Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Thursday, April 7, 2011

New York (Magazine) I love ya

    If, like me, you love fantasizing that you live in a New York appartment, or maybe a bohemian Brooklyn basement, Wendy Goodman, New York Magazine's style editor, could help to feed your dreams. 

    Her regular 'Space of the Week' spot always features such interesting homes – and, unsually, they tend to feel attainable (apart, perhaps, from the New York bit). This colourful place, above, owned by a pair of NY-settled Aussies with a penchant for Peruvian rugs, is far from polished and untouchable-looking – but it's super cute and very inspiring. Love the blue walls particularly. 

    Read about the owners and see more pictures in the slideshow the New York Magazine

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New York (Magazine) I love ya


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Wednesday, April 6, 2011

The Etsy blog: spotlight on 'granny chic'


    I'm really loving the Etsy blog, which I've just discovered. They regularly feature Etsy members' homes – and follow each inspiring "I wanna live there!" shoot with a long and dangerously tempting shopping guide from around the site, to help you get the look yourself. 

    This pretty home is in Connecticut and belongs to Amanda Wytas-Ackerman who lives there with husband, Rob, their three children and Buster the bull mastiff. 

    It's a very simple detail but I just love the homely, tied kitchen curtains. And how cute does that candle look in the fruit bowl? Also most inspired by the use of a battered door leaning against the wall as a way of adding a different tone and texture to a wall. Enjoy.


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The Etsy blog: spotlight on 'granny chic'


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http://asfers.blogspot.com/2011/04/etsy-blog-spotlight-on-chic.html


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Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Emily 'Caravan' Chalmers' new book


         

        
    I'm slightly in love with Emily Chalmers' new book, Modern Vintage Style, which is just out (buy it on Amazon, or from Emily's luscious store, Caravan, for £12.99 or £19.99, signed).

    Been meaning to post up a little preview since I got sent a sneaky preview copy, as I've been poring over the pictures wanting to live in all of the houses featured. All at once.

    She really does have a fantastic eye for style – and the book features so many different looks, yet they're all tied by a unifying aesthetic... and one that I happen to love. Most inspiring.

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Emily 'Caravan' Chalmers' new book


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Sunday, March 6, 2011

Drink, shop & do






























    I was very excited to interview the inspiring and stylish pair behind the most exciting shop to hit London's King's Cross in the last year. Drink, Shop & Do is an incredible vintage homewares store – but also much much more, besides.

    There are snacks to be bought, cocktails to be shaken and silly games to be played (clay modelling in an 80s style, for starters).

    Check out lots of luscious pictures and find out more about the shop and its super cool owners, Coralie and Kristie (they even have great names!) in today's New Review magazine.

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Drink, shop & do


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Tuesday, March 1, 2011

How to… Do craft (even if you’re a needle novice)



    When I was small, my grandma tried to teach me to crochet. The memory of the ensuing “can't-do-it!” tantrum remains embarrassingly vivid. If, like me, the idea of making your own appeals, but the sight of needles – or ‘Kirsty’s Home Made Home’ – make you sweat, read on…

    Get booked Make Eames-y shelves via ReadyMade (Thames & Hudson) or speed reupholster a dull office chair chair in a flash with Design*Sponge – if you can grapple with basic ikea assembly, you can do this.

    Cheat Well – a little bit. Clothkits fully-prepped tapestry or Rob Ryan cushions are peasy. Similarly, try Wool and the Gang, or Backstich.

    Join the press gang Try a screen-printing class at The Papered Parlour (London) or Artison (Yorkshire) – and take home your own art.

    Twinkle, twinkle little tealight My friend Holly’s candles really sparkle – thanks to a super simple craft trick. De-label empty food cans and pierce holes in the aluminum with a metal kebab skewer (or a thin bit on your drill – generally the gold coloured ones if, like me, you always forget which ones work on metal). Put a tealight inside. Repeat. If you're drilling not skewering, you'll love this great drillbit guide. Geek, moi?


    Shoot ’em up Make friends with a staple-gun: fabulous fabric (LOVE love Seamstar) stretched over a canvas (Amazon is cheap) will look lovely.

    Sprayed in full Picture framing can be so pricey. Often I'll find horrible artworks or horrible frames – or both – in charity shops. This isn't for every interior, but can look fantastic on one deliberate wall: replace the art with things you like, and spray the all the frames with the same colour aerosol paint (it avoids brush marks). Try Rustoleum.

    Listen and learn If you're brave enough to grapple with more complex crafts (for me, that includes anything that involves a sewing machine or any kinds of needles) there are some inspiring classes all over the country. In Scotland Lovely Pigeon does sporadic but great looking lessons and in Sussex, West Dean offers residential courses in various homes-y crafts.

    On a plate Stylish chef, Arno Maasdorp, does clever things on – and with – plates: take a charity shop patterned platter, lay an alphabet letter on top (steady hand? Alphabet Patterns), using aerosol paint, spray it. Matt black is striking. Now hang it.

    Sit on it Revamp an old wooden chair with a collage. Pick a theme – torn up newspapers, maps, ornithology books… and, using PVA glue, cover the chair with them artfully, then varnish over and over for durability.


    This is an extended version of my weekly column, The Insider, in the Independent on Sunday

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How to… Do craft (even if you’re a needle novice)


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Monday, February 28, 2011

Storage tips: my stint guest editing for Muji


    A nice little thing I wrote for the monthly Mujimail... See more online

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Storage tips: my stint guest editing for Muji


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Monday, January 17, 2011

How to find inspiration

    After moving from a flat to a house, I panicked: I had little furniture, no budget and zero direction. Inspiration was clouded by the threat of expensive mistakes and “blank canvas” panic. It is around this vulnerable state-of-mind that Ikea’s entire marketing strategy is built. Equally, interiors magazines are great, but can exacerbate the panic with their unattainable chic. Where else can one turn?
    1. Inspiration is everywhere, if you’re tuned in. One friend took layout tips from the kitchens in Desperate Housewives, while a bachelor colleague made manly shelves after seeing Steve McQueen’s bedroom in Bullitt.
    2. For cold, hard design tricks – from one-room living to how to arrange “things” on shelves and walls – Conran’s Seventies interiors bible The House Book (Mitchell Beazley; originals and reprints via Amazon) is invaluable and most comforting.
    3. Make a mood board of photos, fabric scraps and magazine pages. A bit sixth-form media project, maybe, but when you’re overwhelmed it can provide focus. Broad themes should gradually emerge (vintage, minimal, lavish, practical, bright, muted, classic?). If not, ask a friend to edit.
    4. Handy with the sticky-backed-plastic? Try the Design*Sponge blog. Even the DIY-shy can get ideas – the box file shelving is a personal favourite, and demonstrates innovative use for the results of a panicky Ikea binge.
    5. Take a favourite picture, object or cushion and build a room around its colours, period detail, or simply a feeling it evokes – it’s easier than starting with infinite choice. Similarly, follow at least a loose theme through all rooms (also helpful for reducing blank-canvas-panic). I got boxy window pelmets from postcards of 1960s American motels, while my mum designed my entire childhood home around a Swedish 19th century artist called Karl Larsson. And Tricia Guild’s book, A Certain Style (Quadrille), is full of clever ways to do this.
    6. Clever storage can free up whole new chunks of room – so don’t underestimate the creative boost of a flick through the Lakeland catalogue. This above-sink shelf, £22.99, is surely absolute genius, no?
    7. Kevin McCloud’s books on colour, divided into sections according to periods, styles and palettes, are immensely practical. Buy at Amazon
    8. Fear of making mistakes can be paralysing. It’s often easier to know what works when faced with something that doesn’t (and that’s what eBay’s for). That said…
    9. Don’t rush things – one stylish acquaintance swears by the picture-heavy Architectural Digest. Not as scary as it sounds, its ‘Inspired by You’ section, where designers answer questions, is fantastic. Soothing sample quote: “The best rooms evolve over time. It is better to have one fabulous chair or table or rug than a whole room of mediocre pieces.” Most comforting.
    10. Tune into your reactions to a space – and that goes for the smallest and least glamorous details: my sitting room used to make me feel strangely on edge. It took months to work out the door opened the wrong way and made one feel claustrophobic whenever it was opened.
    11. Go next door: if you’ve just moved – or even if you haven’t – knock on amenable neighbours’ doors, especially if you’re in a terrace or flat surrounded by similarly laid out homes. Someone will have done something you’d never thought of that may set off a whole room plan.
    12. For major reconfigurations, and pointers on them, big changes, Architect Your Home is a useful service – a four-hour no-strings consultation costs from £599. Cheaper, is to offer dinner in return for your most creative friends’ tips. Get them over, walk them round, and ask everyone ‘what would you do?’ I doubled the size of a bedroom after a friend suggested I have a mezzanine built in the high ceiling.
    13. Far more useful than the magazine, I think, is the LivingEtc.com gallery – libraries full of images, helpfully subdivided to death: the bathroom gallery has five themed mini galleries according to style/type of room.
    14. And if you do get sucked into Ikea, at least try to stick by the 1-for-3 rule (for every three things you like, buy only one – list all the things you wanted to get, and hunt for them elsewhere). If all else fails, try Ikeahacker.blogspot.com

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How to find inspiration


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http://asfers.blogspot.com/2011/01/how-to-find-inspiration.html


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Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Terence Conran: The House Book


    The House Book. By Terence Conran. First published in 1974. Absolute genius. I properly discovered this book (pictured above, in its 1982 incarnation) thanks to my deeply stylish (but she'd rather kill you than hear anyone saying that) neighbour, Emma. I recently borrowed it from her and plan to treat myself to a secondhand Amazon version some time very soon. Why is it so brilliant? Well, quite apart from how fabulous it looks in all its glorious Seventies-ness - which you can see, here - it's full of the most marvellously practical advice about making one's home look lovely.

    I only wish I'd had a copy to hand when I started the daunting process of re-doing my own home - so many decisions, such indecision...

    [Conran's caption for the picture in the middle]: "If the floor is polished boards in the sitting room, you won't want to cover them except, perhaps with a long-pile white Greek rug, so 'project' the olive green from the landing on to walls or curtains." See? Utterly sensible advice (apart, perhaps, from the long-pile rug, but then again...)

    [Conran on flooring]: "The ideal floor usually turns out to be more expensive than your budget allowed for. However, since your floor is expected to last for years and will get he hardest wear of any surface in the house, it is worth making sacrifices elsewhere and adding to your floor budget rather than making do with second-best. It helps to take a scale drawing of the floors before you decide on something, and work out the comparative costs."

    [Conran on living rooms]: "The essence of a multi-purpose living-room is that it should be able to accommodate any number of activities, and each piece of furniture should make a positive contribution to this...The more potential uses you assign to any one piece of furniture the better; to over-furnish is the death to flexibility, quite apart from the claustrophobia it induces...bear in mind that the old three-piece-suite routine is the least flexible of the lot."

    [Conran on kitchen lighting]: "Although the kitchen is primarily a work space it is also in many ways a living area, and the lighting, whether natural or artificial, should be efficient and stimulating. This means that although the work areas must be well lit... there should still be some variety in the light intensity."
    [Conran on eating rooms - incidentally, as with the other sections, this has a luxurious 16 pages, packed with tips and luscious Seventies pictures]: "As in decorating every other room, what's best is what's most comfortable."

    [Conran on colour]: "Working out a colour scheme for a whole house or flat is a daunting task...try tackling one room first to give yourself confidence...Consider the stuff for the important areas first - walls, curtains and sofa coverings will set the tone by virtue of their acreage.""

    [Conran in the 'Things' chapter - which, incidentally, has a spanking eight sections, including 'things on shelves', indoor plants' and 'tabletops and ledges' - amazing]: "Agreeable arrangements don't necessarily come up if you let the accumulation of objects take its natural course...When you no longer feel some positive pleasure while looking at your things, it's time to rearrange them."

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Terence Conran: The House Book


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Taxidermy chic from the Peanut Vendor

    I really am having a squirrel moment right now. And, as such, I find myself strangely drawn to this stuffed squirrel in a box, which measures W32 x D12 x H38.5 cm and costs £160, from the Peanut Vendor.






    But back to the Peanut Vendor - they also have a fantastic range of Christmas gift ideas - from £12 upwards. I'll post up my favourite   stocking filler in a mo, along with some other goodies from elsewhere. When I was growing up, my mum had a Victorian taxidermic pike in a box that I sort of hated, but found transfixing. Having just spotted one going for £850 on eBay, I'm wondering what she did with it...

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Taxidermy chic from the Peanut Vendor


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Friday, September 24, 2010

Tricia Guild inspiration(and interview in today's Independent)



    My mum used to take me to Tricia Guild's shop on the King's Road in the 1980s (I was the small child struggling to fulfill my brief of frightening off traffic wardens because I was too busy gawping in the window of this extraordinary emporium of colour while she was inside, shopping).

    Last week I interviewed the owner and founder of the Designer's Guild and was inspired to build on my brewing urge for some vibrant colours in my house. She has a (huge) new book out, A Certain Style - also very inspiring, as it charts her magic-making interior design on an array of very different homes, from a country farmhouse with a mid-modern twist to a Norman manor house whose heavy dark panelling was lifted with her innovative palette.

    I'm going to post up some pictures of my hall, which is currently half white, half bare plaster. I also need some bright cushions to make my kitchen bench seat work. I'll be canvassing for opinions... Meanwhile, read my interview with her in today's Independent.



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Tricia Guild inspiration(and interview in today's Independent)


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Thursday, September 23, 2010

John Hinde Butlin's photos one step closerto being hung



    I've already touched on my mild obsession with the John Hinde Butlin's series of photos. Now I've framed them, see above (I love these simple white frames from Ikea). Eventually my water-themed collection will even make it to the bathroom wall (they're going on tiles, so I want to buy some special extra strong velcro for the job).

    Watch this space, or rather - watch the space in front of the loo...By the way - if you want to have a proper look at a hearty array of the Butlin's images, Wessell and O'Connor Fine Art and Photography have them displayed on their site. I am considering filling one entire bare wall in my sitting room with the best bar and dancehall tableaux. Could stare at all those faces, expressions and intriguing interactions for days.

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John Hinde Butlin's photos one step closerto being hung


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Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Style spotlight: Candypop


    I stumbled across the colourful Candypop via the wonderful world of Twitter:  I follow Cath Kidston, she follows Cath Kidston. CK reTweeted Candypop's link to photos of her Kidston-esque kitchen (it's quite a homage...).

    So I checked Candypop out and discovered that not only does she fill her kitchen with kitschenalia, florals and heaps of colour, she also blogs about her inspirations (which include the super cute shop-window in Paris, above).


    She also sells simple and sweet photos as greetings cards or posters at Candypopimages.com, like the one above, and is a prolific photo-poster: check out her Flickr stream - it's the interiors equivalent of a sweet shop. Loving your work CP.

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Style spotlight: Candypop


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Sunday, September 19, 2010

Interior design with pallets at Deptford Project and Start London





    Delivery pallets: I once made a student bed out of some but never got as adventurous as the Pallet House, above with my friend Holly. 

    It was at last weekend's Start London, a new eco event at Clarence House, London (rather disappointing apart from this and one other highlight - a swish and sexy garden that managed to be edible by Urquhart and Hunt - more of which later). At Start, the Pallet House was also filled with green interior design, see below, by an editor at Wallpaper* magazine. Nice.



    In a bit of a pallet coincidence, the same day I also went to the wonderful Deptford Project's Silent Cinema event in the yard out the back of their sweet, southeast London cafe/bar, housed in a whitewashed, stylishly furnished railway carriage. Quite apart from the brilliance of the film menu (Saturday night was part of an 80s three-dayer - Heathers, Ferris Bueller's Day Off and, our pick, The Breakfast Club: "five total strangers, a brain, a beauty, a jock, a rebel and a recluse. Before the day was over they broke the rules, bared their souls and touched each other in a way they never dreamed possible"Hilariously brilliant retro heaven) there was amazing food at the barbecue, the previously mentioned coat hanger display and this super stylish impromptu screening area, complete with ingeniously designed furniture and colourful hand-made cushions.

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Interior design with pallets at Deptford Project and Start London


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Cool, colourful coat hangers by Hive at the Deptford Project



    I'm about to write some more about the lovely Deptford Project - so I won't go further than to say these ingenious coat hooks were the first thing I noticed when I arrived, last weekend. Aren't they cute?

    There's no price online and none was listed in the little poster next to this installation, but you can find out more at Hive Design and Consultancy.

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Cool, colourful coat hangers by Hive at the Deptford Project


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Thursday, September 16, 2010

When inspiration strikes

    This picture of Windsor Smith's beautiful bedroom in House Beautiful has been saved in my files for quite a while, purely because I love the all-over pattern in the fabric. When I came across it again yesterday, the final piece of the puzzle finally fell into place. You see, I've been looking for ideas to finish my youngest daughter's bedroom, and I finally found just what I was looking for when I rediscovered this image:


     embroidered satin by Bergamo Fabrics



    This image is only the starting point for what I had in mind, but sometimes that's all it takes. I'll be working on it over the weekend, so I hope to have something to show you on Monday. Although if this past week is anything to go by, the best laid plans....well, you know the rest!

    Hope you all have a wonderful weekend,

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When inspiration strikes


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Monday, August 30, 2010

Country kitchen style for just 50p



    When is a cookbook more than a cook book? When, like this wonderful vintage edition of Farmhouse Fare: recipes from country housewives collected by Farmers Weekly, it adds to your kitchen's interior decor.

    I spotted this 1973 edition of the ultimate country recipe book in a Hampshire charity shop, for just 50 pence. Couldn't resist that orange font, set against a rustic wooden backdrop, and there's just something about garish yet stolid-looking seventies food photography that just does it for me. It looks rather nice - I think - in my slightly seventies kitchen. As for the recipes... wow. As the jacket blurb says: "Compiled from the favourite recipes of country housewives, this book gathers together the very best of traditional British home-cooking and invites the housewife to experiment with a range of wines, meads, preserves and chutneys [such as] Grapefruit Champagne, Honey Beer and Date and Banana Chutney." Among the book's simple treats including jam slices (made with stale bread and dripping), glacé grapes (surely should have been one of the canapes in Abigail's Party) and hearty onion cake, recipes such as hatted kit, "a very old Highland dish", show the book's heritage. "Warm slightly over the fire two pints of buttermilk," it begins. Then, "pour it into a dish and carry it to the side of a cow. Milk into it about one pint of milk..." Amazing.

    Buy the book on Amazon, but - sadly - without the lush cover. Shop around and you'll eventually find the 1973 edition - for inspiration about where to look, check out this great Guardian blog about the charm of vintage cookbooks.

    Handy hint: you could display books like this on this special new shelving from Ikea.

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Country kitchen style for just 50p


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Friday, August 20, 2010

My big bro's cool home

    A corner of one of the Sydney siblings' homes

    While on the topic of the far-flung relatives with style - thought I'd finally post up a couple of snaps I wrestled out of one of my (two) brothers who live in Sydney. 

    I think that Anglepoise came from the house we grew up in in south London. Aw. Nice things. Hoarding and compulsive arranging of piles of stuff, also passed down from mother.

    The kitchen/diner. Nice.


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My big bro's cool home


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Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Art attack

    Firstly I wanted to thank everyone for your get-well wishes - you guys are so sweet. I'm feeling much better today, and I'm sure those couple of lazy days doing absolutely nothing have helped no end. So while I've quite enjoyed kicking back, watching dvds and catching up on reading, I do find it quite frustrating not to be working on my cabinet makeover - especially when it's sitting right in front of me! That's been set aside for when I can muster the energy, so in the meantime my thoughts have turned to painting.

    When it comes to my art, I probably have enough ideas to last a lifetime. This week has been great for giving me time to plan, refocus and potter around my studio - I've cleaned and tidied my desk (which was no mean feat!), finished a couple of orders, and started to pull together some bits and pieces for my next piece. I've also organised to frame this work my youngest daughter did at school recently:



    I love it, and the fact that she designed the whole thing herself is pretty impressive I think. Once it's framed, I'll hang it in my studio, alongside some other masterpieces by my older two.

    Right, now that I've spent most of this post bragging, I'll show you a few of the things I'll be using in some of my own works. I'm always on the lookout for really diverse bits and pieces, and my plan is to incorporate them into some mixed-media works that will soon be for sale. 


    Japanese paper, wood blocks, hand-made parchment, jute twine...mmm




    I'm really keen to get started, so I'll catch you all soon!

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Art attack


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Tuesday, July 20, 2010

The Chaos Theory

    Those who know me well also know that I can be hugely a little on the messy side, especially when I'm working on a new painting. And to make matters worse, after a while, I find it impossible to ignore the chaos. That's exactly what's happened this week. I've had quite a few ideas for new artwork, but I just can't manage to get going on it when my studio looks like it's been ransacked. So yesterday, I spent a few hours tidying up, and while I still have a few things to take care of (like organising my tax return paperwork - argh!) it's looking much better, and already I'm feeling clearer and more focused. While I'm honest enough to realise I'll never be capable of keeping a fastidiously tidy studio, it doesn't stop me from being smitten when I spy lovely examples of serene (and tidy!) work spaces. And if said workspace happens to overlook a stunning garden (and maybe a pool?) then who am I to argue?



    Maggie Tabberer's barn in the Southern Highlands


     
    Avalon stunner via realestate.com.au


    source unknown


    source unknown


    Would it be too greedy to want this next one just a little bigger? Probably, but hey, this is my fantasy studio, so I'm going to upsize my order.





    Inspired yet? I am!

    Ok, back to work for me. Have a great day everyone,


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The Chaos Theory


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