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Shaynna

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Spring Realisation

BLOG POST


Thursday, September 25

by Shaynna


With the beautiful weather upon us and the days getting longer, we throw open our blinds and curtains and see our home in a whole new perspective. I’m not sure if anyone has their yearly ritual of spring-cleaning anymore but I find with the change of light, fresh air and new fragrances entering my home I feel like a fresh start. And I’m not just talking cleaning but de-cluttering.

It is easy get caught up in the spring sales, end-of-winter-sales, pre-Christmas, kids on school holiday sales etc. and let the cupboards pile up with all those bargains you just cant do with out. You don’t have enough storage to put these things in till you find a place for them so you buy another cabinet or blanket box or bookshelf or… and the list goes on. Next thing you know you are trapped in a situation of not being able to let go of anything and your clutter becomes the focus of your interior and not the beautiful, spacious free-flowing area you were hoping for.

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Moving Into Your First Place...

BLOG POST


Sunday, August 31

by Shaynna


What are the best pieces to buy when I move out?

It really doesn’t seem that long ago when I first moved out of home, all and my girlfriends and I had with us were the contents of our bedroom and boxes full of all the stuff our parents were glad to get rid of. We were so happy to have couches we could throw rugs over, as they were so ugly, but they were ours (even though they were our parent’s hand-me-downs). It was all about freedom as opposed to ‘of-the-minute’ furniture. Hard to believe seeing as though I had graduated in design and started up my own business in interiors. I feel like I’m talking as though I lived through the depression but the late eighties and early nineties was boom and bust in a modern kind of way. So where am I going on this?
Moving out of home is about learning who you are and the transition to the real you. This also means your style will grow and change. In these times of affordable mass reproduction, limitless credit options, a throw away mentality and moving out of home later (mid twenties to late twenties now is becoming the average) means the market is cashed up, mature and more particular about what they want. But it’s also easy to make some very expensive mistakes.

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Lighting

BLOG POST


Sunday, July 20

by Shaynna


Lighting would have to be one of the most overlooked parts of decorating in the planning of a home. I cant tell you the many times I have come into a home after the renovation and pointed out the missed opportunities of function lighting, ambient lighting and feature lighting that could have been included in the original design. When doing lighting after the fact it is either ‘make-do’ or costly changes to get the most out of the lighting plan.

Lighting comes in three areas - general, indirect and accent.
General is the functional aspect of the lighting, sometimes known as task lighting. These are the working areas or a space that has a specific function over a surface like a kitchen bench, a desk and filling areas such as the large expanses of floor space.

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Getting The Most Out Of Your Wardrobe.

BLOG POST


Wednesday, June 25

by Shaynna


With Sex in the City so prominent at the moment and the focus on fashions and shoes and so many changes, it begs to question: Where does it all go? If you constantly hear yourself saying “I haven’t anything to wear”, maybe it’s all there but you just cant find it!

When building a new wardrobe or fitting an existing one we spend so much energy wondering if the doors should be sliding or mirrored. Do we have timber, veneer or laminate? Do we have baskets or full drawers?

In fact, designing the wardrobe is all about the internals. The best wardrobes are designed around what you already have and will grow with you, not just a system to fill. The first and most important step is inventory, followed by culling and leaving room for future purchases.

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Changing With The Seasons

BLOG POST


Monday, May 26

by Shaynna


Many people scramble for the holiday guides and seek sunny accommodation mid-year in fear of the dreaded oppressive onset of winter. Myself, maybe it is because of my love affair of Melbourne’s constant changing weather, find a certain romance that comes with autumn and winter.

I embrace the cold and the changes it brings to my home. Outside the windows I watch the ever-changing kaleidoscope as the leaves turn from green to golden yellow to burnt red and gracefully disappear to leave the barren architecture of the trees. Garden lighting highlighting these beauties give an alternate focal point in the evenings and a great show for when guests arrive. Nature’s way of creating interest is our signal to do the same inside. Out come the heavy knitted throws and deeper tones in scatter cushions, extra lighting in the form of deep red silk shades on table lamps and groupings of tall pillar candles in chocolate, cinnamon, caramel and vanilla.

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This is a saying we have heard many, many times before but more often than I care to say, people tend to think it really is only a cliché. If ever you are going to convince someone to buy your home, you really don’t have a lot of time to gain his or her attention.

Starting from the outside, if you don’t have the right colours and style happening outside, potential buyers may just drive by and never even walk into the house and this is the first opportunity lost. By the time people get to the front door they have an expectation, so look at the colour scheme at the front of your house and how your garden supports the look of your home.
Front mats that scream ‘Welcome’ are saying, ‘Be my visitor, not my buyer’, so replace the mat with a neutral pattern or do away with it if not necessary.
Once that front door opens, that is where you really need to capture the buyer.

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