Green Magazine

Upfront

Big Hitter

“Bang Bang ™ ”, who’s there? It’s a hand-cast bronze door knocker, designed by Max Hunt of Hunt Furniture and made in South Australia. huntfurniture.com.au

Everyday

Daniel To and Emma Aiston (of eponymous South Australian design studio DANIEL EMMA) give new meaning to the phrase ‘dynamic duo’. This intriguing work is from their exhibition, PAK-UH-JING – which investigated colour and material combinations in packaging of everyday items. “This theme brings us monumental joy and satisfaction, enabling us to create pieces that are ‘just nice’,” they reflect. daniel-emma.com

Textiles

Supercyclers and Seljak Brand joined forces to utilise waste generated by the

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Green Magazine

Green Magazine3 min read
Brotherly Love
• Set back only 30 metres or so from a busy arterial route on Auckland's North Shore, this garden that hunkers up to an interior design studio flows out into a reserve where birdsong rises into a kahikatea forest. On approach, the building, by Keshaw
Green Magazine1 min read
Geometric
Pattern, repetition and geometry are at the core of weaving, threads that intersect, going under and over, around and through, lines that loop through other lines. Line/Loop/Line exhibition at the Australian Tapestry Workshop celebrated the complexit
Green Magazine1 min read
Plastic Sprinkles
Designed by Charlotte von der Lancken, the tabletops in Skandiform's Tinnef table collection are made from 100 per cent recycled plastic waste ('tinnef' is the Yiddish word for rubbish). Each tabletop is superbly unique, made from a rotating smorgasb

Related Books & Audiobooks