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New York: Fashion, Flowers, and Garden Fantasies

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A few weeks ago, a friend emailed. "Where are you?" she said. "I want to catch up for a drink." I emailed back: "At Burlington Airport, in northern Vermont. I flew up for the day to see my luggage pattern maker. It's so tiny, I think the shop also serves as the check-in! But all flights to New York are delayed for four hours due to the stormy weather. So I may still be here tomorrow..." 

In the end, I made it back to New York that night. But one poor woman, trying to fly home to Seattle, had her flight cancelled, and as compensation was offered a seat on a flight to New York, then another on a flight to Boston, and finally, after a layover of six hours in Boston, a flight home to Seattle. She took it, glad of the chance to get home by Christmas.

I tell this story because it dissolves the myth that travelling for work is fun. Sometimes it's so tiring, so utterly dull, I don't even take any photos. Because they would just be of boarding lounges. And gate changes. And a fuzzy view of the Manhattan skyline from the back of a crazy, speeding cabbie. But occasionally -- actually more than occasionally -- business trips can be wonderful. Memorable, even. They can make all the long haul flights worthwhile. This recent trip was one such trip. It was a cascade of increasingly lovely, bloomingly beautiful summer days where the sunshine ballooned up from the verdant New York and Connecticut landscapes, and flowers bloomed in places you'd least expect. 

Let me show you. 



BUNNY WILLIAMS, CONNECTICUT

First on the work schedule was a glorious, early-morning photo shoot at the beautiful garden of New York designer Bunny Williams and her husband, antiques dealer John Rosselli, in a bucolic northern corner of Connecticut. 

This garden is so beautiful that whenever Bunny and John open it -- usually once a month in the summer for charity (see garden conservancy.org or the Trade Secrets Garden Fair website) -- people drive for miles to visit. One couple I spoke to return year after year to collect ideas for their own garden. I've been lucky enough to see it before, and I, too, noticed many changes on this visit, the most significant of which is the addition of Bunny's amazing new design studio. And judging by the exclamations of visitors walking up the stairs when the garden opened at 10AM, it was the hit of the day.

This is the studio, below.  I tell you, I think I heard a grown man cry in envy.


The bookshelves ran the length of the studio, which was twice the size of the space pictured above. The elongated room was beautifully bookended each end by enormous picture windows that looked out over the green Connecticut countryside. There was a grand fireplace, too. And a kitchen and bathroom, with a gym below. 

But it was the books that held court here. There were hundreds of design and gardening titles. And everything was intriguing. Even Bunny's mood board, below, was fascinating.



This is Bunny's famous conservatory, with the windows that look over the equally famous parterre. The chicken coop is fairly legendary, too. 

If you want more details, buy Bunny's bestselling book An Affair With A House, which features lots of chapters on both the interior and the garden. Or just come along to one of the Open Gardens one day. You'll be as enthralled as the rest of us.



CHRISTOPHER SPITZMILLER, UPSTATE NEW YORK

From there, it was a short drive across the border to Christopher Spitzmiller's enchanting house and garden in upstate New York, which he had also graciously opened for charity. Ever since it was featured in AD magazine, people have adored this charming place, which Christopher has renovated with his usual flair. 

The highlight for many visitors on this day was the classical white pavilion, which was, in fact, a chicken coop, set charmingly inside an idyllic flower garden blooming with poppies, salvias, and roses. Inside, the kitchen and dining rooms (which Christopher kindly let me see, but which weren't open to the public) were elegant studies in understated sophistication. The dining room was sublime, especially with the botanical wallpaper. But I loved the kitchen the most, I think.




MICHAEL TRAPP, CONNECTICUT

The final garden of the weekend wasn't on the Shot List but I added it to the schedule after hearing about it at Bunny Williams. Owned and designed by antiques dealer Michael Trapp, it was well worth the visit. I stayed for hours! Most of the garden featured architectural antiques that Michael had collected over the years, and it was such a joy to walk through. If you love architecture as much as gardens, this is one to put on your future list. 

(Note: Michael Trapp only opens his antiques store on weekends, or by appointment. The garden is private but if you ask nicely, he may allow you to wander through.)



NEW PRESTON

If you're contemplating a trip to Connecticut to ramble through country gardens and browse antique stores that you can't afford, my best recommendation is to stay in New Preston.  It's a sweeter-than-sweet village that is barely the length of a street but is FILLED with unique stores, which mostly specialize in gardens, homewares, and antiques. 

I always stay at The Hopkins Inn, a lovely family-run inn on the lake, which has rooms from $130/n and a charming restaurant that's split between a lovely terrace under shady trees overlooking the lake and a cosy dining room inside.  For sheer value, it's one of the best places in New England. (Top right image with sofa.) 

My favourite places to shop in New Preston, perhaps in the whole of Connecticut, are Pergola (don't miss the spectacular waterfall behind, which you can see from the store's rear deck) and Dawn Hill Antiques, which has some of the most beautiful Swedish antiques this side of Stockholm.




NEW YORK CITY

Then it was back to New York City for publishing meetings with two of my publishers, and I discovered another great little hotel gem here, which was just $179/n -- even in high season. 

The Hudson Hotel New York is not only close to Central Park for those early-morning walks but also features a grand library for afternoon cocktails, and a spectacular rooftop terrace overlooking the Hudson River, for evening drinks. Even the entrance to the rooftop terrace is an experience, punctuated by bright pink flowers, hammocks, huge tubs of orange trees, and pergolas galore.

The Hudson Hotel was very cool many years ago (I vaguely remember when it opened), but has now mellowed, thankfully, into an affordable pied-à-terre for people visiting Manhattan who don't want to pay a fortune. Rooms are tiny (you are warned), so upgrade if you're a couple, but you can't complain for $179 for a full bathroom (with bath), and a view like the one above. 

It's also within walking distance of all the great department stores, too, from Bergdorf Goodman to Saks Fifth Avenue, both of which stocked THE most beautiful Dolce & Gabbana collection I've ever seen. Designed around hydrangeas, this new season's D&G line (above) is, quite simply, sublime. Many Instagrammers were posting about it, and even Beyonce bought the flowing chiffon version.




THE WHITBY HOTEL

Dolce & Gabbana's latest collection is almost as beautiful as this botanical hideaway; The Whitby, Firmdale's newest hotel in their ever-growing collection. Themed around flowers, it's a vibrant poem to petals and also to vintage plates, which are framed on the walls as porcelain art. It's all wonderful, especially the conservatory, which is lovely for a quick lunch. I only stayed an hour but could have lingered all afternoon.

DETAILS: www.firmdalehotels.com/hotels/new-york/the-whitby-hotel


CAFFE STORICO

My other favourite place in New York City is Caffe Storico, which is a little-known cafe within the New York Historical Society on the Upper West Side of Central Park. (DETAILS: www.nyhistory.org/dine) Lined with floor-to-ceiling cabinets full of beautiful dinnerware, and yolk-yellow banquettes that invite you to linger all afternoon, it's a gorgeous spot for an affordable lunch, especially if you follow it with a walk through Central Park. 

 I also loved the sights of New York that I came across this same day, such as this firehouse mascot, which the firefighters were clucking over. (Sorry, couldn't help the pun.)


Another interesting thing to see was Amazon's new bookstore in Columbus Circle's swanky shopping centre. It was FULL of people buying or reading books -- much like Borders used to look like when it was at the height of its popularity.  (I was thrilled to see this familiar book chosen as one of the bestsellers / books to buy in the Travel Section. Thank you Amazon staff.)


Also caught up with this charming designer  -- Jeffrey Bilhuber, who is one of Manhattan's nicest men -- to look at his chapter for the new Rizzoli garden book. 

He suggested we go to the Majorelle Restaurant at the The Lowell Hotel, which I'd never been to but which I fell in love with at first sight. The floral bouquets were as beautiful as the architectural details. Even the bookshelves full of design books. 

It's all very 'old New York', as in very elegant, very dignified, and very, very sophisticated. (Most of the women were wearing Chanel.) We stayed in the bar, but if you're dining, it's a dress-up kind-of place. Wear the heels. And drink Champagne!


Other detours included a quick trip to the Hamptons to see the new One Kings Lane pop-up store, which is already causing a stir for its stylish blue kitchen, and a visit to the Madoo Garden Fair, a once-a-year gathering of elegant gardenistas selling all kinds of lovely antiques and topiary. 

Then it was home to our own far-more-ordinary blue-toned abode (top left), and to finishing books in time for the end-of-year deadlines.


I hope that, wherever you are, you're having a beautiful, bloom-filled season too.

New Books, Beautiful Films, Floral Places, and Other Nice Projects

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GARDENS OF STYLE

I am thrilled to post that after two years of planning, many, many photography shoots around the world, and a great deal of logistics involving 15 gardens and their delightful owners (who are not only some of the world's most admired designers but also the nicest), my new book for Rizzoli New York, GARDENS OF STYLE is now in the final stages of production.

We are still refining page designs, so these are works-in-progress, forgive me, but it's just a little glimpse. I'm so thrilled with it -- and a little exhausted from it too, especially straight off the back of the huge biography. But it's been such a pleasure to work with the most wonderful team, particularly my patient, kind book designer Alissa Dinallo.  (www.instagram.com/alissadinallo )

I will keep posting updates of the release date of GARDENS OF STYLE here and on my instagram, so follow along on Instagram if you're not already on Insta :

Rizzoli's publication date for GARDENS OF STYLE at this stage is April 2018 - if I can make the September deadline! 




NEW DESIGN BOOKS

I was recently chatting to a new friend, Kim, from Lily Pond Geelong (a beautiful store, do visit), and she was lamenting the dearth of design books at present. Here are a few that I think would be good for the Christmas Wish Lists.

THE ANATOMY OF COLOUR
Robert Bevan has been dubbed 'the paint detective' for his research uncovering hidden colors and paints and indeed the histories of great buildings. (He discovered the artist Whistler's original studio.) Baty's specialist paint business in Chelsea, Papers and Paints, is famous in design circles for finding rare and beautiful colours for interior designers and architects' requirements. (Ben Pentreath uses them.) This book, based on Bevan's research degree, is a fascinating look at colours over the centuries. The photos of gracious and grand old buildings are wonderful. Thames & Hudson, $120.

MAKING MAGNIFICENCE
Christine Casey has spent 10 years researching the travels, fortunes, and fame of an extraordinary group of plasterwork craftsmen who came to dominate the 'great rooms' (or their ceilings) of palatial houses in early eighteenth-century Europe. These stuccatori were masters of plasterwork, and their embellished rooms are some of the most beautiful in the world. Yale University Press.

GARDENS OF COURT AND COUNTRY
Charts the development of the English formal garden from 1630 to 1730. A beautiful book. The cover  alone is worth the price. Yale Books.


AND A NEW NOVEL EVERYONE'S TALKING ABOUT...

This novel has captivated everyone who's read it, and I'm about to start, although the cover pulled me in immediately. It's a novel of two stories by Booker-shortlisted writer Michèle Roberts. The first belongs to Madeleine, who loses her job as a lecturer and decides to leave her flat in cobbled Stew Lane and move to Apricot Place. There, she senses the past encroaching as strange noises begin to haunt her life. The second narrative starts in 1851 and belongs to Joseph Benson, a researcher who spends time in Apricot Place. As these entwined stories unfold, alive with the sensations of London past and present, the two eras brush against each other.  A haunting tale of desire, isolation and loss, and the search for human connection, it's winning over all the reviewers. I love a good ghost story! Bloomsbury.

Review here - Financial Times Review



BEYOND THE ROCK BIOGRAPHY - 
PUBLICITY EVENTS

My book designer for Gardens of Style, Alissa Dinallo, was actually the design talent behind the incredible jacket and page designs for the Joan Lindsay biography Beyond The Rock. This biography has just been entered into the prestigious Stella Prize, and I am about to do another round of publicity, so if you would like to hear about Joan Lindsay, the story behind the famous literary mystery Picnic at Hanging Rock, what is true and what isn't, and what we had to cut out at the very end, please come along to one of these events. I'd love to see you and say hello!

Many of the events for this book earlier this year - including the event with actress Helen Morse - were booked out, and many people missed out, so if you'd like to hear about this strange and beautiful story, do come along. It would be so nice to meet you!

FORTHCOMING EVENTS FOR BEYOND THE ROCK: THE LIFE OF JOAN LINDSAY AND THE MYSTERY OF PICNIC AT HANGING ROCK 


SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23
Ballan Library,  near Ballarat, 10AM
143 Inglis Street, Ballan, Victoria.
Phone:  0419 519 650
Author talk
Bookings and details -- Ballan Library

TUESDAY OCTOBER 10 
Lilydale Library (Eastern Libraries), 10AM
Lilydale Lake Road, Lilydale 
Phone: (03) 9800 6457
Talk and afternoon tea, with book signing
Further details from Lilydale Library closer to date

OCTOBER 15 - 22 
Frankston Library, Frankston (Part of History Week)
60 Playne Street, Frankston
Phone:  (03) 9784 1020
Author talk
Details TBC, see this website or Frankston Library closer to date

WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 25 
Nedlands Library, Perth
Day of Literary Feasting 
60 Stirling Hwy, Nedlands, Western Australia 
Phone: (08) 9273 3500. 
Email: E library@nedlands.wa.gov.au
Writing workshop and author talk
Details from Redlands Library in Perth closer to date

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17 
Stonnington Literary Festival, 6.30PM - 8PM
Malvern Library, 1255 High Street, Malvern
Author talk
Details released by Stonnuington Council and Malvern Library closer to time.




THE (LONG-AWAITED) DAY OF DIOR

The House of Dior is in the process of opening three major exhibitions around the world, one of which has opened in Paris at Musée des Arts Décoratifs, and the other is about to open next week, here in Melbourne at the NGV

The Melbourne exhibition is the first complete Dior collection to be shown outside of Paris and features 140 garments from Christian Dior Couture, including Dior's signature ballgowns and evening dresses and current contemporary designs from the House's first female head designer, Maria Grazia Chiuri. 

As well, it will show an archive of photographs, sketches and works from previous designers at the House of Dior, such as Yves Saint Laurent, Marc Bohan, Gianfranco Ferré, John Galliano and Raf Simons

Showing at the NGV Melbourne, from next week (27 August) until to 7 November, 2017. 
The Paris exhibition at Musée des Arts Décoratifs runs until 7 January, 2018.

Details and tickets here:  Dior NGV


TULIP FEVER: THE FILM

One of the most beautiful new movies to be released this year is this glorious new costume drama called Tulip Fever, which is based on Deborah Moggach’s bestselling novel. 

Set in 17th century Amsterdam, it centres on a beautiful young married woman (played by Alicia Vikander from The Danish Girl and The Light Between Oceans), who begins a passionate affair with an artist hired to paint her portrait. The lovers gamble on the booming market for tulip bulbs as a way to raise money to run away together. The trailer has just been banned in the US due to the 'racy' sex scene (which is about as racy as a tulip). 

As well as Alicia Vikander, the film also stars Judi Dench, Tom Hollander, model-of-the-moment Cara Delevingne, and Christoph Waltz (from Django Unchained). The script is by Tom Stoppard, so it should be good. 

Tulip Fever is slated for US release in September and Australian release on November 23. 

The (not-so-racy) trailer is here:  TULIP FEVER



THE NEW PETERSHAM NURSERIES,
COVENT GARDEN

If you're heading to London at any time (don't forget to take LONDON SECRETS, the new guide book! Badly disguised plug there...), one must-see stop is Petersham Nurseries' new restaurant, store, deli, and florist in Covent Garden.  

Most of the regulars to London know of Petersham in Richmond, one of the most beautiful destinations in the city. And its glamorous new 'sister' promises to be even more gorgeous. There is a huge retail space, a florist, a delicatessen, a florist, and not one but two restaurants to open soon, called The Petersham and La Goccia. 



OTHER PROJECTS

There are many other projects currently in the planning stage for my team, including two new garden books in the early research stages (mock-up above), a new biography (didn't really want to do many more books, but it's about a famous fashion designer so who can refuse such a beautiful subject?), ongoing mentoring of new authors with their exciting publishing projects (something I love doing),  a new luggage collection that is still in the R&D stage, using a wonderful pattern maker in Vermont and a bag maker in London, and all of the lovely things going on in our private lives too, which is a lot but I will keep those private for now.  

For now, I hope you'll stay in touch, either by Instagram, email, or good old letter, as some people still do! (NB The blog is problematic at time, so if you can't leave a message, don't worry.)

Follow along on Instagram for updates -- or just to say hello!

GARDENS OF STYLE in the NY Times and Architectural Digest

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If you follow the New York Times' T magazine's Instagram page, Architectural Digest's online feed, and my own modest (and irregularly updated) Instagram page (LINK HERE), you'll know that a beautiful and rather ambitious book we've been working on for many years called GARDENS OF STYLE: PRIVATE HIDEAWAYS OF THE DESIGN WORLD has just been published by New York publishing company Rizzoli.

This book was such a team effort, and we are all so thrilled to see the final result! It was such a risky book, but has turned out beautifully -- mostly thanks to all the wonderful people involved in the project.

(CLICK ON PIX TO ENLARGE)



CLICK HERE FOR: ARCHITECTURAL DIGEST LINK





All the designers featured in GARDENS OF STYLE were all such a delight to work with. They are all hands-on gardeners, and their gardens are not just testament to their green thumbs but also serve as beautiful inspiration for their fashion and design collections. 

Aerin Lauder, Bunny Williams, Carolyne Roehm, Ben Pentreath, Jeffrey Bilhuber, Celerie Kemble, Robert Couturier, Paolo Moschino, Gary McBournie, Roman and Williams, and many others featured in this book have all drawn on their private gardens for their work, using the flowers, foliage, lines and forms to influence and inform their projects and collections. 

Two of the designers, Christian Dior and David Hicks, were as famous for their gardens as they were for their designs, with Dior using his beloved flowers to create his magnificent silhouettes. In fact, writing the Dior chapter was unexpectedly moving, knowing that he always viewed himself as "a simple gardener" rather than a couturier, and always suspected he would have been happier had he been allowed to retreat from the world and the stresses of his fashion collections to tend to his beloved rose beds.

(CLICK ON PIX TO ENLARGE)



GARDENS OF STYLE was commissioned by Rizzoli in late 2015, and it has particular significance for me, because I began work on it only a few weeks after my father passed away from a brain tumour in September that year. In fact, I flew from Australia to New York for the first editorial meeting barely two weeks after my father's memorial service.  I'm sure I looked a mess after months of crying, but my editor was very gracious, and so we began the long and complicated process of planning the gardens to be featured.

This was aways going to be a difficult book, not just because of the logistics involved in shooting all the international gardens -- shoots rely on seasons and weather as much as their owners and their schedules -- but also because of the sheer distances involved. For one of the shoots, I flew from Australia to Provence and back again in 4 days - 48 hours of flying in total -- and then, just three days later, I repacked the bag and flew 24 hours back to Europe again. Another time, I flew home from New York to Australia, received an email to shoot Aerin Lauder's magnificent garden in the Hamptons, and got a flight straight back to the US again. And yet another garden, in the Dominican Republic, was shot a week before a major hurricane hit. But every air mile was worth it to venture beyond the garden gates of these remarkable estates and gardens, all of which are private, and most of which are rarely open to the public.

It really was a great, great privilege to see these places, and an even greater privilege to shoot them. I am still grateful. So very, very grateful.

(CLICK ON PIX TO ENLARGE)





From the elegant formality of David Hicks' famous garden in Oxfordshire to the romantic flower beds of Carolyne Roehm's country estate in Connecticut to the enormous potager and overflowing produce of Emma Bridgewater's castle garden in England to the astounding design of Celerie Kemble's tropical hideaway in the Dominican Republic, every garden featured has its own beauty, its own charm, its own secrets, it own splendour.

Perhaps what I remember most about doing this book is the people who helped produce this book -- the designers who created and own these gardens, the head gardeners who clipped the hedges and parterres ready for photographing, the assistants and staff who helped set up the shoots, and of course the entire team at Rizzoli, who helped polish it ready for publication.

There were also many, many wonderful lunches and teas with these designers, and no words can adequately express how grateful I was for these lovely balmy afternoon, amongst the flower beds and box hedges. Some of the gardens were so beautiful, I had a quiet tear when I got in the hire car and drove away.

I hope the beauty of these magnificent estates is evident on the pages. And I hope that, if you buy a copy (a great Mother's Day -- hint hint!), you enjoy these gardens as much as I and my team has done.


GARDENS OF STYLE: PRIVATE HIDEAWAYS OF THE DESIGN WORLD
Rizzoli New York
Published April 10, 2018
Available through most bookshops, or online.




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Reclaiming The Beauty of Life

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WHY WE NEED BEAUTIFUL THINGS IN OUR LIFE

Recently I watched the film The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society. I know the title is long (one reviewer said it made him "lose the will to live"), but the story is surprising – and deeply moving. The kind of story I haven't seen for years. I read the novel a decade ago, and wept. I saw the film, and wept some more. Then I bought the DVD. (It's also on Netflix.) It reminded me of the power of storytelling. And boy, have we forgotten that in this age of pithy, witty one-line tweets and abbreviated conversations.

It was a film of layers: the war; the importance of books; the importance of empathy; the importance of friendships. And then there was the elegance of the cinematography. Even the garden scenes and Isola's flower-filled home had the light and painterly quality of a painting.

It reminded me of what a new friend said when she wrote to me recently. "Where has the fabulousness of life gone? Where is the magic?" Well, it was there, in Isola's greenhouse, in a lovely film with a title so long it would barely fit into a modern-day tweet. 

I hope you get the chance to see The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel SocietyIn the meantime, here are a few more beautiful things, to help you cope with this expeditious life we're all leading. 


(There's a good little piece about the backstory behind the story here -- LA TIMES )

(Top image from Zimmerman's new collection, 'Corsage' -- more on this below.)



WRITING WORKSHOPS
(HOW TO WRITE YOUR OWN BOOK)

If you dream of writing your own book, be it a design book, memoir, or novel, I hope you'll come along to our intensive, one-day WRITING AND PUBLISHING WORKSHOPS. They not only look at the nuts and bolts of writing a book, but also how to get your book or proposal to the attention of publisher. 

It's short notice, I know, but there's ONE place left this weekend -- Sunday August 26 -- in the library at my beachside home on the coast of the Mornington Peninsula. And TWO places on Sunday, September 2nd, in a beautiful venue in Melbourne.  

There may be another Writing and Publishing Workshop in London in mid-September (we're just finalizing it now) -- please email me for details (email on website). 

More than anything, I would love to help you all with your books, whether they're novels, biographies, memoirs, travel books, design and architecture books, or anything you'd like to write. We need more good stories in this world. 

See this link -- www.janellemcculloch-officialwebsite.com for details 
(Look for workshops in top menu)


NB: A huge, heartfelt thank you to everyone who has bought Gardens of Style: Private Hideaways of the Design World (Rizzoli New York). Your support and sales helped it reach number one on Amazon (US) in the 'Garden Design' category in May. I am so deeply grateful, and so very touched, as is everyone who worked on this wonderful book. It was a beautiful project, and I'm so thankful to the entire team. Even Tory Burch did a lovely post on it here -- TORY BURCH  





THE GARDENS OF BUNNY MELLON

Here's a glimpse of the glorious new book about by Linda Holden about the style and gardening icon Bunny Mellon. With last year's biography being such a huge success, it was inevitable that more books about this extraordinary person would follow. 

Bunny Mellon was known for her wealth but she was also incredibly talented at garden design. One of her commissions was the the formal and vegetable gardens at Hubert de Givenchy’s French home, Château du Jonchet. (Mellon, in turn, had many of her clothes designed by Givenchy, including her gardening hats and smocks.) 

This book features many of Ms Mellon's garden plans, watercolors, and illustrations, as well as vintage photographs by Horst, Aarons, and others of Mellon’s gardens, including her main residence, Oak Spring (above), and also her gardens and homes in Cape Cod, Nantucket, Antigua, and New York. 

PS There's a wonderful article about Bunny Mellon's interiors and garden by Architectural Digest here -- BUNNY MELLON

Vendome Press. Published October 30, 2018. US$60


TORY BURCH AND BUNNY MELLON

A stylish addendum to the book about Bunny Mellon, above, is the recent article in US Vogue about fashion designer Tory Burch, who bought Bunny Mellon's estate in Antigua, in the Caribbean. Burch has spent the last few years restoring it, with the help of landscape designer Miranda Brooks (who did Anna Wintour's home), and interior designer Daniel Romualdez. The word are almost more interesting than the images, so do read it -- it's beautifully written by Hamish Bowles, who I think is underrated as a storyteller. 

I particularly loved the trellised garden room in this tropical hideaway, above. The image on the left is its current form, after Tory Burch's restoration. The image on the right is when Bunny Mellon had it, filled with her beloved pots and plants and topiary.

LINK HERE – VOGUE


GARDEN ROOM GLAMOUR

If you fancy a trellised garden room of your own, House and Garden UK has just featured this glorious wallpaper -- ‘Botanical French Trellis’ -- a custom-made wallpaper mural, from £294 a square meter. It's from Iksel. Guaranteed to make even the smallest powder room feel like a grand conservatory.

DETAILS HERE -– HOUSE & GARDEN
LINK HERE – IKSEL


THE NEW CORSAGE COLLECTION
(CONSERVATORY CHIC)

Do you follow Zimmerman? It's a gorgeous Australian label that's become a major name in New York and London. I adored the Edwardian-looking pieces earlier this year. The forthcoming Corsage Collection (above) is sublime. 

 LINK HERE – ZIMMERMAN





LONDON MEETS NEW YORK CITY

One of the most glamorous homes I've seen this year has just been featured in House & Garden UK. Designed for a couple who moved back to London after being in New York for years, it mixes Manhattan glamour with English understatement. 

The design firm was Maddux Creative, a two-person show made up of Scott Maddux and Jo leGleud. They commissioned the paint specialist Isabelle Day to colour the arched entrance hall in Ben Nicholson-esque blocks of blue and sage and ochre, and then saturate the dining green in deep viridian green, which blends seamlessly with the view of the garden. In the white marble in the adjoining kitchen, rolling library ladders provide access to high cupboards, while the drawing room features an elegant curved sofa by Vladimir Kagan and voluminous, asymmetric curtains  inspired by Alber Elbaz's designs for Lanvin. 

The bathroom, however, is the pièce de résistance. Inspired by Le Meurice hotel in Paris, it is a lavish marriage of unlacquered brass and Arabescato marble. 

LINK HERE – House & Garden UK


THE WORLD OF CABANA

If you love design, you must look for an issue of Cabana Magazine, the bi-annual tome that covers some of the most intriguing, elaborate, and extraordinary interiors in the world. But if you can't find it, the beautiful new book – Cabana Anthology by Martina Mondadori Sartogo – covers all ten issues.

In the words of its author, Cabana Anthology explores the “intellectual and emotional intimacy with buildings and their surroundings... the intense relationship of thought, place and the person." Cabana Anthology, says its author, is about "the magic of atmosphere and aesthetics inspired by the classics and Italian art history, and interiors where old and new are assembled to reflect the soul and history of a person or a family, not a stylist.”

Look for it in bookstores, or order online.



DIOR AND HIS DECORATORS: A NEW BOOK

Whenever today’s tastemakers reach for gray and white, leopard and houndstooth, satin skirts and sunburst mirrors, they pay homage to the chic of Dior. Now a new book chronicles the great couturier's love of interiors and furniture. DIOR AND HIS DECORATORS is the first work on the two Parisian interior designers most closely associated with Christian Dior, Victor Grandpierre and Georges Geoffrey, and the first study of the evolution of Dior’s aesthetic as seen through his houses. 

Author Maureen Footer, an expert in French decorative arts and former interior designer in her own right, recounts the lives and work of this influential trio, illustrated with a trove of evocative vintage photographs. Grandpierre created not only the chic, elegantly restrained look of Dior’s salons (pale gray walls, white moldings, and Louis XVI–style chairs) but also the template for the Dior brand, including typeface, logo, signage, and packaging—still followed to this day. Georges Geffroy, an aesthete and connoisseur of eighteenth-century antiques, shepherded Dior into the couture world with an introduction to the couturier Robert Piguet in 1937. When Dior acquired a townhouse in the fashionable 16th arrondisement, he asked both Grandpierre and Geffroy (who worked independently) to design the interior, assigning the private rooms to the former and the public rooms to the latter. The results were, like Dior’s haute couture creations, rich, sensual, and refined. 

After Dior’s untimely death in 1957, both Grandpierre and Geffroy went on to design salons for other couturiers, as well as homes for royals, Parisian socialites, fabulously wealthy ex-pats, and celebrated film stars and artists, ranging from Yves Saint Laurent and Marcel Rochas to Baron de Redé, Arturo López-Willshaw, Élie and Liliane de Rothschild, Gloria Guinness, Daisy Fellowes, and Maria Callas. 

There's a good article by Architectural Digest here – DIOR in AD

Abrams. Published September 2018.

Gardens, Books, Beachhouses, and Other Lovely Things

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Social media is a funny thing. Sometimes it can be nasty, or sometimes it can be just plain crazy! Other times, it can be surprisingly kind. This week, the internationally renowned author and entrepreneur India Hicks suddenly shuttered her business, to the shock of the thousands of people who follow or work with her. But instead of jamming her social media with unwanted vitriol, as is often the case, everyone applauded her effort, energy and inspiration over the years. Kindness flooded the comments.

It was, I think, a quiet acknowledgement that most of us prefer to seek out the niceness of life rather than subscribing to the negativity that social media breeds. I tell you this small story because I've noticed lately that many people are shying away from or even shutting off from social media. I am one. But I have missed the stories, the ideas, the inspiration, the social interaction, the unexpected whimsy and beauty. Many of us in my social circle have gone full circle and returned to old-fashioned email to ping-pong interesting snippets to each other. I even send cards and parcels -- with stamps!

I don't know what the future holds for media, and as a former journalist and magazine editor I'm intrigued to see how we will receive our information once the major players such as Instagram have had their day. Until then, I thought I'd do a little blog post. Because there are lots of lovely things bouncing around – from books to dinnerware, and even a wonderfully dilapidated old beach house (ours), that's breathing new life into our little family, after we decided to buy it on a whim. I hope these bring you joy on this windy Wednesday. And I hope that, wherever you are, beauty and kindness come your way.

(Image above is my favourite spread from a new book outlined below.)


THE GARDENER'S TRAVEL COMPANION TO ENGLAND
A NEW BOOK ABOUT BEAUTIFUL BOTANICAL DESTINATIONS

This new little botanical guide to England (LINK) has been my baby for the past year. (As well as the old beach house that we're slowly restoring.) As with every book I'm involved with, I'm thrilled and deeply grateful that I was able to be part of it. It's a truly beautiful guide, thanks to the efforts of the entire team at Images Publishing. 

I really hope you all like it. It covers everything from glorious under-the-radar gardens and private estates throughout England, to garden museums and festivals, garden hotels, restaurants and pubs with gardens, and many other unusual botanical destinations. There's also an index of garden courses, from photography classes to garden embroidery workshops. 

My favourite section is on hotels – there are so many gorgeous new hotels with kitchen gardens and cutting gardens and restored parterres. If only I could have stayed at them all.

I really hope you enjoy reading it. (I've already ordered a copy for my mother for Christmas.) It's published in early September by Images Publishing, my long-time publisher. For more details, previews and to buy an advance copy in the pre-sales, please go to any of the websites below. 













NEAR AND FAR
A NEW DESIGN MONOGRAPH FROM LISA FINE

Many people know of textile designer Lisa Fine. Her designs are as sublime as her homes in Paris and Manhattan. (Her beautiful fabrics are available through Nicola Lawrence --  link.) So Lisa's first book has been eagerly awaited by many of us. Titled NEAR AND FAR (a fabulous title!), Lisa chronicles the design of her homes in Dallas, New York, and Paris, and then takes us along as she visits the places and people that have been her greatest sources of inspiration. Among her favored treasures are the Mughal palaces and gardens of India, the 18th-century home of Carl Linnaeus in Sweden, the whitewashed retreat of interior designer John Stefanidis on Patmos, the idyllic country house and garden of London-based designer Penny Morrison, and a storied house in the Tangier Casbah belonging to collectors Jamie Creel and Marco Scarani. 

Evocatively photographed by Miguel Flores-Vianna, it's a treasure trove of design ideas. I've already put it on my Wish List for Christmas. 

Published September 2019. By Vendome.




A TABLE IN VENICE
A BOOK FOR ALL THE SENSES
If there are two places that have been prominent in travel media this year, it's Venice and Capri. (Thanks to Zimmerman for the latter.) If you adore the former, look for Skye McAlpine's stunning book A TABLE IN VENICE. Then, if you can, try and find photos of her new Venetian apartment. It's as lovely as her photography. (The above pix are from Ben Pentreath's social media; he was lucky enough to dine with her in this spectacular space.) 

A Table in Venice is now out in bookstores. I hope Skye begins working on a second book soon. And that her new apartment is in it.


ANNA WEATHERLEY
BEAUTIFUL BOTANICAL DINNERWARE

Have you seen Anna Weatherley's delicious dinnerware? It features some of the prettiest plates around. Anna is based in Washington DC but she is so fond of Australia that she has waived shipping here. 

Look for her gorgeous designs on her website -- link here.


A GARDEN IDYLL IN LONDON
ROSE UNIACKE'S EXTRAORDINARY LONDON HOME

Do you follow Nowness''In Residence' videos? If not, search them out -- they feature incredible homes of celebrated architects, designers and artists. My friends and I are always referring each other to their newest videos. 

My favourite is Rose Uniacke's extraordinary London home – quite possibly one of the most glamorous interiors in the English capital. She calls it "a monastery meets Venetian palazzo". It's difficult to believe it's in the middle of London. The best part? Her hidden courtyard garden, which has a secret door built into the brickwork. 

The link to Rose's residence is HERE
(The music is as mesmerising as the videography.)


BOTANICAL EMBROIDERY
THE NEXT BIG SEWING TREND? 

Architectural Digest has recently published an article asking if botanical embroidery is the next big thing in sewing circles? Many people I know, including my sister-in-law, have been practising this for years, but they tend to be quiet achievers, so hopefully AD's story will push this gorgeous art form to the fore.

AD's story focused on Olga Prinku, who takes real flowers and weaves them into ornate embroidery filled with petals and other things foraged from gardens and forests. What she and all these other botanical embroiderers do is simply magical. And to think that all it takes is tulle and a few dried flowers...


Find out more on Olga's instagram HERE or Architectural Digest HERE



MAE IN MAUVE
AN UNUSUAL BEIRUT ABODE

Recently I stumbled across a house in Architectural Digest that was unlike anything I'd seen for years. It was the grand Beirut home of Mae Daouk, and it was notable for the colour mauve -- or lilac, as it's being marketed as the moment. 

Purple has never been a big colour in design -- I think it's a hue that grows on people as they get older, particularly with gardeners who see it in salvias and other flowers. But this year, it's making a glamorous comeback. Lilac -- especially that luminous shade of silvery lilac you see in evening skies -- is everywhere I look at the moment. So much so, that we have decided to do our new kitchen in our new (old) beach house in lilac. But I love Mae's place -- anyone who pairs purple with Schiaparelli pink deserves a gold medal.


The link to Mae's home in Architectural Digest is HERE


ZIMMERMAN'S NEW COLLECTION
(FLORALS AND FRILLS)

Someone who is utterly mad about mauve is Zimmerman, the Australian fashion label famous for its femininity and frills. If you caught all the fuss about Zimmerman's new store on Capri last week, you'll know this label puts on seriously glamorous soirees. But its launch parties are nothing compared to its summer dresses. These are a few I snapped in-store last week. If you can't afford the eye-watering price tags, there are two Outlet stores, and both are fantastic for finding sophisticated Zimmerman frocks for bargain prices.



THE LOSS OF MIN HOGG
VALE A GREAT LADY

Many of us were devastated to read the news of the death of legendary magazine editor Min Hogg last week. During her editorship of The World of Interiors,Min was responsible for publishing some of the most brilliant magazine stories in the design world. Her own homes, above, were just as stylish. She will be missed.

The New York Times'wonderful obituary about Min is HERE.



DIOR EXTRAORDINARIE 
HOW DIOR ARCHIVES A DRESS



If you're one of the fortunate ones who saw the Dior exhibition at the V&A in London this year, then you'll adore this video from the New York Times. It shows the attention to detail that goes into archiving Dior's precious dresses. Even Monsieur Dior would have been happy with this level of care, I think.



FINALLY...
OUR NEW LIFE -- IN A VERY OLD BEACH HOUSE

I've been quiet on social media for a few months. There are many reasons. A few lingering health issues. A book deadline. Mentoring my wonderful authors. (One may already have a book deal.) And writing a new book. But perhaps the biggest reason for our quiet life is an old beach house we bought, in a spur-of-the-moment decision, four days before Christmas. 

We didn't know we wanted to live by the beach until we starting renting an interim townhouse, waiting for our city place to be finished. Then we fell in love -- with a house by the sea.

We saw a slightly run-down old house on our nightly dog walk, made an offer, and the rest is renovation history. Six months of dust, hammers, drills, plans, revised plans, tradespeople (actually we're doing most of the work, due to the miniscule budget), visits from friends and from our wonderful architect Virginia Blue, and -- best of all -- blissful evening strolls along one of the most beautiful esplanades in the world. 

Not a day goes by that we don't say thanks for our new life. Our new life in a lovely old house.



Restoring a house is a long process. Our books are still everywhere, the tables are still cluttered with things that have no home (there is little storage here), the paint colours, fixtures and fittings are still being determined (lilac and cornflower blue are the forerunners, inspired by the cover of the new book), and the garden is a disaster!

But oh, how we love it.

I hope to post some pix on Instagram soon. When things look a little more presentable. In the meantime, if you ever want to say hello, just email me (the old-fashioned way!) or dm on Instagram -- I'll always try and reply.

Until next time, wishing you all a wonderful week, from our little family at the beach.



BOOK TOUR -- 'STORIES OF GARDENS & GLAMOUR' WITH LINDA HOLDEN (AND ME)

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STORIES OF GARDENS AND GLAMOUR
GARDENS, BIOGRAPHIES, AND BEHIND-THE-SCENES STORIES OF GREAT ESTATES

A BOOK TOUR WITH LINDA HOLDEN AND JANELLE McCULLOCH

Thousands of book and garden lovers bought Linda Holden's beautiful book THE GARDENS OF BUNNY MELLON (Vendome), which was a runaway bestseller last year.  Recently, a friend and I had the privilege of visiting Mrs Mellon's own private garden and estate in Virginia, 'Oak Spring', and were even more privileged to meet Linda and be shown around by head gardener Randy Embrey. Since then, I've read and re-read this gorgeous book and have been enthralled at the gardens Mrs Mellon designed for Hubert de Givenchy, Jackie Kennedy and many others. Well, now it's my absolute pleasure to announce that, after many months of planning, Linda is coming to Australia for a book tour.

If you would like to hear behind-the-scenes stories of Bunny Mellon and the garden at Oak Spring, and see photographs of Mrs Mellon's gardens for Hubert de Givenchy, the White House, the Kennedys, the potager at Versailles, and many other places, please mark your diaries for one of the dates on her Australian book tour, October 17 - 22.  

It's such a thrill to host Linda, and I can promise her stories are worth listening to! As well, I thought it would be nice to 'bookend' the event with some of the beautiful gardens and homes I've had the privilege of shooting for GARDENS OF STYLE: PRIVATE HIDEAWAYS OF THE DESIGN WORLD (Rizzoli), so I will chat about Estee and Aerin Lauder's garden in the Hamptons, Carolyne Roehm's estate in Connecticut, David Hicks's famous garden in Oxfordshire, Bunny Williams's beautiful country house in Connecticut, Ben Pentreath's hideaway in Dorset, Christian Dior's flower garden in Normandy and Celerie Kemble’s amazing botanical-themed hideaway in the Dominican Republic, among others.

We will also be co-hosting a one-day Writing and Publishing Workshop on Sunday October 20th (details TBC), for all those who want to write or publish their own design or garden book, or memoir / biography, or want to know how to approach a publisher -- whether in London, New York or Australia. (NOTE: It will be in Melbourne, but there may be another workshop in Sydney. )  

Please email me to RSVP or to be keep up-to-date with details of either the writing workshop or the talks -- janelle.mcculloch@bigpond.com

We hope to see you at one of these events! Both Linda and I are looking forward to meeting you all, and perhaps helping some of you write or publish your own book, too! Books will be for sale, including Linda's book, and my new book The Gardener's Travel Companion to England.



STORIES OF GARDENS AND GLAMOUR
An insight into some of the most beautiful gardens in the world 

TOUR DATES

Thursday October 17th  10am – 12.30pm
CENTENNIAL VINEYARD, SOUTHERN HIGHLANDS, NSW
(ORGANISED BY THE BOOKSHOP BOWRAL, BOWRAL, NSW)
Hosted by The Bookshop Bowral but held at the beautiful Centennial Vineyard, this morning tea, talk and slideshow will feature some of the most extraordinary private gardens in the world, including those of Mrs Rachel ‘Bunny’ Lambert Mellon, the Kennedys’ private gardens, Hubert de Givenchy’s Paris garden, the Potager du Roi at Versailles, the Normandy garden of Christian Dior, the Provence garden of Hermes’ creative director Nicole de Vésian, the Oxfordshire garden of David Hicks, the Hamptons garden of Estée Lauder, the Connecticut estates of Bunny Williams and Carolyne Roehm, and several more. Books will be for sale, with a book signing after the talks. 
(Further details will be posted nearer to date)
RSVP: Bowral Bookstore. 
Email: books@thebookshopbowral.com.au. Phone: (02) 4862 1634. 


Friday October 18th   (Time TBC)
PIGOTT’S, WOOLLAHRA, SYDNEY
Talk and book signing by Linda Jane Holden and Janelle McCulloch about the magnificent gardens they've visited and written about, and the book launch of Janelle McCulloch’s new book The Gardener’s Travel Companion to England. Books for sale. (Details TBC)
(Further details will be posted nearer to date)
RSVP: Pigott’s. Email: sales@pigotts.com.au  
Or Janelle.mcculloch@bigpond.com


Saturday October 19th   11am – 1pm  
MORNINGTON LIBRARY, MORNINGTON
Talk and slideshow by bestselling American author Linda Jane Holden (The Gardens of Bunny Mellon, Vendome) and Janelle McCulloch (Gardens of Style, Rizzoli), plus book sales and book signings. 
(Further details will be posted nearer to date)
RSVP: Mornington Library (details TBC) 
Or through Eventbrite – LINK


Sunday October 20th    (Time TBC)
WRITING AND PUBLISHING WORKSHOP
Writing workshop held by Linda Jane Holden and Janelle McCulloch
Details and venue TBC (Further details will be posted nearer to date)
CONTACT: Janelle.mcculloch@bigpond.com Phone: 0422 356 350


Monday October 21st   6.30pm – 8pm
READINGS BOOKSTORE, HAWTHORN 
Talk and slideshow by Linda Jane Holden and Janelle McCulloch on the gardens they’ve had the privilege of writing about and visiting.
RSVP: Readings Hawthorn 
(Further details will be on Readings’ website and here nearer to date) 
Or email janelle.mcculloch@bigpond.com


Tuesday October 22nd   6pm – 8pm
ROYAL BOTANIC GARDENS, MELBOURNE 
Talk and slideshow for the ‘Friends of the Royal Botanic Gardens’.
(if you’re not a member, this is a good opportunity to join this wonderful organization).
Welcome drinks and a light supper from 6pm – 6.30pm, followed by talk. Book sales and signings after. 
(Further details will be posted nearer to date)
RSVP: Friends of the Royal Botanic Gardens – jill.scown@frbgmelb.org.au P: 03 9650 6398






Beautiful Books for Spring

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BEAUTIFUL BOOKS

This time of year is the height of book season, as publishers release their pick titles for Christmas. Here are a few beautiful ones to bookmark for your Wish List.












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