallainjewellery.co.nz and visit her blog http://claireallainjewellery.blogspot.co.nz/





Tuesday, 12 February 2013

All lit up


Decorating a house in theory is easy.  Renovating your home is much harder, I’ve found.  In the first case you’re browsing magazines, books and the internet thinking “I like that, that and that!”  In the second case you’re asking; should I have that or that?  Pay for it.  And live with it. For potentially the next 10+ years.  Eeek!  That’s a whole ‘nother game.

Case in point: my lampshades.

One of the first things we learned about our new house on moving day was that several light fittings didn’t go and most had no earth wire.  (Insurance companies please forget I just said that).  So for a while we lived with naked bulbs and live wires poking out of the walls.  Scary.  On the bright side there is a glorious 1930’s milk glass lamp in the front hall.  I just make sure it’s turned off before I dust it. 
Getting new lights fitted was a priority.  But expensive.  In the end we had plain pendants fitted and foolishly thought it would be easy to find shades when time and budget allowed. 
Now in any country that had an Ikea that would be easy.  And cheap too.  But this is New Zealand and sad to say we don’t have Ikea or anything that really compares.  The lighting I found in was overpriced and just didn’t feel special enough.  But Google has the answer (doesn’t it always?).  Googling “lamp shades New Zealand” produced this website which is so much more exciting than its plain Jane name suggests.

Lampshades Direct2 U (based in Dunedin) offers two collections; fabric & wallpaper (stunning and very affordable) and these drop dead gorgeous digitalfine art collaborations between interior designer Robyn Buis and photographer/landscape architect StefanMutch.  Stefan’s photos have a beautiful painterly quality.  Some of them feature fantails and other native birds, yet without the kitsch kiwiana quality.  (Actually, I like the kiwiana thing, but this is so elegant and easy to live with).  Here are just a few of their shades, and honestly, I have no idea which ones to choose!


If I had just one recommendation; it would be awesome if they put this gorgeous photography onto more than lampshades.  I could happily live with this on cushions or a framed print.  I only have so many lamps!  

Wednesday, 6 February 2013

Hello world

I am beginning World Beautiful as a sort of messages in a bottle; to celebrate the fact that outside of the 8-5 weekday, junk mail and laundry the world is full of extraordinary places, brilliant people and incredible creations.  I will be about design.  But more than that.  It will be a reminder that 

life is beautiful.

Hello world, 
My name is Grace...