Skip To Main Content
Issue 65 - The 'Bespoke' Issue

Issue 65

The 'Bespoke' Issue

With Guest Editor Yasmine Ghoniem, we are launched headfirst into the world of unique and eclectic design. From architecture to interiors, there is nothing that can’t be enlivened with bespoke interventions. Granted, a stunningly beautiful home can be made by simply shopping for the best, but when the artist’s hand is introduced, some pure magic is possible. Whether it is an artwork or a new upholstery, a built-in component or a mosaic inlay, these gestures, whether bold or subtle, are what make the home unique.

Order Issue

A Product of

The First Words from Habitus #35
Design StoriesHolly Cunneen

The First Words from Habitus #35

Welcome to the Eccentric issue! This quarter we’ve left no holds barred, completely embraced the theme and left nothing to the imagination…


Eccentricity, seen through the Habitus lens, is a way to embrace design ingenuity, celebrate creativity and push ourselves to think outside that same old box. We look at clever solutions to genuine design problems, strictly avoiding design for design’s sake; there’s flair but there’s no superfluous waste.

Perfectly befitting the Eccentric issue, Stephen Todd – who’s built a bit of a reputation for himself contributing essays on art, architecture, design and fashion to newspapers across the globe, has given our feature section a bit of a shake up. Within it, he pens his thoughts on an Australian design identity – and whether such a thing exists – as well as a few words on life so far for Don Cameron, a rare furniture importer, friend and curator of interiors for Hotel Hotel, Canberra.

Marion Borgelt takes us in a slightly different direction when we visit her immaculate studio, refusing to buy into the notion that mess and creative license go hand-in-hand. But I guess that’s the idea with eccentric beings, they’re unpredictable and it’s part of their charm.

The houses that we visit, generously scattered throughout the region, all encapsulate great design in some form or respect. There’s a beachside abode on Sydney’s North Shore that’s more Brutalist than beach shack; a house atop the rolling hills of Buderim, Queensland, with a silhouette to emulate a viewfinder; and a modern terrace in Malaysia that’s found all the right angles.

So, this quarter we invite you to embrace the eccentricity hidden within. We invite you to get bold, get creative and get amongst it.

Holly Cunneen
Deputy Editor


About the Author

Holly Cunneen

Holly Cunneen was the editor of Habitus and has spent her time in the media writing about architecture, design and our local industry. With a firm view that “design has a shared responsibility to the individual as much as it does the wider community,” her personal and professional trajectory sees her chart the interests, accomplishments, and emerging patterns of behaviour within the architecture and design community.

Tags

habitusThe Eccentric Issue


Related Articles
Issue 65 - The 'Bespoke' Issue

Issue 65

The 'Bespoke' Issue

With Guest Editor Yasmine Ghoniem, we are launched headfirst into the world of unique and eclectic design. From architecture to interiors, there is nothing that can’t be enlivened with bespoke interventions. Granted, a stunningly beautiful home can be made by simply shopping for the best, but when the artist’s hand is introduced, some pure magic is possible. Whether it is an artwork or a new upholstery, a built-in component or a mosaic inlay, these gestures, whether bold or subtle, are what make the home unique.

Order Issue