Category: Shopping
Modernist makeover of Clapham flat
A friend recently asked me to help him give his London flat a bit of a makeover. Given that I’ve run out of things to do to my own flat, I didn’t need much persuading.
The flat is a split-level Victorian conversion. It’s a fairly neutral space: there’s not much in the way of Victorian period features (a negative to most people but a positive to me) and the ceilings and windows are of regular height given that the flat occupies the top floor and attic of the building. Some of the rooms are irregularly shaped (more on that later) but it’s a good size overall and has the potential to look good.


We’ve decided to start with the living room: due to the placement of the stairs leading up to the loft conversion, a chunk has been cut out of the corner of room, resulting in a slightly restrictive L-shape. The way the room is currently furnished isn’t making the most of the space: each item of furniture is too big for the room and there is just too much of it.
For the room’s new look, I looked to the interior design section of the Skandium website, which contains a number of period houses furnished with mid century pieces, for inspiration (let’s face it, the style was always going to be mid century modern) and decided that these rather ambitious photos were going to be my goal:


Sadly, we don’t quite have a Skandium budget at our disposal so I’ve sourced the furniture from various low to mid-range stores with the odd bit of Heal’s:

- Hektar ceiling lamp, IKEA
- DSW Eames-style chair, Vita Interiors
- Suki round drop-leaf table, Habitat
- Yves black tripod lamp, Habitat
- Eclipse coffee tables, Heal’s
- Mistral sofa, Heal’s
- Vince walnut sideboard, Habitat
- Raskmölle flatwoven rug, IKEA
“After” photos to follow…
Modernist Pilgrimage to Singapore
I didn’t have particularly high hopes for Singapore from an architecture and design perspective so I was pleasantly surprised by a couple of interesting places that I visited during my short time there. It turns out that there is more to Singapore than gleaming office blocks and shopping malls (though there were a lot of those as well).
St Mary Church of the Angels
Worth visiting for: the stunning prayer hall



This beautiful modernist church was definitely worth the long trek out into the wooded slopes of Butik Batok. I found the church’s design to be dramatic yet entirely fit for purpose: the main prayer hall, with its uniform stepped rows of beechwood pews and tripod-like lamps, was a surprisingly intimate space and the light-filled underground columbarium (a room with recesses in the wall in which funeral urns were kept) was stunning yet tranquil in spite of the slightly mawkish Enya-esque music that they insisted playing in the background.



Singapore Design Centre
Worth visiting for: the odd mash-up of architectural styles, the shop




I couldn’t quite work out what was going on with the architecture of this place – the front part of the building appeared to be 1930s-era Art Deco, the back was much older (according to my guidebook, the site was an 1800s former convent) and the interiors were all brand new – but it came together into an impressive whole. The purpose of the building was equally confusing: part art gallery, part Design Council HQ, part creative office block and part retail space. The retail space housed some kind of hip eaterie and Kapok, a very good design and clothing store.



Bras Basah
Worth visiting for: the cat in Cat Socrates


I’m not sure why Timeout listed this shopping centre as one of its “must-see” places to visit in Singapore. The building was an unattractive concrete warren of shops; sort of brutalist looking but in a bad way (nondescript and dingy, with a strong resemblance to a multi-storey carpark). The shops all appeared to be art suppliers – great for artists and art students but of limited interest to everyone else – and various tat merchants. There was one store which made the trip worthwhile, however: Cat Socrates, a quirky design and gift store with a friendly ginger resident cat.


Foundry
Worth visiting for: Scandinavian design items


I don’t know anything about this building but it was architecturally up my street (sixties looking, futuristic) and it housed a nice furniture and accessories store which stocked a variety of European designs and brands, some of which I recognised (Hay, String) and others I didn’t.


Pact
Worth visiting for: a haircut, a meal and a t-shirt


I only received an email today letting me know that this brand is going “online only”, which is a shame because the instore shopping experience was so pleasant. This menswear store/hairdresser/restaurant/bar formed a cluster of slightly left-field independent stores in an otherwise bland Singaporean glass and steel shopping centre on Orchard Road.


New York design stores
New York, rather like Copenhagen that I visited in 2014, is an excellent place to go shopping for overpriced design items. All tastes are catered for with lots of vintage stores in Brooklyn and the Lower East Side and higher end places in Chelsea and Soho. My pick of the most interesting stores are as follows:
The Apartment
Good for: home decor inspiration (rather than actual shopping)
Price: expensive



Laid out and furnished to resemble the luxurious apartment of a New York rich bitch, The Apartment is more of a “lifestyle showroom” than shop. The space, a large Soho loft, is loosely divided into living areas (including a pretend kitchen and flatteringly-lit walk-in wardrobe), and is filled with tasteful items, all of which are for sale. It’s a bit pretentious and everything is hideously expensive but it’s a novel concept and well worth a visit. That is, if you can find the very discreet entrance/lift sandwiched in between two shopfronts on Greene Street.




Objectify 139
Good for: hipster junk
Price: cheap to moderate



The person behind this trendy Lower East Side store would probably baulk at the comparison but if American Apparel branched out into selling artwork, records, design items and books, it would probably look a bit like this. The stock, which is appealingly laid out and quite reasonably priced, is secondary to the store’s “vibe”, which makes you feel hip just by being in there. I was so seduced by the experience that I ended up buying a print that I only realised was absolutely terrible once I’d brought it home, outside of the context of the store. Be warned.



Room and Board
Good for: high quality modern American homewares
Price: Expensive



I’d never heard of this US-only furniture and homewares brand before visiting New York so I found the experience of wandering around the enormous, attractively laid-out Chelsea showroom quite exciting. The style of the furniture and homewares is a high-end, distinctly American take on mid-century modern in that everything is slightly oversized, glossy and comfortable-looking. Whilst I generally prefer a more vintage aesthetic (some of the styled room setups were a little too polished and minimalist for my taste), there’s no denying the quality of the product and design across the board – a couple of the mid century-inspired armchairs were particularly covetable.



Atlantic Avenue vintage furniture stores
Good for: mid century originals
Price: moderate to expensive



There appears to be a concentration of stores along Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn which specialise in selling vintage mid century furniture. I visited two fairly representative examples of this kind of store – Horseman and City Foundry – and found both to be interesting if slightly overwhelming. Both stores are packed to the rafters with mid century antique cupboards, sideboards, chairs, tables, lighting and all manner of other items, all piled on top of each other. I spotted a number of beautiful pieces in amongst the organised mess that you’d be unlikely to come across in the UK but prices were relatively high so I left empty handed.



Steven Alan Home Shop
Good for: overpriced homewares
Price: expensive



Another store I’d never heard of before visiting New York, Steve Allan appears to be a U.S. clothing brand that has branched out into attractive if slightly overpriced homewares. The delicate artwork and vaguely ethnic looking rugs and blankets at the back of the store were particular highlights.


Other:
MoMA Design Store


Effectively the MoMA gift shop minus the touristy tat, the MoMA Design Store (across the road from MoMA) sells slightly more substantial design objects and accessories. It’s worth popping into if you’re visiting MoMA but it doesn’t warrant a dedicated trip: there wasn’t anything for sale that I hadn’t seen in other shops or online before.
Gentry


This menswear store has an unexpected living room/vintage homewares section upstairs that provides a fitting backdrop for the mens’ bespoke tailoring service.
Organic Modernism


The name of this small Chelsea store describes its aesthetic pretty well. Whilst not all of the heavy wooden furniture was to my taste, there were some crude yet oddly charming paintings and bronze pieces that I might have bought if there hadn’t been the issue of having to lug everything home to the UK.
The Firs – one year on
My flat looks pretty much the same as it did at the end of 2014 when I last blogged about it but the combination of some sunshine and the need to test out my new camera ahead of some upcoming travels prompted me to take some new photos of the (very minor) changes and additions that I’ve made along the way.



The only changes that I’ve made to the living room are some new plants and an ever-growing collection of pointless wooden animals. I’ve been meaning to replace the rather tired looking faux-Tulip dining table and rag-tag assortment of knock-off chairs with a more sophisticated looking dining set (ideally something like the Hans Olsen piece that I once saw at the Kingston Antiques Centre) but I thought I’d wait until I’d moved before deciding. The move, however, does not look like it’s happening any time soon so I might just bite the bullet.
I was inspired to make the makeshift terrarium by this article on the Ikea website, which made it sound like: (a) I would be able to buy all of the components from a branch of Ikea; and (b) it would take less than an hour. I can confirm that Ikea misled me on both counts.


Looking back at the photos of my office from 2014, I think it’s looking a lot better and less spartan these days. The Varier rocking chair is a definite upgrade from that 90s birch Ikea job that I previously used and I’m quite pleased with the other additions, especially the Componibili unit, Uten Silo and that bizarre Flensted mobile of a pregnant chicken.
Thanks to my valiant efforts at various sample sales, I have collected enough random bits of String shelving by now to construct a system to replace that cheap Ekby Ikea unit but the sheer effort that this is likely to involve has been putting me off. I’ve also grown quite fond of the Ekby shelves: they’re quite strong and sufficiently shallow so as to be unobtrusive in what is quite a small room. I’ve grown similarly fond of the 90s John Lewis glass desk: it was always my intention to replace it but I actually think that it almost looks quite good?!



I have made a few green additions to the kitchen and balcony off the kitchen but my sub-par gardening skills means that I haven’t even been able to coax the potted ivy to climb the trellis that I fixed onto the balcony wall.
On the whole, my current flat is not my dream home by any stretch of the imagination (the compulsory carpeting, lack of original features and the distinctly non-central location all irk me to varying degrees) but if the move never happens, I can’t say I’ll be too devastated.
London sample sales summer 2015
SCP Warehouse Sale
This was far less frenetic than last year’s scrum but the decreased level of interest was perhaps down to the slightly inferior quality of goods on offer. There were fewer “big name” items than last year and a lot of the furniture appeared to consist of rusty vintage junk that SCP had used as accessory props in a recent tradeshow. There were some treasures to be extracted from the junk pile, however: I managed to scout out a large Componibili unit (I’ve always wanted one), some pendant lighting (for which I probably won’t find any use), a String sliding cabinet unit in birch (the collection of random String items in my cupboard is slowly coming together!) and a nice metal and wood clothes hook.
Vitra Flash Sale
Vitra sample sales used to be the stuff of legend. Great items coupled with ridiculously low prices caused bargain hunters to take leave of their senses, camping outside the Clerkenwell showroom for days (and nights) in advance and then literally elbowing and punching one another to secure the best items when the doors finally did open. Perhaps as a direct response to this sort of behaviour, this year’s sample sale was a low-key, three day affair involving a meagre selection of items that had clearly failed to sell in the quantities that Vitra had envisaged (that ugly green plastic Vegetal chair was distinctly overrepresented). Prices were not sufficiently enticing for me to buy anything.
TwentyTwentyOne Warehouse Sale
The venue and setup of this warehouse sale, consisting of a spacious warehouse space and small stalls in the courtyard outside, made for a far more civilised shopping experience than the SCP Warehouse Sale. There was a great mixture of furniture, lighting and nice-but-pointless design accessories for sale. Discounts were decent, causing me to dash around like a greed-crazed monster, sweeping up everything and anything that I liked into the wicker baskets provided. Much to my embarrassment, this behaviour (coupled with the fact I was the first in the queue), did not go unnoticed by the organisers.
Final Haul
- Crosscut coat hooks, Faudet-Harrison for SCP
- Large Componibili stackable drawer unit, Artek at SCP
- Rotary tray, Vitra at TwentyTwentyOne
- String side panel, String at TwentyTwentyOne
- Peg board, Block for TwentyTwentyOne
- Flowing Rhythm mobile, Flensted at TwentyTwentyOne
- L’Oiseau wooden bird, Aram
- Eames House Bird, Eames at TwentyTwentyOne
- Lunar bathroom range, Lunar Authentics range at TwentyTwentyOne
- String sliding cabinet unit, String at SCP
- Rhinoceros eraser, Kikkerland Design for TwentyTwentyOne
- Wooden birds, Jacob Pugh at TwentyTwentyOne
Langham House Close furniture
Whilst the flat in Langham House Close wasn’t quite the right fit for me, I was quite taken by its futuristic-looking mid century modern style.
I was determined not to use the expression “get the look” but this is effectively the purpose of this blog entry:
- TEJN faux sheepskin rug, IKEA
- Sisal flooring, buy something similar at urbaneliving.co.uk
- Arne Jacobsen Grand Prix chair, Skandium
- Vitsoe 606 Universal Shelving System, Vitsoe
- Earl Saarinen Tulip round dining table, TwentyTwentyOne
- Artek 900 Tea Trolley, Pink Apple Designs
- Eames Modernica rocker, SCP
- Arne Jacobsen floor lamp, Skandium
- 101 Moov sofa, TwentyTwentyOne
Midcentury Show East at Haggerston School
Midcentury Show East at Haggerston School
Grade II-listed brutalist school building
Architect: Erno Goldfinger
Date built: 1964-1965
I hope the kids that attend this inner-city secondary school realise how lucky they are to be surrounded by all of this spectacular Goldfinger-designed brutalist architecture.
Constructed between 1964 and 1965 in Goldfinger’s signature style, the school is a key example of Goldfinger’s approach to space and his innovative use of materials (mainly grey and sludge-coloured concrete).
The school comprises three main separate but connected blocks. A two-storey, double height entrance annexe contains the assembly hall and some administrative offices, which is connected via a glazed walkway to the main teaching building, a rectangular, four-storey, concrete-frame classroom block whose facade is divided into a continuous series of four-window bays. A sports block is located at the far end of the site. A sculpturally cast spiral concrete staircase pirouetting up from the first floor of the entrance annexe and a soaring water tower shaft serve to break up the flat roofline.
Due to a very sympathetic refurbishment in recent years, all of Goldinger’s original details, such as the recessed wall pockets for opened doors, the exposed waffle slab to the double-height lobby and the decorative carved concrete wall in the assembly hall have been retained and restored.
Goldfinger’s brutalist architecture provides the perfect setting for Mid Century Show East, an furniture and accessories fair held semi-regularly at the school. The calibre of stock here is at the top end both in terms of provenance and condition (definitely a step up from Judy’s Vintage Furniture Fair, which I wrote about in March) with both professional dealers and buyers in attendance. I was sadly not in a position (either logistically or financially) to buy anything.
Judy’s vintage furniture fair
This event pops up semi-regularly in slightly shabby town halls across London. Sometimes billed as a flea market and at other times a vintage furniture fair, the reasonable but not dirt cheap prices and greater emphasis on actual furniture over random pieces of toot (though there is a lot of this as well) means that vintage furniture fair is a more accurate description of this event.
The various traders specialise in pieces from the 1950s-1970s, offering up a decent number of coffee tables, occasional furniture, lamps and sideboards from the period. There is a slight overabundance of stuff in that orangey-red teak colour that’s a little too kitschy for my liking but there are plenty of other things I’ve seen at these events that would work in a contemporary interior. I’ve only bought small bits of toot (albeit nice bits of toot) from Judy’s to date but I hold out hope that I’m going to find (and manage to get home) an incredible vintage piece of furniture at a bargain price at some point.
Some haggling is tolerated but I suspect this is because the vendors have marked up the prices in advance to account for this. I would recommend arriving for the 10am start time, doing a quick circuit of the shabby town hall (including the stage) and then placing a deposit on any items that catch your eye, especially if it’s furniture. Most of the decent stuff has been bought or reserved by about 10.30am, if not earlier.


Purchases to date:
- Danish bear (or is a rat?) wooden bottle opener (£7)
- Wooden Dala horse (£10)
- Homepride Fred (functionless but pleasing) (£10)
- 1950s wooden magazine rack (£30)
- 1960s mirror (£30)
- Danish wooden bull (£12)
New homewares
Latest additions:

- Placemats – Marimekko from Skandium
- Uten.silo – Vitra from Haus London (WARNING: attaching this to the wall poses an unexpected level of challenge)
- Cushions – Hay (yellow), Donna Wilson (fox face) and Marimekko from Skandium (red spots)
- Orange Varier chair – kindly donated by XT
Wish-list:

- Grey cross blanket – Pia Wallen from Haus London (it’s a total rip-off and is a bit scratchy to the touch but I just love it)
- Mirror – Normann Copenhagen
- Componibili unit – Blue Sun Tree (I’d get the £50 “replica” over the £100+ genuine article from Kartel – they’re exactly the same)
- Marble-topped tulip table – Blue Sun Tree for the replica or Vitra from TwentyTwentyOne for the genuine article (I think it may soon be time to replace my rather chipped IKEA Docksta dining table with the table that “inspired” it)
Kingston Antiques Centre
As there are no flea markets near where I live (or anywhere in the UK that I know of), I have to make do with this place when I feel the need to pick up some old toot. Whilst shopping at the Kingston Antiques Centre is nowhere near as cheap an experience as a flea market, it is almost as varied and musty, comprising two packed floors of antiques (of mostly dubious provenance) from a range of eras with everything from Victorian knickknacks through to substantial pieces of mid century modern furniture on sale.




I’ve bought a couple of really nice things here (a probably fake Arne Jacobsen lamp, a colourful piece of 1950s Italian pottery, a vintage Steiger clock and a 1950s modernist statuette of a lady pulling a rather camp pose) over the years and there’s a sufficiently high turnover of stock to keep coming back semi-regularly.

The best thing I’ve seen here was a beautiful rosewood Hans Olsen dining table (with the chairs that slot in underneath) for about £500. There is a risk that putting such a retro-looking furniture set next to my Poul Cadovius shelving system would tip my living room into retro pastiche territory but if I ever see one again, I’ll probably take that risk.







































