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Why Aiming to Maintain Weight Can Actually Help Fat-Loss Goals

We’ve all had moments during a weight-loss effort when we start to lose momentum. At times, it can feel like our goal weight is so far away, and we may be tempted to give up. If weight-loss star

Weaving Country + Culture With The New Textile Brand, Flash Minky

Flash Minky is a brand new textile brand on our radar, bringing the designs of eight Indigenous artists from the Eastern Kimberley region to limited-edition blankets.

Founded by non-Indigenous woman Emilia Galatis – an arts professional who has worked with Indigenous artists and arts centres in remote communities for the last 14 years – 100% of the net profits are redistributed to the artists.

The blankets create a new medium for these lauded artists’ practices to be shared and explored, as well as connecting them with a mainstream audience. We love them!

You Say You Want a (Food) Revolution

Spearheaded by English chef and healthy eating activist Jamie Oliver, this Saturday, May 19 is the first annual Food Revolution Day.The world’s rising rate of obesity is staggering. Since 1980 worldwi
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A Sweeping Country Estate Created From Dust

GardensA Sweeping Country Estate Created From Dust

When revered Sydney Landscape Architecture & Design firm Dangar Barin Smith was brought on to this Hunter Valley project, there was not a  single tree on site. Now the property contains at least seven different species of mature, flowering trees – though that was not part of the client’s original brief.

‘I try to steer my clients towards what they’re capable of in terms of management, and then work backwards from there,’ explains project director, Will Dangar. The initial plan was for a lush and decorative planting scheme, flush with flowers and exotic species; but when it got down to the nuts and bolts of such a maintenance-heavy idea, a tree-dominant palette made the most sense.

And what a vision! Elegant cabbage tree palms frame the northern aspect while Port Jackson Figs (the same ones that line Sydney’s Centennial Park) create a sense of drama. Will calls them ‘legacy trees’, and confides it’s the only time he’s ever used them in a project as they can stretch to 30m wide!

Weeping willows fringe the dams, their drooping tendrils grazing the water surface, while flowering crepe myrtles are dotted throughout the property. A full-time gardener (one of Will’s former staff members!) has been employed to maintain the rolling estate.

This pared back but ambitious design took a year to complete, after construction had already begun on the house. The two lakes were a result of the need to re-level the property, and situate the house deeper into the site.

‘The house was a rundown weekender that didn’t capture the views,’ says Will. ‘So a big part of the job was changing the levels. We had to move a lot of earth around because the house was quite high out of the ground, and we needed to nestle it lower into the site.’

The dams hence served two purposes: aesthetic, and practical. The soil dug up to create the adjacent watering holes was used to even out the gradients around the house, and set the residence deeper into the hillside.

Aesthetically, the lakes add lushness and vitality to the otherwise dry and dusty Hunter Valley landscape. Bore water is pumped into the top lake to keep it full, while gravity then feeds the bottom lake from run-off.

The combination of sculptural trees and wide, serene watering holes creates a romantic, lush paradise here – a testament to the vision of the talented team at Dangar Barin Smith.

See more projects from Dangar Barin Smith here.

Photo – Prue Ruscoe.


Photo – Prue Ruscoe.


Photos – Michael Wee.


Photo – Prue Ruscoe.


Photos – Prue Ruscoe.


Photo (left) – Michael Wee. Photo (right) – Prue Ruscoe.


Photo – Michael Wee.


Photos – Prue Ruscoe.


Aerial photo – Michael Wee.

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