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- Exhibitions (3)
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- New product (4)
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- Studies (7)
- Tips (4)
- Uncategorized (8)
- 01/11/2009: iPhone App fun.
- 15/10/2009: Expanding horizons
- 16/09/2009: Differences
- 23/08/2009: Window treatments
- 02/08/2009: Let's go eco!
- 26/07/2009: Only Ideal Home...
- 14/07/2009: Cheap design...
- 06/07/2009: Empty venue season is upon us!
- 15/06/2009: Curiouser and curiouser...
- 08/06/2009: Shiny new lounge creation
Archive for the Uncategorized Category
Window treatments
23/08/2009 by admin.
I’ve been quiet on the blogging/twittering front for a while as I’ve been finalising Project 3 for college which is an extensive Curtains, Textiles and Soft Furnishings Notebook. I don’t think the word ‘notebook’ is nearly grand enough to describe the vast quantity of information, fabric samples and pictures I’ve had to gather over recent months! My poor eyes are starting to fall out of my head as I’ve been staring at this screen for evenings and weekends on end just typing descriptions about curtain suspension and fabric composition.
I’m not complaining…
I didn’t quite realise there were so many types of curtain headings out there! If you want to know more about pole drapery, I am now your woman.

Having difficulty deciding between an Austrian or Festoon blind? Call on me.
[caption id=”attachment_194″ align=”alignnone” width=”465″ caption=”Austrian blind vs…”]
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[caption id=”attachment_195″ align=”alignnone” width=”480″ caption=”…Festoon blind?”]
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And if you need someone to design a portiere (that’s door curtian to you) for you, I can point you in the right direction.

What I did find extremely difficult was finding decent images of such treatments. Google and Yahoo image searches tend to come up with the same image again and again, in varying sizes. My favourite magazines seem to have endless pages of rooms that are far too trendy for windows treatments as they are full of those big glass boxes. Plus some treatments are completely unknown in a search engine, or in the case of blinds, come up with pictures of blind people (no offence, but unless there’s a window behind you, it’s no help to me).
If I end up with a decent mark, I may even end up sharing the finished product with you at a later date. here’s hoping…
Posted in Studies, Uncategorized | Print | 5 Comments »
Let's go eco!
02/08/2009 by admin.
When you’re in training to be a designer, part of the journey involves discovering your style, what areas of the industry you eventually want to go into etc.
Now the first year of my studies have come to an end, I have found myself becoming increasingly interested in the world of eco design.
Eco has come a long way since the days of the hippies and hemp rugs!
There are now so many ecologically sound designs available, there’s no reason not to indulge and help save the planet at the same time. But it’s not just about the products we buy, it’s a way of life.
Britain first and foremost eco-designer is Oliver Heath. Heath believes that ‘We can’t all hope to live in shiny new wind turbine powered eco houses but there is much that we can do in our homes, lives and working environments that can make a real difference.’
In his latest book release Urban Eco Chic, Heath breaks down eco design into the three basic elements of Technology, Nature and Vintage.
Technology
There are two ways you can look at this area.
1. Don’t buy any new technology, therefore saving the energy and materials produced whilst manufacturing new TVs, washings machines etc, or*
2. Buy the latest in efficient technology. This will not only help save money on your energy bills, it is likely to have been produced from renewable or managed materials.*
Nature
Nature, in the broadest sense, is equivalent to the natural world, physical world or material world. It a product comes from nature, it is more likely to come from a renewable source and therefore ecologically sound. What you have to watch out for is the amount of energy used to produce the product, as this may counteract eco-friendliness of the natural material and therefore pointless!
Vintage
This is undoubtedly my favourite area of the three! I spent a great of my childhood scouring charity shops for a variety of things (albeit slightly against my will, as I thought they all smelt of mothballs) but the older I have become, the more likely I am to look for homeware rather than piles of ‘Choose Your Own Adventure’ books! Looking for vintage (or basically secondhand) goods is undoubtedly the best way to obtain the ‘eco chic’ style and way of life. The only energy used is your own (or maybe a little bit of petrol if the item is too heavy) and you can feel smug about the fact that the item was a bargain too!
Under the area of vintage also comes customisation. Regular readers will be familiar with my dodgy old pine sideboard that I’ve been trying to get rid of for the best part of 3 years. It’s lovely in the fact that it’s solid wood, but I do harbour and unnatural dislike of all things pine. So, I’ve finally come to the conclusion that instead of flogging it on eBay, I’m going it paint it instead!
Be gone evil pine!
Fingers crossed it will go as well as the painting of the fireplace (well done hubby). All I need to do now is to magic up some money for a new carpet and then I can rest…
Speaking of carpet and in the spirit of all things eco, I have been seriously investigating natural carpet. It’s becoming so popular, even Next have started supplying it. The best selection of natural flooring though, would be from the Alternative Flooring Company. They’ve got Coir, Jute, Seagrass, Sisal…Anyway, I’ve ordered a bunch of samples to test on the hubby and will share the results soon. I have to try these things on him first, as like all men, gets a little scared of things he doesn’t know, like natural materials, colour, massages etc but ends up loving them eventually.
Enough of me waffling on, I must get on with my textiles notebook for college!
*Please bear in mind, these descriptions barely touch the surface, so check out Urban Eco Chic for more info. By the way, this is an Amazon affiliate link, so if you click and buy, I may get a few pence towards the new carpet…
Posted in Tips, Uncategorized | Print | 2 Comments »
Cheap design…
14/07/2009 by admin.
It’s that time of the month again. Not the time where snap at my hubby for no reason and generally keel over in pain unless given chocolate on a drip. No, it’s the time of new magazines!
After my last trip to college, I found that I had been buying irrelevant, inappropriate and sometimes downright dirty magazines…like Ideal Home for example. It seems that the college theory is that if a trend is featured in one of these so called ‘lowly’ publications, it’s already on it’s way out.
As a previous ‘consumer’ buying every interior design magazine under the sun was a perfectly acceptable habit, especially since I preferred this to buying clothes and shoes (much to the hubby’s confusion). Now I have to extract myself from consumerdom and start thinking like a designer.
I’ve remedied this somewhat buying subscribing myself to professional (expensive…) mags such as idfx and the like. I have to say that the products featured in them are infinitely more exciting than my old mags’ offerings but also, unsurprisingly, more expensive.
As I’m not even halfway through my course yet, I haven’t decided what kind if designer I want to be. Are all interior designers high-end? Some would argue that that is the whole point. Hiring a designer us seen as an expensive luxury, a business necessity a bage to show off how much dosh you’ve got. I’m leaning towards the more accessible end of the market. The people who, like me, buy all the magazines but never actually have any time to put the ideas into action. The people who want to go ‘eco’ but don’t know where to start. The people who haven’t really got a lot to spend but want to feel as if they’re living in a home and not just a house where they eat and sleep every night. Am I wrong for wanting to do this? Should I end up designing for both ends of the Market and everything inbetween? Think like Kelly Hoppen who has a raft of celebrity designs under her belt to go with her shiny MBE (congrats!) but has also designed a range of homewares for BHS.
If you’ve got any thoughts on this let me know and comment below.
Anyway, rant over!
Carrying on with the theme of accessible (bargain) design, the Next Sale starts on Saturday. Or at least I think it does, as I’ve received a VIP sale preview invitation that ends on Friday! For those of you who like mirrored furniture btu think it’s a little too pricey, you’ll be pleased to know that the Vienna Standard Chest is half price at £175 (down from £350).

- Only £175!
They also appear to have halved the price of some of their glossy items such as the Opus White Gloss Sideboard, again now at £175. But the most notable discount appears in their wallpaper section with this beautiful metallic damask now only £7 (down from £18).

With all these bargains available, I can see my Next account taking a large hit very soon!
I have been quite active on the old Twitter of late, so if you haven’t already signed up, please do and follow me (peacheydesign) for a daily helping a rants and finds!
Posted in Tips, Studies, News, New product, Uncategorized | Print | No Comments »