Insights • Inspirations • Destinations • Design

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Suite Dreams

After many years of sartorial woes, including being overshadowed by flashier fashion houses, and bit of a nasty business with John Galliano earlier this year, the legendary House of Dior is finally showing signs of an elegant comeback. One of these signs is this: the glamorous new Dior Suite at the St Regis hotel in New York.

Designed in collaboration with Dior, the 1700-square feet space features spectacular views of 5th Avenue and Central Park, and a decor based on the Dior atelier in Paris – right down to French-style mouldings and a pale dove-grey colour scheme (St Regis calls it  “whispering gray”). There are also framed sketches of Christian Dior’s designs. Yours for the Dioresque price of $8500 a night.

www.starwoodhotels.com/stregis



{Photography by George Chinsee for WWD and St Regis}

Paint Inspiration


Inspired by Dior’s signature sophisticated grey, Benjamin Moore has created a paint that emulates its classic and understated beauty. It’s called 2133-40 Dior Gray, and it's the perfect grey; not too cold and dark and not too washed-out. It's slightly darker than the grey that the Prince of Wales often selects for his suits, and has a distinct Savile Row feel to it. Pair it with white, or black, for a thoroughly distinguished finish.

Classic Design Quotes

“The tones of gray, pale turquoise and pink will prevail.”
 Christian Dior (French Fashion designer, 1905-1957)

Dior-ettes

DID YOU KNOW:

– The English singer-songwriter Morrissey released a song titled “Christian Dior” as a b-side to his 2006 single “In the Future When All’s Well”.

– American Rapper/Producer Kanye West released a song titled “Christian Dior Denim Flow” as a 2010 Fashion Week single.

More Dior

It’s not widely publicised, but Christian Dior’s childhood home in Granville, ‘Villa Les Rhumbs’, is open to the public. The only ‘Musée de France’ dedicated to a couturier, a this 19th-century, Belle Epoque-style clifftop villa overlooking the sea features hundreds of Haute Couture garments over three floors, including designs by Christian Dior, Yves Saint-Laurent, Marc Bohan, Gianfranco Ferré for Christian Dior and John Galliano. There is also a gorgeous garden, designed by Dior’s mother, which is beautiful in the spring and summer.

www.musee-dior-granville.com

Friday, November 18, 2011

Gardens Great and Small


We're approaching summer here in Australia. The spring rains have soaked the soil so much that the garden has that lovely scent of damp fertile earth, and the sun has sent the plants soaring skyward. We have spent the past weekend weeding madly but Mother Nature is far ahead of us. She has already sent out more agapanthus seeds, so the long driveway is now full of their bobbing white heads, and she seems to have given a few words of encouragement to the English box hedges, the beds of hydrangeas, the Chinese wisteria and the beautifully fragrant star jasmine as well. Everything is growing like a teenager with hormones.

Here, as inspiration for all you avid gardeners, is a small selection of the most beautiful gardens I've ever seen, photographed for a book called The Modern Kitchen Garden last year. Two months of nothing but shooting flowers and petals and produce and leaves. You can't imagine what bliss that was. (Okay, you probably can.) Next week I'll feature Villandry (WAIT until you see that!), the King's Garden at Versailles, Petersham House and images from Stuart Rattle's and Paul Bangay's gardens, which I'm visiting tomorrow.




Prieure d'Orsan, France
One of my all-time favourite gardens, this garden (pictured above and below) is legendary, and spoken about among gardeners with the kind of reverence that fashion folk speak about Karl Laferfeld's shows for Chanel. It's an extraordinary, medieval-inspired garden in the heart of France, created using hand-made structures made from willow grown on site. Even the herb garden and the Berry Walk (pictured here below) feature intricate supports that look more like art than twigs and bits. With hearts created from ivy and espaliered splendour everywhere, it's the kind of place you walk around in a daze, for hours and hours and hours.  www.prieuredorsan.com







Barnsley House, Rosemary Verey's garden in the Cotswolds  (Below)
I once met the renowned Ms Verey on Media Day at Chelsea. I chatted to her for half an hour about Prince Charles' garden at Highgrove (which she had a hand in) before realising who she was. That's how beautifully unassuming she was. Her own English country home (below), which I was so incredibly fortunate to stay in last year, is a poem to prettiness, with peony borders, a world-famous potager, knot gardens and a stunning laburnum walk. If you stay here, book into the Potting Shed suite (which I did). Accessed via a path through the potager (bottom image), it's one of the most glorious hotel rooms a gardener could ever wish for, with a deep clawfoot bath, a super-luxe living space and your own courtyard garden looking out to the Cotswold fields. Even the lights are made from terracotta pots. Elizabeth Hurley's property borders Barnsley House, so if you're lucky you might see her pottering about as well. www.barnsleyhouse.com





The kitchen garden at Daylesford Organic, Cotswolds (Below)
Daylesford Organic won a lot of acclaim at Chelsea's 2008 Garden Show for this gorgeous garden (below). A superb example of a small walled kitchen garden, it features beds of delicious produce enclosed by woven willow, a modern summer house  (dubbed a "garden kitchen") that's designed to be an indoor/outdoor space, and delightful views of the wheat fields beyond. Lady Carole Bamford has achieved a great deal at the much-visited Daylesford, but this is undoubtedly the best. Love the hearts fashioned out of twigs. And notice how the gardening aprons match? That's how strict the branding is here. www.daylesfordorganic.com





Australia


Australia has a problem. It's beautiful, but it's too far away for anyone to come. Okay, so President Obama may be able to jet over in Airforce One for a few days of cocktails and neighbourly chat, as he did last week, but that doesn't mean the rest of the world is easily able to follow.

I've spoken to so many people, in so many countries, who have sighed deeply when I've said the word "Australia". They've then told me that they've always wanted to come but a) have never had the funds, b) have never known where it is (I can see this how this could happen; it's down near Antarctica if you have a map to hand), and c) have never wanted to sit on a plane for 14 hours to get there! Now I can understand all of these reasons, and I sympathise, I really do. Who wants to sit on a plane for 14 hours, let alone in LAX or Heathrow for the three-hour wait beforehand?

The thing is, we want you all to come. We live in this enormous, absolutely gorgeous country, with very few people to ruin the scenery, and we'd love to show it to you. If nobody comes here, we'll soon wonder what to do. So follow Obama and just get on a plane. United, Virgin and Air New Zealand have return airfares for extraordinarily low prices at the moment. Don't worry about accommodation: there's plenty here, and if you can't find anywhere, then we'll look after you. It's summer here: you'll have a wonderful time. (Oh – one last thing. Obama had crocodile insurance, but we don't think you'll need that. Just get cover for Great Whites and perhaps a snake bite or two.) We look forward to seeing you soon!

PS When you do get here, here are some of the best places to go, in my humble travel journalist's opinion.


Lord Howe Island. An island so tiny you can ride your bike around it in a few hours, and yet it has all the best bits of Australia, including a spectacular coral reef with tonnes of tropical fish, gorgeous beaches, and two dramatic mountains, plus hideaways such as this one – the magnificently designed Capella Lodge. See? Isn't this sublime? Don't you want to come now? Explorer Dick Smith says it's the most beautiful place on earth. I'm with you, Dick.  www.lordhowe.com


Peppers Palm Bay, Queensland. A little-known place that's right away from the raucous crowds of Hamilton Island. There are a handful of super-luxurious "huts" (huts being a bit of a misnomer, really, since they're more stylish than a five-star hotel), a superb restaurant, pool and spa, a cute cove-style beach, and all the bushwalking / swimming / yachting / cocktailing you could want. Pure bliss. www.peppers.com.au/whitsundays


Wilson Island. I've not been here, but it's on my List. Right at the top. See that girl? That'll be me. Soon. www.wilsonisland.com 


Whitehaven Beach, in the Whitsunday Islands, Queensland.  See how there's nobody on the beach? That's what ALL our beaches are like. Okay, so not all, but most of them are reasonably deserted. This one's a little special in that it can only be reached by sea plane or yacht, but that just keeps the riff-raff out. The water is the colour of a Tiffany box, and the temperature of a bath. The sand's so pure and soft it's like talcum powder. And the sky is the colour of Wedgwood. Paradise.


Our architecture. (The Pole House, Great Ocean Road.)


Our getaways. (A private beach hut and pier at Portsea, Victoria.)


Our summer diet. Seafood, Champagne, wine, and beer.

You can't get much more idyllic than that...


Will post more Australian gorgeousness next week...


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.



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