Insights • Inspirations • Destinations • Design

Friday, November 18, 2011

Black, White+Yellow: A NY State of Mind

Reading the October issue of UK Elle Decoration, it appears that black, white, grey and yellow are the hot new colours of the winter season. These colours always remind me of New York City; the yellow taxi cabs, the flashing neon lights, the windows of the skyscrapers at night. If cities could be catalogued according to colour, then London would be red and black, Paris would be beige, black and gold, Miami would be turquoise and pink, and New York would be monochromatics with a splash of brash old yellow in between.

Here are some of my favourite photographs of New York showing its (highly fashionable) signature colours...


Classic scenes of Fifth Avenue, New York

Yet more Fifth Avenue extravagance...

The beautiful lines of the New York Public Library
(and these are just the ones on the outside)


The charm of Balthazar's Bakery, SoHo

The fabulousness of Freeman's taxidermy-themed restaurant
The further fabulousness of Freeman's clothing store

A fitting sign in the Garment District
The golden glamour of the Kelly Wearstler-designed BG cafe, on the top floor of Bergdorf Goodman (a place that has some of the best views in the city).
One of the classic New York views from BG Cafe on the top of Bergdorf Goodman
The stylish windows of Bergdorf Goodman 
(The store's visual displays are so famous, it recently published a book on them; Windows of Bergdorf Goodman, by Assouline, for the hefty price of $550.)
The elegantly ornate balconies of Henri Bendel department store
A collage of Manhattan memories
A great character at the always-entertaining Tompkins Square Park dog run

Behind the Scenes on a Book


Every now and then someone kindly asks me to speak at an event, festival or function. Whenever I do these public speaking events, I always shorten the speech and leave 20 or 30 minutes at the end for questions, because I think it's important for the audience to ask the questions they want to know the answers to, rather than hear the long drawn-out speeches we authors think they should listen to! Curiously, many of these questions revolve around publishing: conceptualising a book project, getting a book deal, and then writing/producing it after the contract's been signed. It's amazing how many people want to know about the process that goes into creating a book.

So each week on this blog, I'm going to write about the 'flip side' to books. If you have any questions, please do just ask me. But to start off, I'm going to jump in the deep end and answer a query from a friend who wanted to know how authors/photographers structure their working lives, particularly if it involves working on an illustrated coffee-table book.

Naturally, every person, and every book, is different. But for my recent Paris book, Paris: A Guide To the City's Creative Heart, Plum's lovely publisher, Mary Small, and I got together in her office at the very start of the production process (this was before a single word had even been written) and planned the structure in detail.  We worked on a concrete contents list, and then worked through that, planning sections, chapters, headlines, the ratio of photos to copy, the look of the design, and even the proposed colour palette for each of those sections/chapters. With Paris, I suggested colours for each arrondissement, such as black and gold for the 1st, pink for the 6th and so on (I knew these colours were dominant in these arrondissements). Once Mary and I had agreed on these colours and the overall structure and feel of the content and design, I then flew to Paris to photograph it.

Now before you think I just wandered around Paris and clicked a few shots here and there, let me reassure you that it was a little more professional! I had 10 days to shoot the whole book,: 6000 photos in total. (These would later be culled down to 1000 or so for the final submission.) And Plum's photography brief was as comprehensive – and as extensive – as my Learning French phrase book!

Each day I set out at 8am, with my newly charged battery, my Canon camera, a tripod and just two lenses (I like to work light; it's easily when you're traipsing around on cobblestones!), and I worked through The List. Each day I traversed the various arrondissements, shooting street signs, doors, markets, courtyard and colours, among a hundred other things. And each night I would go back to the hotel, cull the photos and download them onto a Mac laptop, and then back them up on a portable hard drive. If I hadn't finished the list from the previous day, I would have to return to that quartier and do it early the next morning before I started the next day's shooting schedule. Everything matters when you're working on such a tight schedule, so rather than sit down to lunch, you find somewhere you have to shoot and order an entree there, then shoot it – and the cafe – before you grab a couple of bites and then rush off to the next thing. You shoot constantly, when you're walking over bridges, through streets and markets, taking short cuts through parks and even when you're waiting at traffic lights! And you always look up. In Paris, some of the best photographs are those above head-level – the ornate balconies, the architectural details, the signs, the rooftops, the skyline...

It's completely exhausting, of course, but it's also wonderful. Writing and shooting a book on Paris is one of the loveliest things an author or photographer can do. And I'm very grateful to the Plum girls for commissioning this one. It was such a joy to do.


From this, above (the photographic brief), to this, below... 
Day One, Photograph #1 (the first night in Paris)


And then to this... 
Day Ten (the last night in Paris), and the 5,942th shot...


Thursday, November 17, 2011

The Art of Collage


Collages have been around in the blogosphere and indeed the magazine and book publishing world for some years now. I remember seeing them being used in magazine spreads as early as 1999, although they really took off in the last decade. Some art directors feel that the collage has had its day, but I disagree. I think their simplicity and whimsy is timeless. No matter how ornate or amateurish they might be, their quirkiness never fails to enchant. We've framed lots of our travel mementos into collages and hung them around the house. There are collages of Do Not Disturb signs collected from hotels around the world; collages of vintage postcards I've found in Parisian flea markets, and all the collages I've designed for my books over the years, many of which have been used as end papers, contents pages, section dividers and acknowledgement pages.

Here are some of my favourites. It just goes to show that the art of collage isn't past its due-by date.

Below: Mock-up collages produced for Paris: A Guide to the City's Creative Heart, published by Plum/Pan Macmillan.



Below: Two collages of Coco Chanel, produced for a forthcoming book on Chanel.


Below: A collage of whimsical bits hanging in my library/study.


Below: A collage of pages from a vintage copy of Picnic at Hanging Rock. The book was torn but it seemed a shame to throw it out, especially because it's one of my favourite novels. I simply used some old tape I bought at Merci in Paris and stuck the pages onto a gilt mirror. I don't know if it works, decoratively speaking, but I often pause and read the pages when I walk past.



Curing Blogger's Block


There comes a time in every writer's or blogger's life when The Block hits. This is when the mind empties of intelligent thought, inspiration all but disappears and the computer screen suddenly appears intimidating, and strangely vast. You can't imagine how you're going to fill it. This happens to everyone, even experienced writers. It's a common affliction.

A mentor once told me that whenever this happens, there is a guaranteed solution: Just go to your journals. (He said it in a Godfather accent, so I think he was referencing the classic line "Go to the mattresses".) What he meant was: Fight writer's block by using, and referring to, a library of personal journals. These can be notepads you keep lying around – by the bed, in the car, in your bag for long flights or rail commutes – or more substantial journals that you write in regularly. Whatever form they take, use them to jot down ideas, snippets of information, whimsical bits from the media, even funny characters and conversations you see or hear. When he said this, I realised I had a whole decade of journals to call upon; black notebooks of lists, ideas, insights and inspirations that I'd been scribbling for more than ten years. So I dragged them out and flicked through them again. It was like finding an aisle in a library you forgot existed; an aisle full of fabulous old books and beloved authors offering volumes of wisdom, whimsy and wit for the taking.

So now I have those black journals and notebooks on a shelf above my desk. Even if I don't refer to them, the very sight of them is enough to inspire me...


OTHER PLACES TO FIND INSPIRATION FOR BLOGGER'S BLOCK 
  1. The features sections of online newspapers and magazines, particularly The TelegraphThe Guardian, The New York Times (and its fantastic T magazine), the New Yorker, Vogue, UK Elle Decoration, and of course mini e-magazines such as Ivy and Piper and Matchbook magazine.
  2. Quirky, cute and intriguing books. Try publishers such as The Little Bookroom, Plum (Pan Macmillan's new imprint), Murdoch, Assouline, Rizzoli and Ryland, Peters & Small.
  3. Other blogs, although try to stay away from blatantly copying their content, which isn't nice. You can refer to their sites, or use their posts to inspire you to create a different one of your own, which should be significantly different. 
  4. Your own home. Every home, in my opinion, is interesting – as is every city / village / island / quartier / neighbourhood and district. Look around your own home and neighbourhood, and write about the things you see – be they people, shops, decorating, design aesthetic, colour palettes, landscapes, even just street scenes. We all love seeing how people live on the other side of the world. I'm never bored listening to other people's stories.

Design Wise: Piet Boon


Each week here in The Library I'd like to play librarian, if I may, and introduce you all to someone I think you'd like; someone who's not only worthy of mentioning but also of further reading. It will usually be someone I've met or come into contact with. And it will usually be someone inspiring. Because we can't get enough of those types...

Last week it was Mr Jeffrey Bilhuber, interior designer to the stars. (Including Ms Anna Wintour, although I can't imagine how difficult it would be being her decorator.) This week, it's another extraordinary design talent: the inimitable, always elegant Dutch designer Piet Boon.

I first came across the work of Piet Boon and his design studio when I bought one of his monographs, Piet Boon 2 (which features what must be the most beautiful cover of any architecture or design book ever published). The project inside were imbued with a quiet elegance and understated sophistication, and yet they had a polished drama as well. In a word, they were soigné. Then I discovered that Mr Boon started his career as a carpenter. What an arc, to go from chippie to world-renowned design star! Now his busy studio not only designs architecture and interiors for residential and commercial clients, it also produces furniture and products for the likes of Dutch manufacturer Moooi. (Another great brand.) I was so impressed that I asked him if I could feature his work in a book I was editing at the time, called Design in Black and White. He couldn't have been more gracious.

If I had an extravagant income, I'd hire Piet Boon in a heartbeat. As it stands, I'll just have to be content with his beautiful books. Although I DID see that his studio is having what appears to be a sale of some kind, so if you're in The Netherlands this month perhaps look it up? I'd offer more details, but I don't quite understand the language. All I can recognise is "Pin of Cash", which I presume is Dutch for bring all the money that you can?
Datum: zaterdag 19 en zondag 20 november 2011 . Tijd: 10.00 - 17.00uur 
Lokatie: in het nieuwe gebouw tegenover de hoofdingang van ons hoofdkwartier Skoon 78, 1511 HV Oostzaan 
Betaling: Pin of cash 
Garantie: op items uit deze sale zit geen garantie en kunnen ook niet worden geretourneerd

Look up pietboon.com for more details of his projects and signature style (which he describes as "Simple Sophistication" but I tag as "coolly glamorous"). But in the meantime, here are some images of his well-groomed style, as featured in  Design in Black and White. (Images Publishing.)

NB Piet's new book, Piet Boon III, has just been released worldwide by Lanoo publishers. I've already put it on Christmas Wish List.




{Images courtesy of Piet Boon.}

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Style Insights: Fabric Stores


Journalists are often asked where the best places in the world are, be they boutiques, bars, bistros, hotels, hideaways, activities, unusual museums and galleries or just great little neighbourhoods to get lost in. I think this is because we're often the first to know of such places, thanks to the helpful PR companies that keep us up to date. But we also hear about these places from bloggers - who are surprisingly quick to find out about them - as well as those industry contacts who trawl the world in search of these aesthetic treasures, such as photographers, editors, architects, designers, stylists and store owners.

I believe it's important to share these insider's tips, because what goes around soon comes back, as the old Creative Karma rule advocates. If we share our favourite finds, then others will share in the pleasure of them, and may even return a few style secrets of their own. So, every Thursday, I'll post some of my favourite 'Style Sites'; places in the world I love visiting for their inspiration, insights, great products and gorgeous design. Here, to begin with, are my favourite fabric stores.


1. MOOD FABRICS, NEW YORK  This store is so big I always have to persuade my partner to come with me so he can kindly hold the bolts while I browse the aisles! (Such a gentleman. Nothing says love like a man holding a houndstooth for his girlfriend.) It’s the most extraordinary space; three enormous levels filled to the roof with fabrics of every kind, and most are discounted. I often buy Ralph Lauren linens here, marked down from $200/yard to $12/yard. There are chiffons, shirt fabrics, pin stripes, upholstery fabrics and an entire row of linings. It’s so popular, the owner is opening an outpost in London in 2012. 225 West 37th Street, New York.

2. TISSUS REINE, PARIS  Where else in the world can you buy gorgeous silk-taffeta for this cheap? Last time, I picked up six metres of Pompadour-pink silk for a handful of Euros, which was then swiftly sewn into Parisian-style curtains for our guest bedroom. Very French. (It was just a pity we didn’t have the parquetry floors, high ceilings and a balconied view of the Eiffel Tower to go with it.) Filled to the rafters with inspiring bolts and bits (or passementerie, as the French call it. Just lovely. 3-5 Place Saint Pierre, Montmartre, Paris.

3. ULTRAMOD  This store, or mercerie as the French call it, is too marvellous for words. Apparently Jean-Paul Gaultier shops here and that’s credibility enough for me. If JP’s here mooching through the millinery, then I’m here too. The store dates from 1890 and is like stepping back in time to an old-fashioned haberdashery. Sweetly atmospheric. 14 Rue Monsigny, Paris.

4. CLOTH HOUSE, LONDON   I found this place by accident one day while wandering through Soho and now try to visit whenever I’m in London. It’s a pretty little place with cute window displays and several rooms full of lovely linens, cottons and woollens. Just try to resist. 47 Berwick Street, Soho, London.

A Parisian Thank You...


I don't want to fill up this blog with images or excerpts from my books, as that would be far too boring - and besides, there are so many other interesting things in the world to feature here. However, I do feel that I should say a sincere thank you to certain magazines and media outlets that have kindly featured my latest book, Paris: A Guide To the City's Creative Heart. My grandmother always told me that manners were the sign of a well-bred lady, and as I never - NEVER - ignored anything my grandmother told me, I'd like to send my heartfelt thanks to the following for their lovely reviews this month: The Australian newspaper, Vogue magazine, MindFood magazine, MAP magazine, the Canberra Times, Australia's ABC radio, Avenue bookstore in Melbourne, Shearer's Bookstore in Sydney and many gracious bloggers. Your comments have been wonderful to read.

Paris: A Guide to the City's Creative Heart

American Idyll


I have a handful of favourite hotels in the world that I like to stay at, time and time again, when I'm travelling for business. (I know. I'm boring. But I think I'd rather walk off a 14-hour flight and straight into a familiar space than wonder if the new hotel I've booked into will even remember that I'm coming!) These are hotels where you can check in with ease, even if it's 10AM, and where the doorman remembers your name, even if it's been two years since you've seen him. They're hotels where the interiors are stylish and intriguing, but you're not paying a premium for the privilege of seeing them, and where the pool deck, breakfast terrace, library and reception area are always filled with fresh towels, a selection of tea, coffee and snacks, lots of books and informative things to read through - preferably about the city you're in. Most importantly, these are hotels that are affordable - usually between A$100 and $250/night  - but they somehow make you feel as though you're in a $1000 suite.

Some of these hotels include the Dean Street Townhouse in London's Soho (love the luxurious bathrooms fitted with supplies from the Cowshed spa), the Viceroy in LA, the Pantheon and Senat in Paris, The Landing in the Bahamas, and the Night Hotel in New York City. But perhaps my favourite hotel is The Moorings, one of the most sublime hideaways I've ever seen.

Located in a charming place called Islamorada ("Village of Islands"), which is set halfway down the Florida Keys, The Moorings is actually an enclave of extraordinary beach houses scattered around an old coconut grove on the Bahamas side of the ocean. Designed by Herbert Baudoin, one of the loveliest gentleman you'll ever meet, this pocket of postcard-worthy prettiness is so photogenic that Ralph Lauren, Bruce Weber, Vogue, Jennifer Lopez and dozens of other names regularly use it for photo shoots. The week I was here to shoot the place, George Bush Sr was in the house next door, the Secret Service were on the beach and Victoria’s Secret were shooting the next catalogue on the pier. Such an oxymoronic scene, but everyone was happy. And who wouldn’t be, staying here?

For more details, see The Moorings website - www.mooringsvillage.com (which really doesn't do the place justice).  But in the meantime, here are some of my favourite scenes...

(And let me know what your favourite hotels are, too. Would love to hear of them.)










Seeing Green



I'm having a torrid love affair with the colour green at the moment. And so, it seems, is everyone else, judging by the covers and contents of many of the style and home magazines this month. (I know. Who would have thought green would ever swing back into fashion?) I've never had much to do with green until now. I think this is because I once read that it was the colour associated with fairies, and that, according to myth, the fairies were deeply grieved if people didn't respect their claim on the shade. Well, I'm very sorry fairies, but it's just too beautiful to pass up. Surely you can share it for a few months?

Green reminds me of gardens. And summer. And the luminous lightness of new spring leaves. It reminds me of English conservatories, and gentlemen's libraries, and old country kitchens, with painted timber doors. It takes me back to the day I discovered Ladurée, that chic French patisserie (which is famous for its Parisian-green packaging), and the morning I wandered into Kate Spade's flagship New York store, which showcased green like never before. Inspired by Ms Spade, we've since painted our hallway in a deep, double-strength geranium green and it's like walking into a garden, every single time.

Green is fresh, sharp, elegant, sophisticated, whimsical and calming. It's also utterly surprising. Tom Scheerer loves it. So does Charlotte Moss. Christopher Maya associates it with Palm Beach in the '60s and '70s, and those carefree days of David Hicks and Lilly Pulitzer. ("I think of parties with ice cubes clinking in glasses and lots of laughter".) The rest of us wonder why we've never noticed it before.

Green is difficult to do, but if you're daring, try it with pink. Or white. Or even black, which gives it depth and dignity. We've hung lots of black and white photography over the leaf-green walls of our hall. The effect is simply startling.

Here are some of my favourite green moments over the past two years...


Gourmet Green: Bistro Guilluame, Melbourne.
Where sublime interior design meets first-class cuisine.


A study in green: Monet's house and garden at Giverny.


Going green in the tropics: The Presidential Suite at the Maya Ubud hotel, Bali.  
The stunning private pool of this suite picks up the striking green of the surrounding jungle and sets the tone for this stylish hill-top hideaway.


A very Parisian green: Le Dokhan’s hotel, Paris
A sublime little hideaway, Dokhan’s elevates green to an elegant level. The Champagne Bar (it only serves bubbly) is decorated entirely in a delicate shade of pale wasabi green (although this, being Paris, it’s probably described more as a “diluted absinthe green”). A fitting backdrop for a glass (or four) of golden French Champagne.



A very surprising green: The Viceroy hotel, LA. 
Decorated by Kelly Wearstler, this was one of the first US hotels to really break ground with green. One of my all-time favourite places. 


An elegant Art Deco green: The Hotel Victor, South Beach, Miami.
Such a fresh space for a city that tends to be saturated in colour.


Lining' em up in green: The Sagamore hotel, Miami.
Love those fresh green stripes in the poolside banquettes, which elegantly reflect the lush landscape of the hotel's garden.



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