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Sunday, May 12, 2024

Cultivated Wilderness In Inner Melbourne

After seeing team Phillip Withers’s ‘I See Wild’ installation at Melbourne International Flower and Garden Show in 2017, Melbourne-based couple Malcolm Watkins and Peter Kerr (of PLK Interiors) engaged the landscape specialists to create a captivating garden to surround their Cera Stribley and AV-ID designed residence in Toorak. 

Comprising three separate pockets of garden that each required a distinct horticultural approach, Phil and his team devised channels of foliage that connected the landscape with the architecture, while also giving the separate sections a distinct character and function. Not to mention one seriously vibing infinity pool!

An Artful Way To Live!

One of the concerns many long-term home owners face is how to downsize without leaving the neighbourhood and amenity they’ve grown to love. 

Nick Edwards and Amanda Hall were faced with this dilemma until a new apartment building popped around the corner from their South Yarra family home, presenting the perfect solution. 

Since moving into the apartment in 2015, the couple have made this home look truly their own, filling every space with vibrant art that truly reflects their passions!

Sam Clayton and Mal Wood – The Design Files | Australia's most popular design blog.

Today we visit this lush, colourful, ‘anything goes’ Melbourne garden, belonging to Sam Clayton and her partner Mal Wood.

When Sam purchased her Northcote cottage 10 years ago, the garden was unkept, with weeds waist high, but she was sold on its potential. When Mal moved in a few years later, the couple began to slowly transform the garden, with many of the plants in the backyard grown from cuttings gifted from friends or planted as tube stock.

Our gardens columnist, Georgina Reid of The Planthunter chats to this industrious pair to learn a little more about their vibrant outdoor space.

Get a Fresh Look with Easy Furniture Updates

UncategorizedGet a Fresh Look with Easy Furniture Updates

DIY freshly painted desk - 12898

Get a Fresh Look with Easy Furniture Updates

When you grow bored with your furnishings or want to change up the look and feel of a room, you may find yourself trying to put off redecorating until you have a bigger budget. Instead, you can give the furniture you already have a unique, fresh look at a fraction of the cost.

These projects from the crafting experts at Jo-Ann Fabric and Craft Stores show how easy it can be to transform a tired old desk or a basic dining chair into one-of-a-kind pieces that complement your space perfectly.

Find more ideas for crafty ways to update your furnishings at joann.com.

Chalk Acrylic Paint Desk

Crafting time: Weekend project
Skill level: Beginner

Supplies and Tools:

  • painter\’s tape
  • FolkArt Home Decor Chalk: Imperial or color of choice
  • 2-inch paintbrush
  • hand sander and 80 grit sandpaper
  • soft cloth
  • dark wax

Using painter\’s tape, tape off areas not to be painted. Paint desk. Allow to dry and recoat as needed.

When dry, distress edges with hand sander until desired look is achieved. Using soft cloth, wipe on dark wax and buff.

12898 Get a Fresh Look with Easy Furniture Updates embed1

Sitting Pretty Painted Chair

Crafting time: 1-2 hours
Skill level: Intermediate

Supplies and Tools:

  • white cotton canvas to cover seat and back of chair
  • masking tape in a variety of widths
  • Tulip Soft Fabric Paint in Ebony, Crimson Red, Royal Blue and Sunshine Yellow
  • foil or foam plate for palette
  • paintbrushes
  • spray paint in coordinating color
  • scissors
  • Aleene’s Fast Grab Tacky Spray
  • Aleene’s Fast Grab Tacky Glue
  • staple gun and staples
  • craft knife
  • black trim fabric
  • Glam-It-Up! Iron-On Crystals in Clear
  • Tulip Cordless Heat Setting Tool

Lay canvas flat on work surface. Randomly place a variety of tape strips on canvas, intersecting strips to create abstract lines and shapes.

Fill in open areas between tape strips with fabric colors, using one dominant shade for majority of sections, with other colors as occasional accents. Remove tape and allow fabric to dry.

Remove old upholstery from chair. Reserve it to use as a pattern for cutting painted fabric.

Spray paint chair base; allow to dry.

Cut out painted canvas to fit chair backing and base. Apply tacky spray to chair base and position painted fabric over base. This will help to hold new fabric in place while gluing and stapling edges. Repeat for chair back.

Use tacky glue around the edges of fabric to secure it to chair base and back. Use staple gun to secure fabric edges on the base and back for additional security. Trim excess fabric around edges with craft knife. Cover edges of fabric and staples with black trim, secured with tacky glue. Allow glue to dry completely.

Cut out heart shape from scrap of painted canvas. Cover heart with clear crystals and use heat-setting tool to set crystals in place, following instructions on packaging. Use tacky glue to secure crystal heart to chair back. Allow to dry.

Source:

Jo-Ann Fabric & Craft Store

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