Maintaining artisinal heritage appeal as an international interior design operation
Key design and interiors dates for your diary 2022
Best design and events to catch in 2022
Clarice Cliff – bright colours and bold geometric shapes of Art Deco pottery still relevant today
Rose Uniacke launches debut paint collection with Graphenstone
Image: Rose Uniacke paint by Hary Crowder
Planted announces ‘Green Graduates’ a physical platform for the best new designers from 2020-2021
- Over 30 design graduates focusing on the wider issues of sustainability and presenting a cleaner, greener way to live will showcase their work for the first time at Planted, the first zero waste design event in the world from 25-26 September –
How to buy vintage furniture and lighting well
Paul Middlemiss has been buying furniture professionally for more than 30 years. His mother was one of Austalia’s best known antique dealers and as a teenager he would travel with her to Europe to trawl markets and buy and ship back vintage pieces. Here, Paul shares his tips on how to buy vintage furniture and furnishings.
Prior to setting up Merchant & Found in 2018, now one of the UK’s largest vintage furniture dealers, Paul held various posts including buying director at The Conran Shop and Habitat, owner of the General Trading company and managing director of Pedlars – the first mainstream vintage furniture retailer in the UK.
The art of design collaboration - for Decorex The Edit
This month we spoke to Decorex The Edit about what makes a successful Design Collaboration and why they are so important for the industry.
From a PR perspective, why is it beneficial for businesses to form collaborations within the design sphere?
A successful collaboration is a genuine meeting and sharing of minds, aspirations and identity that can enhance and move ideas forward. A successful collaboration can bring a new energy to all partners. With that comes greater awareness and all that brings. For the interiors, architecture design and art market the undisputed silver lining of the Covid-19 shutdowns will be increased collaboration.
Shaping the future of Home
3D technology and architecture is coming together with exciting eco sustainable and aesthetic results as first residents move into digitally printed homes in Europe.
How can the design industry re think its major events post Pandemic?
How can the pandemic be a source for good in shaping the future of Design and Interiors Festivals such as London Design Week, Maison & Objet and Milan Salone
Changing face of social media in 2021 - Five key trends
Matthew Williamson launches exclusive decorative furniture collection for ROOME LONDON
Matthew Williamson launches new decorative furniture collection with British furniture brand, ROOME LONDON
How a design classic became peak pandemic homeware
Paul Denoly and Nicholas Blain’s Hudson Home with matching Murano Mushroom lights
Paint that actively cleans your air - equivalent to planting a tree in your home
Paint that actively cleans your air…. equivalent to planting a tree in your home
Tete a tete with ROOME LONDON on it's collaboration with fine artist, SYRETT who works with nail varnish and other beauty industry products
Nail varnish fine artist SYRETT and ROOME LONDON on their colourful collaboration
House of Modernity: creativity in the absence of London's Art and Design week
In the absence of London’s art and design shows - Masterpiece, PAD and Frieze - best of its kind art, furniture, lighting, glass, ceramics and textiles are still on display
The Conran Shop
The loss of Sir Terence Conran on 12 September 2020, design titan and founder of The Conran Shop.
What it means to be a design publicist in 2020
While nimbleness is particularly useful in light of this year’s upheaval, it’s clear that quality will continue to be the contemporary design publicist’s calling card.
Highlights from Collect 2020
It has been a great privilege and joy to work on the PR for Collect for the past two years in 2019 and 2020 and see it grow and mature even further as it moved to the classical grandeur of Somerset House for its 16th edition.
The joy of a restaurant – not just any old restaurant.
The British are known for being painfully polite and restrained, self-effacing and inhibited which can lead them to situations from which they can’t extricate themselves.

