interior design students visit domayne

Nicole’s Lounge Before

Nicole lounge after

Nicole’s Lounge After – Asymmetrical

The Interior Design & Styling students recently went on a field trip to Domayne at Kotara for a styling session. The staff at Domayne allowed the students to style a space of their choice in either a symmetrical, asymmetrical or radial balance. The students work was then assessed by the class on how the space was working and what could be done differently.

Jodi's lounge before

Jodi’s Lounge Before

jodi after

Jodi’s Lounge After – Asymmetrical

corenne lounge before

Corenne’s Lounge Before

corenne lounge after

Corenne’s Lounge After – Symmetrical

Thank you to the staff at Domayne for being so accommodating and allowing us to play with there displays.

HDS students visit Stuart Pinkerton workshop

On Saturday the 15th of October. A few Design Students accompanied by Jess went to visit the workshop of Stuart Pinkerton, Furniture Designer.

Stuart’s massive workshop is the home to artistic pieces of furniture. Stuart makes a range of retail products, and of course designs and builds ‘one off’s’ for customers for residential & commercial purposes. His process is to visit the home of the client, check out the space in which the piece will be placed, and then design accordingly.

Pinkerton stool

Stuarts creative ability is matched only by his humble attitude to his creations. The experience was both informative and inspirational.

Thank you to Stuart for allowing us to invade his space for just a little while. Tania

inside industry night – Marianne Westall

The Inside Industry Night with guest speaker Marianne Westall on Wednesday 21st September was a great success. Thank you to Marianne, the students who spoke and all who attended. Marianne a Newcastle textile designer shared her experience and knowledge of the industry including short deadlines, designing with the manufacturing process and end product in mind and the importance of floral motifs in textiles.



Thank you to the students who spoke of their experience studying at HDS, from designing rugs to working in design and with clients.







It was a fantastic night with plenty or inspiration.

black beauty

Image found here

We all own a ‘little black dress’. It’s a basic in any wardrobe. Its slimming and unquestionable. However does this extend to our interiors? Here are some examples why we should embrace black.

Image found here

Image found here

Image found here

Image found here

Image found here

product spotlight – eco-core

Global Ventures Australia is the exclusive agent and importer of the Eco-Core® range of environmentally friendly timber products.

The Eco-Core products are environmentally friendly timber products for use in interior applications of high end commercial fit outs, restaurants, offices, buildings and more. The Eco-core range comes in a variety of colours, finishes and colours.



A particular favourite is the SVL (Solid Veneer Lumber) a high strength, load bearing, stable material due to the many laminations. SVL can be used for large window/door frames and long span shelving, stair treads, bench tops, table tops, joinery, furniture, wall panelling and flooring.

Global Ventures Australia has a range of products that are FSC® certified, including Eco-Core White Birch Multiply, Eco-Core Poplar Blockboard, Eco-Core Poplar Multiply and more.

To see the full range visit here

saturday indesign sydney 2011

Sacha Roberts, HDS Colour Planning & Consulting student, reports on her visit to Saturday Indesign.



We started our day at Café Culture in Surry Hills with a glass of champagne while looking at their funky space and cool chairs. We judged our favourite upcycled design and wandered down to Cloth then to Interface flooring.



After a quick short black to pep us up we headed to Alexandria to Coco Republic which was lavish, the Verve Cliquot was flowing freely, gorgeous antipasto tables and a DJ creating the mood. It was a great day spent with girlfriends meandering around cool furniture, homewares and suppliers with groovy music and lots of champagne.

Can’t wait for Melbourne in Design in 2012.

colours of the hunter

HDS recently visited Bristal Paint Kotara to learn more about the new “Colours of the Hunter” range. Bristal Paint Kotara in association with Brimlay paint manufactures has developed a premium, low VOCs range of paint exclusively for the Hunter Market. The range features 25 whites and neutrals developed by local colour consultants. Each colour is named after a hunter suburb including Redhead, Bar Beach, Sugarloaf and Morpeth.



The Colours of the Hunter range are available in low sheen and ceiling paint with plans to expand to undercoat, external coating and extend the colours on offer. The paint comes in a 6L tins for the price of 4L and is reasonable priced at $59.95 for the low sheen and $45.95 for the ceiling paint.

spring inspiration

It is spring!! The weather is warmer, the days are longer and summer BBQ’s are on the way. When I think of spring I think of flowers. I don’t just think about visiting the local florist but I remember a magazine called Bloom.



I have only had the pleasure of viewing this magazine in real life a couple of times (as it is pricy for a magazine) but it has left a lasting impression. Bloom (still in publication) is a statement magazine. Art and high end fashion meets flowers. The photos are pure fantasy of fantastic floweral arrangements, from close ups of buds to floral instillations and floral motifs.



Bloom is not just a great inspiration for its fantastic blooms, photography and styling the colours are rich, playful, harmonious, striking and fun. Bloom is memorable for its combination of colours, lesson in tone, repetition and form. Pure eye-candy to kick start the creative design process. To enjoy some of Blooms work visit here.

design figures from history – Paul Rand

design figures from history – Paul Rand

Paul Rand (born Peretz Rosenbaum, 15th August, 1914 – 26th November, 1996) a modernist American graphic designer (advertising artist), painter, industrial designer, writer, philosopher and educator was the creator of some of the worlds best known logos including IBM, UPS, Westinghouse and Enron.



Paul Rand is a very interesting character in design history. Articulate and prolific in his writing on design, design thinking and the design industry he walked the tightrope between art and design. In his own words he states “It is no secret that the real world in which the designer functions is not the world of art, but the world of buying and selling… Unlike the salesman, however, the designer’s overriding motivation is art: art in the service of business, art that enhances the quality of life and deepens appreciation of the familiar world.”


Rand’s modernist core ideology was to take the familiar or ordinary and defamilarise it. This idea is not unique to Rand but can be seen as far back as Impressionism and Pop Art, from Cezanne apples to Duchamp’s urinal. This is pronounce in Rand’s work for manufacturer Westinghouse, (not the Westinghouse manufacturer we know today but when the company pioneered long distance and high voltage transmission of electricity) the work is playful, colourful, asymmetrical and goes against every idea of the ‘corporate look’ you expect from a large corporation. This is where the surprise lye’s and interest is created. Rand has managed to take electricity (a very familiar concept) and wrap it up in an unfamiliar aesthetic while still delivering the message.

How can this apply to our work today? The familiar in an unfamiliar context still plays out today. The woven basket hang upside down as a lamp shade, wallpaper that looks like a bookcase, oversized floor lamps in vibrant blue to name a few. Often these surprises are the most dynamic and memorable elements in a space.

To find out more and view Paul Rand’s work visit www.paul-rand.com

Other pearls of wisdom from Paul Rand:“Don’t try to be original just try to be good.”
“Without aesthetics you can’t find the truth.”
“(Design) is the synthesis between form and content… A work of art is realised when form and content are indistinguishable.”
“To do things with quality.”

inside industry night

As part of the Inside Industry Night series the Hunter Design School welcomes guest speaker Marianne Westall on Wednesday 21st September, 7pm at 555 Hunter St Newcastle. Marianne is a Newcastle textile designer and will share her experience and knowledge of the industry. Please RSVP to hello@hunterdesignschool.nsw.edu.au

Hello and Welcome! Register here before making an Application.