Must I have 'fillers' ?
Helen Devenish-Meares
7 years ago
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MB Design & Drafting
7 years agoRelated Discussions
Please find me this wall clock! Can't find it but I must have it!
Comments (2)Thank you so much BMF!!! It is indeed by Nazar, and I have subsequently enquired about it. I really appreciate your help. Cheers!...See MoreArt above the sofa & space filler?
Comments (15)I have used Saatchi Art (saatchiart.com) to both browse and purchase art for our home. Original art work can be purchased and most artists have prints at a more affordable price. It's a good place to determine what styles and mediums you love as you can filter your search. For Australian art I love Blue Thumb (bluethumb.com.au). All Aussie and all original. Very few options for cost effective prints unfortunately. I'd be cautious about filling the space for an instant look. As everyone before me has said "art is personal" and as such, I think it should grow with you and your space. Start with one piece that you really love, big or small and work around that. I have found that putting unusual unexpected items on the wall makes for interesting 'art'. My husband's baby shoes (circa 1953) and now our children's first shoes are objects that always create conversation when guests come over. I have a Mexican art cross (we're not religious, the colours and the metal work drew me to it), a vintage wooden Indian spindle, African birds in a tree hand-beaten and cut from a steel drum, a clay mask my daughter made in art class, a woven Maori kit bag, some art that our kids have done at school (put into Ikea frames so they are always the right size. We change them as something else we love comes home), a hand-made ceramic tile, a growing collection of geckos found in antique stores, vintage travel posters in frames, (I'll stop listing what we have!)...all these items and more, have been collected over the last 20 years and put up around our collection of art or in clusters to create stories. I've collected the initials of our family (yes the child with the "K" is not thrilled it's so small and the child with the "G" feels he's by far the favourite! Needless to say both will be replaced in the future when a more appropriate size comes to light) from vintage stores both here and overseas. Our walls are a growing collection of art and objects and at any time I can move things around and change the composition as a new item is discovered. Best advice I can give you is to have fun with it, enjoy creating your own gallery, it's for you to love you're not required to impress anyone else....See MorePot filler... Wonderful or a waste of money?
Comments (3)Hi Gallifrey, luckily in my case it'll be gas oven and gas hob. (That's a whole other story because there doesn't seem to be many all-gas cookers to choose from... bummer!) Hi Bigreader, you make a very good point about draining. I hadn't thought of that. Thank you....See MoreWhat are the absolute must-haves in your new kitchen?
Comments (6)Hi Complete Kitchens....Yes, I realise that 20k could get a good standard kitchen (our own one recently done was about 26k including scullery), I'm more talking about the ones that talk about doing kitchen, bathroom, painting and even moving some walls on 20k. What my point was, is its great when people like you actually give an idea of a cost of a project - it's easy to get fired up with inspiration and then get thoroughly dissapointed when reality hits! Things are expensive these days and I think for some who may not have done any renovations to their house for years, they don't really have a lot of idea of the costs involved....See MoreHelen Devenish-Meares
7 years agooklouise
7 years agoHelen Devenish-Meares
7 years ago
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