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gust 2020 DIY
ROLL OUT THE DOUGH!
2 shelves in 3 steps
Swe
A comfy quilt
bakes
From pork Wellington to apple tipsy tart
IN THE GARDEN
Flower farming in Murraysburg Indigenous and informal on a rocky ridge
8 cosy to suit your dĂŠcor and lifestyle Stylish storage for your wine READER HOMES
Interconnected I t t barns on an agricultural estate
Colour therapy in Swellendam
Renovated gem overlooking iconic Melville Koppies
Bed? Made.
MONEY? SAVED! 1
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149
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99 each
Single plain polycotton duvet cover set
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3/4 R199.99 D R279.99 Q R329.99 K R379.99 SK R399.99
1 Striped cushion 60 x 60cm R199.99 2 Super plush blankets 200 x 220cm R299.99 each 3 Striped hand towel R89.99 4 Striped bath sheet R159.99 5 Soap dish R79.99 6 Dispenser R129.99 7 Tumbler R89.99 8 Longpile blanket 180 x 200cm R199.99 9 Velvet quilted cushion 60 x 60cm R199.99
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LESS PLASTIC, MORE FANTASTIC. We have removed the plastic packaging from our duvet covers. 100% feel good for the planet.
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ONLINE | IN-STORE | APP Product available from 16 July 2020, while stocks last.
Seersucker duvet cover set 3/4 R399.99 D R499.99 Q 599.99 K 659.99 SPK 699.99
259
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99 each
Crepe voile eyelet curtains 140 x 225cm
249
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99 each
Taped faux silk curtains 230 x 218cm
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5 1 *Rattan chair 91 (l) x 68 (w) x 80 (h) cm R1600 2 Textured cushion 50 x 50cm R199.99 3 *Maddox chair 71.5 (l) x 84 (w) x 78 (h) cm R3700 4 Super plush blanket 200 x 220cm R299.99 5 Knotted jute rug 120 x 180cm R799.99 6 *Corduroy chaise 235 (l) x 234.5 (w) x 81 (h) cm R13 000 7 Jute rug runner 70 x 200cm R399.99 8 *Nested side tables 48 (l) x 48 (w) x 50 (h) cm R1800 9 Printed cushion 40 x 60cm R139.99 10 Printed cushion 55 x 55cm R159.99
Ease into bigger, better,
Bolder Savings. 139
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99 each
9 Printed cushions 40 x 60cm
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ONLINE | IN-STORE | APP Product available from 16 July 2020, while stocks last. *All items marked with an asterisk and furniture are available online at mrphome.com or in selected mrphome stores.
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Reader home
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Reader home
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Fireplaces
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Renovation
Beautiful blooms
110 10 décor 14 18
30 40 50
Fresh ideas for wine storage Interco6nnected barns make for a spectacular home in Franschhoek A welcome haven from bustling city life in Mellville, Johannesburg Paint and bold colours give an old Swellendam abode a fresh new look Fireplaces A hearth for every home
in the kitchen 110 122 126
Delicious pies, tarts and flat bread Quick food We’ve got supper sorted! Food & drinks to feed your senses
6 home August 2020
do it yourself 64 68
Make a winter quilt Two shelves in three easy steps
competitions 8 60 67 84 92
Write in to Your Space and WIN A facelift for a finalist’s messy space in our Declutter Competition Enter our Tjhoko Champs 2020 competition now! Send us your pet pics and WIN Complete Crossword #144 and WIN a book worth R375
in the garden 94
104
A local take on the English cottage garden style An expert shares her advice on growing beautiful blooms
regulars 10 72
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What’s new on the décor scene Advice Ask the experts 75 Trash or treasure? Let’s find out 78 Renovation Improve, don’t move! 84 Pets and their peculiarities 86 Gardening notebook Last words from Karin Brynard
Cover photograph Francois Oberholster • Styling Marian van Wyk
Roll out the dough!
G
ood advice is worth its weight in gold and now that tw wo readers – Heidi Lund of Swellendam and Wouter le Roux of Cape Town – have said the same thing, allow w me to reiterate: it’s better to live in a house for a while before yo ou start renovating it because a space reveals its secrets to you as the seasons come and go. As Wouter puts it: “You have to get used to a space before yo ou make changes; that way you can plan the renovation down to the finest detail – like where to store the vacuum cleaner once the dust has settled…” And it’s not just the vacuum cleaner. It’s also the clothes rack k for drying laundry indoors when it rains, a place for your books and (if you still have them) CDs, your wine collection, fabric shopping bags, and then those other unsightly random items that always end up somewhere behind a door because there’s simply no space in a cupboard. In my case, it’s the large stoep umbrella and my greatest irritation since I moved in: my extra-length ladder. The problem is, I don’t have a garage. I added a floor inside my roof, with fold-up steps in the hatch for easy access, but risking life and limb every time I need the ladder is just a pain, so now it lives in the study. For five years, five lo-o-o-ng years, that ladder has been a thorn in my side. But I had no choice because I often need the ladder – for hanging curtains, painting, doing repairs to the leaking roof, washing the high windows above the kitchen that need cleaning more often than you’d think... During the wretched Corona crisis, I have always been open to a silver lining, which is why I, like many other people, have taken the opportunity to declutter my house. Finally, the time had come! But when I stumbled over that infernal ladder again one day, I sent a message to Home’s handyman: “Deon, I’m feeling reckless. Please come and build a cupboard for me. I don’t care what it costs, I’ve had enough!” And then I started dreaming. Everything standing around was measured and a drawing of the cupboard done so that all my clutter could be neatly stored. The cupboard was planned around that ladder... Deon is capable of making anything and shortly after the start of Level 3 he built me my dream cupboard. I’ve always regarded my closedcombustion fireplace as the best thing in my house, but for the past month I haven’t been able to stop staring at my beautiful new cupboard. I almost feel like one of our finalists in the Gumtree Declutter Competition (see page 60) – it’s like I’ve hit the jackpot! Now I just have to make room for the load of wine I ordered during lockdown. Because never again will I be without my favourite tipple just because the government has made a controversial decision. Maybe I should consider giving myself that honeycomb wine rack on page 14 as a Christmas gift? Happy reading and stay warm! If you don’t already have a fireplace, be inspired by the beauties on page 50.
editor@homemag.co.za Our food editor Johané Neilson’s Quick Food bookazine – with more than 200 recipes in a special hardcover edition, complete with a free potato peeler – is still on shelf, but this is your last chance to get your hands on a copy. Look out for it at your nearest supermarket; if you can’t find it, email editor@homemag.co.za.
k food
EDITOR CAPE TOWN OFFICE ape Town postal address Office Manager JOHANNESBURG OFFICE
EDITORIAL Features Editor Creative Editor Food Editor Art Director Designer Chief Copy Editor Copy Editor Digital Editor Multimedia Journalist Photographer Retoucher
Wicus Pretorius • editor@homemag.co.za 20th Floor, Media24 Building, 40 Heerengracht, Cape Town PO Box 1802, Cape Town, 8000 Amina Essop 021 406 2401 Media Park Building, 69 Kingsway Road, Auckland Park
Shané Barnard • shane.barnard@media24.com Marian van Wyk Johané Neilson • johane.neilson@tuis.co.za Andrew Maritz Jade Cupido Tessa Jean-Jacques Gillian Eva Amy Johnson Suné Esterhuizen Francois Oberholster René Nortjé
CONTRIBUTORS Jani Augustyn-Goussard, Shelly Bergh, Karin Brynard, Elza Cooper, Deon de Goede, Pietman Diener, Paula Dubois, Gerda Engelbrecht, Marié Esterhuyse, Cecile Greyling, Kay Montgomery, Beatrice MooreNöthnagel, Hettie Scholtz, Carin Smith, Ludwig Taschner, JJ van Rensburg, Amanda van Wyngaardt, Dina Venter, Henrique Wilding
Production Manager General Enquiries ADVERTISNG HEAD: Advertising Sales (Cape Town and KZN) Key Account Manager (CT) Sales Manager (JHB) Classified Sales MEDIA24 LIVE Head of Events Head of Sponsorship Marketing Manager LIFESTYLE CREATE STUDIO Creative Director Commercial Manager: Monthlies Commercial Editor CIRCULATION Circulation Manager Product Manager
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Francois Malan 021 406 2376 Nikki Ruttiman 011 713 9147 Andile Nkosi 021 406 2257
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Published by Media24, 40 Heerengracht, Cape Town, 8001. Tel: 021 406 2121
CEO: Media24 Ishmet Davidson • CEO: Media24 Print Media Rika Swart GM: Media24 Lifestyle Minette Ferreira Head of Finance: Media24 Lifestyle Jameelah Conway CMO Media24 Lifestyle Nerisa Coetzee
200+
easy weekdayy meals We’ve got supper sorted! Johané Neilson
Copyright Media24. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without the prior written permission of the publisher. While reasonable precautions have been taken to ensure the accuracy of advice and information given to readers, the editor, proprietors and publishers cannot accept responsibility for any damages or inconvenience that may arise therefrom. Home has the right to make alterations to any material submitted, and cannot be held responsible for the loss of or damage to any material submitted for publication. All prices stated are subject to change and may vary from store to store; retail prices in-store should be considered the final confirmed amount.
your space Write to us at Home, Readers’ Letters, PO Box 1802, Cape Town 8000; email editor@homemag.co.za, fax 021 408 3046, and join our Facebook group (facebook.com/homemag) or follow us on Instagram @TuisHomeMag. When submitting a letter, please include your full name and the town in which you live.
IN SHORT
Time to reflect
Monique van Deventer of Hilton, KZN writes Since we bought our 10ha ‘fixer-upper’ smallholding six years ago, we’ve had plans drawn up and shelved, then redrawn and passed – and now we’ve canned the whole design and gone back to the drawing board for something more modest and affordable. In January, my husband left to work abroad for six weeks and I spent a lot of time on my New Year’s resolution to declutter and surprise him by repainting the inside of the house and learning to use a drill. I also watched a documentary on minimalism and while I’m not aiming to live in a beautiful ‘box’ like Christiaan Greyling (deserving winner of your 2019 Fix it with Flair Innovation category), I reflected on this statement: “Living more deliberately with less”. We’re modest people at heart and our over-budget renovation plan was putting
huge financial strain on my husband and, if I’m honest, on our marriage. Ultimately, I decided that I don’t want to live in a beautiful house with an absent husband who is always away, trying to pay for it. I relooked our core values as a family. I remember writing notes like: Who are we pleasing? What are our family values? We want to teach our children what’s really important in life! Create our space to fit our lives! Live responsibly (the smaller, the better). Re-examine what it means to be successful. In short, we’ve now decided to go with a plan that’s a third of the size of the original one but will give us just what we need – and we’re excited. When we told our two daughters that we weren’t building the big house but a much smaller version, my 14-year-old said: “Mom, I’m so pleased. I think we would have been lonely in that big house!”
Things I missed
Steve Lombard of Cape Town writes With nothing to read during lockdown, I dug out old copies of Home. How lovely it was to discover all the articles I’d previously overlooked. I found Karin Brynard’s ‘Cathedrals of Europe’ very interesting and I was in awe of the Mirtehof garden in Prince Albert. I also admired the home built at Gifberg in the Cederberg and that dream home on the island of Lesbos took me back to my years of travelling in Greece. Now that I know what I missed before, I’ll ensure that go through each copy several times to avoid any oversight in the future. Thank you!
Kennel art
an Botes of Klerksdorp writes After the death of our
eloved pooch Wilson, his empty kennel reminded us so uch of him and we really longed for him. I decided to repurpose the wood from the kennel. took it apart, cut the planks shorter and then drew and ainted characters on them. I sealed each artwork and ttached some rope for hanging them up. The plan is to give them to friends and family as irthday gifts so that Wilson’s kennel can also bring joy to thers. Rest in peace my sweet doggie!
I couldn’t believe my eyes when I saw the latest issue of Home on the shelf as I was getting my essential goodies during lockdown. I wanted to shout out “eventually!” as Home is now on my essential goods list. I tried to get a copy just before lockdown but was disappointed when I couldn’t find one. I comforted myself by looking at older issues, keeping busy with baking, gardening and decorating. One of my decorating pleasures was layering my bed with throws and cushions in pillowcases embroidered by my great-grandmother. In fact, these pillowcases were given to my parents as a wedding gift almost 50 years ago! – Henrietta Holman, Johannesburg I’ve been buying your magazine since 2010 when I moved into my own tiny flat as a post-grad student. I couldn’t afford to do much more than buy a few pot plants and a scatter cushion. However, Home became my monthly inspiration fix. For years, I filed the images I loved in sections labelled ‘Dream Kitchen’, ‘Dream Patio’ etc. Today, I sit in my own home in Melville, which my partner and I spent two years renovating, and I’ve been putting my 10 years’ worth of ideas to use. Thanks for creating a beautiful, accessible magazine that I adore. You are one of my longest-standing relationships! – Kerry Hibberd, Johannesburg The writer of the winning letter gets a Glad hamper worth R500! Glad has plenty of good ideas to make your life easier! Whether you’re taking steps to reduce waste or to better protect your food to keep it fresh, Glad is ready to help. The next time you have supper leftovers or a delicious cake that needs to keep a little longer, use Glad Sandwich Bags to seal in the freshness so you can enjoy it later. Simple and convenient! Visit glad.co.za for more information and follow GLAD South Africa on Facebook.
WIN!
The editor reserves the right to edit letters at his discretion.
WINNING LETTER
Send décor and lifestyle news to news@homemag.co.za.
what’s new
Compiled by Shané Barnard
CREATE, INNOVATE! WHO Kendall Giles WHERE Cape Town BUSINESS Keniken HER WORK Kendall Giles is the creative mind behind this contemporary collection of artisanal table linen hand-screened onto 100% cotton fabrics. Inspired by the exquisite fauna and flora of the Cape, the designs feature an array of proteas, pincushions, bees and sunbirds, amongst others, all printed on colourways that include black, moss-green, grey, gold on black and black on natural. The range includes napkins in sets of four, table runners, tablecloths, tea towels and aprons. Kendall recently expanded her collection and introduced a range of ceramic accessories incorporating her unique designs, as well as purses, wine carriers and multipurpose soft pots ideal for pot plants and herbs. Go to keniken.co.za for details.
A SIMPLE SOLUTION
The new Simply Stored range from @home will help you get organised and stay organised! Declutter your living space with natural woven baskets, keep your kitchen fuss-free with stackable pantry and fridge organisers or create calm in the bedroom and bathroom with cedarwood hangers and cosmetic organisers. View the full range at home.co.za.
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In need of new scatters?
Knus offers a range of cushion covers featuring a handembroidered design created with a punch needle technique. Made from 100% cotton twine, they’re available in a range of colours and designs, and feature a natural colour backing. Take a look at knus.co. 1 Punch Needle Pattern 4 scatter cover (40 x 30cm) R615 2 Terracotta Punch Needle Ndebele 1 scatter 30 ) R440 cover (50 x 30cm)
O OFF THE SHELF
Inspired by the Cape floral kingdom, Babylonstoren’s new range of wild fynbos rugs (200 x 200cm, R8 500 each) brings the outdoorrs inside. With its unique wild fynbos design, this rug will add warmth and vibrancy to any room. Browse online at shop. babylonstoren.com.
H Holly Wood Kitchens and Furniture has launched an online store where you can order some of their most popular designs, including kitchen p cabinets, vanities, storage cupboards, desks, seating and th heir much-loved butcher’s block. The website allows customers to T enjoy the Holly Wood experience by offering custom options in colours, toops and sizes. We love the Scandi Oak Display Cupboard (2 100 x O 6 600mm; R13 230) and the Solid Oak Stool with Back (R2 806). O V Visit hollywoodfurniture.co.za. >>
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The new Esala range from Scion is a celebration of joyous colour and a fusion of patterns, motifs and semi-plains. We love the Padukka wallpaper (52 x 1 005cm; R1 641/ roll) with its pops of bright colour, available in Flamenco, Tangerine and Twilight (pictured). Find it at St Leger & Viney; visit stleger.co.za.
Artisanal Spanish Mali glassware (small) R250, Haus
Made from solid ash wood with velvet upholstered cushions, this occasional chair (900 x 900 x 750mm; R12 500) from Meuble Fine Furniture is the perfect snuggle spot on a cold winter’s day. Take a look at meuble.store.
Kia velvet single ottoman in Forest Green (38cm) R199, Decofurn
Keep your firewood neat and tidy with these stylish solutions: 1 Leather wood carrier (400 x 400 x 450mm) R550, Incanda 2 Eva Solo log holder (62cm D) R1 469, Yuppiechef 3 Arcade steel log holder R663, Leroy Merlin
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3 Wallroom’s floating wall-mounted TV units provide a sleek backdrop for your TV and a practical solution when it comes to hiding unsightly cables and brackets. All designs (from R6 450) are available in a wood veneer or engineered Melawood, and in a variety of colours and drawer/shelf combinations. Go to wallroom.co.za.
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what’s new
Décor buys under R300
Fine fabrics 1
Statue Eagle Pose in polyresin (12 x 28cm) R299, @home Ribbed panel rust planter (small) R99.99, MRP Home
Ambient Light LED lamps R299 each, Woolworths Glass vase with brass top (10.5 x 30cm) R249, @home
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Protea scatter cushion R119, Sheet Street
Mini succulent in metallic diamond pot R119.99, MRP Home
Ceramic cut-out lantern (18.7cm) R250, Woolworths
Matisse hexagonal glass mosaic tiles (290 x 350mm) R79.90/sheet, CTM
Inspired by traditional African indigo dyeing techniques, these gorgeous 100% cotton fabrics (R250/m) from Design Team will bring a fresh feel to your living spaces: 1 Indigo Pebble 2 Indigo Spine 3 Indigo Star
STOCKISTS @home 0860 834 834, home.co.za CTM 0800 010 810, ctm.co.za Decofurn 087 740 1800, decofurnsa.co.za Design Team designteamfabrics.co.za Haus 0860 437 839, hertexhaus.co.za Incanda 021 863 1965, incanda.co.za Leroy Merlin 010 493 8000, leroymerlin.co.za MRP Home 0800 212 535, mrphome.com Sheet Street 0800 212 535, sheetstreet.com Yuppiechef 021 702 4969, yuppiechef.com Woolworths 0860 022 002, woolworths.co.za
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fresh ideas
Rack it up! A special wine collection deserves its own space in which to age gracefully... By Suné Esterhuizen and Johané Neilson Photographs Francois Oberholster and Henrique Wilding • Styling Marian van Wyk
Hive of activity This contemporary wine rack in Jackie and Danielle Uitenweerde’s home in Somerset West immediately catches the eye. Jackie is the owner of Design11, a company that laser-cuts decorative steel screens and structures for indoors and outdoors, and he conceptualised this design himself. The rack, inspired by the hexagonal cells of honeycomb, was cut from steel and then powder-coated in a soft golden colour. Visiting friends loved the rack so much that it has become part of the Design11 range. Known as The Hive, it is available in a variety of colours.
Paint colour
Midas Earthcoat Pencil Lead
Basket from Basketly; plant from Garden Cafe
Keep it cool
Hans and Charlene Nieuwoudt made quite a few changes after moving into their home in Die Boord, Stellenbosch about five years ago. This space, originally part of the kitchen, is now partly an entrance hall and partly the vinotique – a room that provides the optimal conditions for storing and aging wine. Exposed bricks and the original raw cement floor enhance the authentic wine cellar atmosphere.
Hans built the shelves from plywood and edged them with 44mm cover strips to keep the bottles in place. The vinotique has its own air conditioner which keeps the temperature constant at 16°C; for insulation, the cavity walls were filled with 70mm IsoBoard. The Nieuwoudts love the special place they’ve created for their unique collection. “Hans cherishes his range of Meerlust Rubicons; I also have wines from 2003 and 2005, the years in which my children were born,” says Charlene.
The focal wall is clad with authentic Karoo slate. “It’s my nod to the Karoo, where I was born,” explains Charlene. A fireplace enhances the cosy ambience.
Rug from Rug & Kelim Gallery; vineyard basket from Agrimark; slate from Mazista; fireplace from Fire Science
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fresh ideas
Bar none
Who would have thought that this home bar was once part of a tandem driveway? Designer Lara Myerson of Camps Bay, Cape Town created this cosy spot as a multifunctional space in which to store wine and raise a glass (or two). “I’ve always loved the idea of having a little wine cellar; it’s a warm and comfortable room that no one ever wants to leave,” says Lara. The textures of wood, exposed brickwork, glass and cement all add to the ambience. The panels under the counter are made from various pieces of wood salvaged from the original renovation; they’ve been colour-washed to create a bespoke look for a fraction of the cost. The rest of the features are the handiwork of architect Haydn Ellis of Ellis Associates Architects and Lara herself.
CONTACTS AND STOCKISTS Agrimark myagrimark.co.za Basketly 087 012 5009, basketly.co.za Design11 082 823 6610, design11.co.za Ellis Associates Architects 021 422 2824, ellisassociatesarchitects.com Fire Science 082 215 1333, firescience.co.za Garden Cafe 082 783 7207 Hanga Steel 072 559 4434 Lara Myerson Designs 082 265 8941, facebook.com/laramyersondesigns Mazista 011 998 2600, mazista.co.za Rug & Kelim Gallery 083 604 1059
The perfect fit Serial renovators Kelly and Jonathan Croeser of Fish Hoek wanted a centre island in their new kitchen but a tight budget didn’t allow for a custom-made solid wooden piece. Kelly decided instead to upcycle a large double-sided imbuia office desk she found on Facebook Marketplace. “I was confident that once adapted the desk would work and at the same time add a quirky touch to the space,” explains Kelly. First of all, the gap in the middle of the desk was boxed in to Bricks from old demolished walls were re-used to create a lovely feature wall.
accommodate a gas hob and oven but that left an unused space at the back of the oven that was not quite deep enough for a cupboard. Kelly decided to turn this into wine storage with an old wine rack found at a local charity shop. “It was the perfect fit,” says Kelly. The back panel had to be insulated with Rhinoboard to control the heat emanating from the oven so as not to spoil the wine. In the end, their DIY kitchen island ended up costing a fraction of the price of a new one – and now the wine is always close at hand! The desk was lower than the average height of an island, so Kelly and Jonathan simply raised its original top, and then sanded it and sealed it with Novathane Polyurethane Matt Varnish.
Decorative cast-iron brackets by Hanga Steel
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Colour was introduced in the garden with red, yellow, pink and grey accented areas. Different textures in the form of agaves, black mondo grass, dark green crassulas, arums and firesticks create surprise and interest. The larger rocks in the background, sourced from Rickety Bridge Winery, weigh about 10 tons each and were brought in by mobile crane.
Spectacular Thanks to clever design, this home consisting of interconnected barns makes the most of its surroundings with views to take your breath away. By Beatrice Moore-Nöthnagel • Photographs Francois Oberholster • Styling Marian van Wyk
reader home WHO LIVES HERE? Roy and Elise Parkhurst WHERE Fransche Hoek Agricultural Estate, Franschhoek SIZE 440m²
Elise has been collecting beautiful glass vases for many years; the roses are from her neighbour’s garden. The chimneybreast is finished with Earthcote Pandomo, a resin-based stucco plaster that gives it a polished, smooth-as-glass look. Finish by Screed Worx; fireplace from Décor Fires
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reader home
Different textures were incorporated throughout the house; at the entrance, a rough, brushed sand effect on the wall creates a lovely backdrop for artworks. The rug was bought at an auction in Stellenbosch.
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estled between the vineyards just under the Franschhoek Pass and boasting the most majestic views of the imposing Drakenstein Mountains and the small town below, you’ll find Roy and Elise Parkhurst’s home. And what a dreamy space it is… Initially, they planned a traditional H-shape home but in the end they opted for a house with a simple, easy flow – and a view from every window to make the most of their dramatic surroundings. When Roy and Elise bought their plot in the Fransche Hoek Agricultural Estate in 2007, they were relative ‘pioneers’ on this 100ha working farm with its olive trees, vineyards and abundance of unspoilt fynbos and nature trails. Located in the ‘farm werf’ section of the estate, their house design was required to harmonise with the architectural vernacular of historic Franschhoek. “We’d fallen in love with the use of connected barns,” says Roy, a first-time owner-builder. “This led us to choose a far more modern interpretation of the vernacular, using four interlinked barns and creating an open, industrial feel incorporating ‘raw’ elements.” The Parkhursts moved into their home at the end of 2017; the building process was drawn out over 18 months as a result of rain. “The design has worked well – in fact, beyond our expectations,” says Roy. “There’s a wonderful sense of movement between the spaces, while the interconnected barns create interest and form distinct areas,” adds Elise. “We enjoy the open space and privacy, while blending the lines between the interior and exterior.” >>
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Despite the height and size of the space, the open-plan living and dining room has a warm, cosy feeling thanks to the use of colourful rugs and richly textured upholstery. Upholstery fabric from Fabric Centre
Did you know?
Elise and Roy’s fireplace is newly built but you can also install a freestanding stove in an existing fireplace, says Carli Adendorff of Décor Fires. “To prevent heat being lost through the chimney, and cold air from entering your room, you need to install a block-off plate a short way up the chimney above the fireplace. It has no impact on the heat output of the fireplace. Remember that about 60% of the heat from the stove is lost through the glass – the larger the window, the hotter the fireplace will make the room.”
The chandeliers, previously gold with crystals, were stripped and painted a matte white to suit the farm-style look and feel of the home.
There’s no can’t or shouldn’t with colour combinations! – Elise
reader home The shabby-chic furniture on the stoep is mostly from the couple’s previous home in Kloof, KwaZulu-Natal. Elise says the stoep is a work in progress! Table from Odds & Ends; grey chairs from Block & Chisel
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The 1.2 x 2.8m island boasts drawers on one side for crockery, serving dishes, cutlery and tablecloths, while a sink, dishwasher and bar fridge are housed on the other side. Honed black Zimbabwean granite and grey quartz stone were used for the countertops, while bleached oak softens the black cupboards. Kitchen by Nelson Baardman Houtwerke; floors by Screed Worx
Farm-style appeal To tie in with the industrial barn-style look, careful consideration was given to the finishes, ranging from black aluminium doors with large framed panes to the very high ceilings with I-beams in three of the barns. Screed floors throughout the house, including the bedrooms and bathrooms, add to the farm style. Thanks to IsoBoard insulation under the floors as well as in the walls and ceilings, the temperature range is effectively moderated. “In hot weather, the screed is nice and cool,” says Elise. “In cold weather, strategically placed rugs work well, while the fireplace heats up the large bricked chimney that retains heat for the living area. For ‘emergencies’ we installed underfloor heating in all the bathrooms. It has a cork underlay to make it more energy-efficient.” Says Roy: “We were impressed by how many good contractors we had and so hope that their businesses pull through after the severe Covid-19 disruption. Their skills are so important for our country. We’re very happy to still be on good terms with all those involved in our build.” >>
Stoep and garden While the stoep is a decent 66m², when the stacking doors between the living area and stoep are opened, the two zones create a combined space of 150m² that’s open to a panoramic view of the Franschhoek Valley. “This makes everyone feel part of the action in the pool or in the kitchen,” says Roy. “It’s also a great space in which our three young grandchildren can test their bike skills!” While the north-west-facing stoep offers incredible sunset views and winter warmth, it also gets its share of the winter rain and wind. “Two large motorised blinds (5 x 3.6m each) provide shade and weather protection, except in extreme north-westerly wind conditions when the anemometer automatically lifts them to prevent damage,” explains Roy. “We chose these blinds over a fixed structure for ease of operation and because they enhance a sense of openness.”
The swimming pool is reminiscent of a Cape farm pond with its low walls and dark finish inside. Garden advice from Henk Scholtz Landscaping, Pietman Diener Landscaping and Two P’s in a Pod Landscaping; stoep blinds from Wonder Blinds
In the garden, Roy and Elise opted for mainly indigenous waterwise plants mixed with fynbos and succulents. “We consulted with a couple of well-known local landscapers,” says Elise. “One suggested a basic layout and planting plan and the other advised us on how to work on different levels. Another Cape Town landscaper gave us many other tips. They all kindly shared lots of spekboom, succulents and other cuttings.” Then it was Elise’s responsibility to source other plants, rocks and labour. In addition to citrus and pomegranate trees, there are quite a few olive trees – the couple undertook their first oil-pressing in May. “We love how the garden is starting to come together and the range of grasses, fynbos and succulents set between the huge feature rocks,” says Roy. >>
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Carport En suite Garage
Bedroom
Entrance forum
Bedroom
Kitchen
Bedroom
Dining
Scullery
Stoep
Pool
Living
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The wood in the main bedroom has been left unpainted to create a natural colour scheme with splashes of colour. Cupboard from Velvet Home & Living
On the décor When it comes to their home’s décor, Roy can vouch for Elise’s creative, colourful personality! “Her artistic side is always busy – painting, sewing, knitting, quilting and decorating,” he says with a smile. “Her intuitive use of colour is amazing.” Elise loves to combine checks, stripes and plain or floral fabrics as seen in the bedrooms. She describes her décor style as modern eclectic, successfully mixing old and new. She has kept to a grey-and-black theme to create a neutral background, which allows her to use just about any colour with it. “I’m a total devotee of Tricia Guild and her Designers Guild,” says Elise. “She inspired me to be bold when it comes to colour and design. Fortunately, Roy also loves colour and the way I push boundaries.”
The couple has an impressive collection of rugs which they’ve been collecting since the ’90s – some were gifts from friends while others were found at antique and second-hand furniture stores. Attention is given to the finest details, like a single rose in a charming vase. “I must have colour and flowers in my home,” insists Elise. “They create vibrancy and positive energy. I’ve collected vases from here, there and everywhere. I even have a few treasured Art Deco vases.” Elise admits that she is a compulsive collector. “I have a large Harlequin set of teacups, saucers and plates. And please don’t ask my husband about my fabric collection!” >>
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[ ELISE’S TOP COLOUR TIPS ]
• Choose one of your favourites then add the complementary shade opposite it on the colour wheel. For example, to complement the pink couch in our lounge I used green on the other couch (see page 19). For the cushions, I used split complementary colours, violet and yellow; these are the colours on either side of pink and green on the wheel. Trust the colour wheel! • A monochromatic scheme is often used in houses, as it’s a safe bet and much easier to work with than colour. However, always add a splash of colour in the form of cushions, vases and a patterned or colourful rug. • Mix colours and textures. I’ve used linen and velvet together – I really love the feel of different textures on a couch, for example. Rugs add richness to a room and pull the look together. • You can add interest by painting your walls in an attractive colour. Often, one painted wall is enough to give a room character. The wall colour then dictates the contrasting colours you will use, such as the throw on our bed made from Designers Guild fabric which is opposite to the green on the colour wheel.
The original building plans were adapted to make space for a striking 3.7m-tall door from Argentina that leads to the main en-suite bathroom. It features original wavy glass and various layers of paint. The green of the wall is repeated in the chair, throw and duvet cover. A floral rug pulls the chair and table together (opposite), while also echoing the greens. Door from Onsite Gallery; bed from Velvet Home & Living
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[ AGRICULTURAL ESTATES ]
The Parkhursts chose an agricultural estate because of its mountainside surroundings, low density (93 erven on 100ha) and high security. According to estate agents Lynette Schoeman and Doug Gurr of Pam Golding Properties, there are pros and cons to living in such an environment: Pros • A sense of space. • Excellent security with automated access control complemented by 24-hour security guards. • Homeowners have access to fantastic walks and trails all within the convenience and comfort of the development. • A picturesque atmosphere complemented by vineyards and olive groves or horse stables and paddocks. • Some estates produce and offer owners estate wine, if located on a wine farm. • Some have facilities such as communal swimming pools, tennis courts or even a clubhouse. • Supreme privacy.
Cons • Some estates are located a few kilometres out of town – which means planning your trips to the CBD. • There will be certain rules and regulations to abide by. • Design restrictions and architectural guidelines may influence the level of uniformity amongst the houses. • Levies can be higher than average. Owners of homes in agricultural estates pay a levy to the Homeowners’ Association that manages the estate. This pays for security, which is often around the clock; the maintenance of roads, boundary fences and the common areas; and management of agriculture on the development.
Towel from Mungo
28 home August 2020
Construction by Patson Van Willingh Bouers; structural engineering by Frame Group Civil Engineers; Architecture by A3D Architects
Tiles from Tile Africa
By incorporating a dressing room into one large bathroom (above and left), space was created for an island (left). Black 3D tiles in the guest bathroom (above right) create a bold, interesting look. Elise was set on drawing a mural in the guest loo (right) but time ran out so she sourced a monochromatic Shutterstock image from which Orms created striking wallpaper.
STOCKISTS A3D Architects 021 872 8066, a3d.co.za Block & Chisel 080 012 7337, blockandchisel.co.za Décor Fires 021 872 9147, decorfires.co.za Fabric Centre 021 851 5086, fabric-centre.co.za Frame Group Civil Engineers 021 872 4436, framegroup.co.za Henk Scholtz Landscaping 082 570 3495, henkscholtz.net Mungo 044 533 1395, mungo.co.za Nelson Baardman Houtwerke 084 690 5454 Odds & Ends 021 851 8267, facebook.com/oddsandendsantiquefurniture Onsite Gallery 021 462 1357, onsitegallery.co.za Orms 021 465 3573, ormsdirect.co.za Patson Van Willingh Bouers 082 807 0918 Pietman Diener Landscaping 072 376 5632 Screed Worx 083 571 7113, screedworx.co.za Tile Africa 011 455 6061, tileafrica.co.za Two P’s in a Pod Landscaping 083 564 0686, twopeasinapod.co.za Velvet Home & Living 044 873 0381, velvethomeandliving.com Wonder Blinds 021 883 9111, wonder-blinds.co.za
hills far away
Over the and
Gorgeous views of the iconic Melville Koppies in Johannesburg make this renovated home a welcome escape from bustling city life. By Dina Venter • Photographs Elza Cooper Styling Amanda van Wyngaardt
With its epic views of the so-called Jo’burg parks, it’s hard to believe that this home is in the heart of the city. On a neighbouring property, an original farm windmill is a reminder of Johannesburg’s agrarian history.
WHO LIVES HERE? James Diack, his partner Diane Lecluse, and their dogs Luke, Dali and Lolita WHERE Melville Ridge, Johannesburg SIZE 215m²
To make the most of the home’s proportions, built-in book nooks were installed in the living room. “Since I have a bit of a cookbook obsession, this proved the perfect solution to limited floor space,” says James. He bought the painting at Rosebank Art & Craft Market. >> Coffee table custom made at Brightside Farm; soft furnishings by Paraphernalia Upholsterers
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James put a drinks trolley in a corner between the living room and stoep so guests can grab a drink when moving between the kitchen and the outdoor entertainment areas. The coatrack was a second-hand find.
A
fter his first viewing of an old semi-detached house situated on the top of Melville Ridge in Johannesburg, James Diack knew that despite its dilapidated appearance, it could be transformed into something special. The stand has such glorious views of the Melville Koppies that it’s hard to believe the bright lights of a vibrant suburb are just a stone’s throw away. “I loved the idea that I would be able to walk to the local bakery and our favourite restaurant or pub down the road – Melville has such an international feel,” muses James. Not keen on an overlarge home requiring a lot of upkeep, James was nonetheless drawn to the size of the property. “I wanted something between a house and a loft; not too big but with room for my dogs and enough space in which to entertain.” With his sights set on this little gem, James took the leap and made the purchase towards the end of 2009. Luckily, he knew someone who would be able to turn the rabbit warren of separate rooms into an open and inviting home: his mother Janet has a knack for decorating without breaking the bank. James grew up in the beautiful spaces she created – the family home in Northcliff, their beach house in Annerley on the South Coast and Brightside Farm in Magaliesberg – and had no doubt that she was up to the challenge.
32 home August 2020
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Opening up
In the TV room (left), Earthcote’s textured Fever Tree Green creates a backdrop for a classic grey sofa designed and made by Paraphernalia Upholsterers; the throw belonged to James’s grandmother. Coffee tables from Superbalist
Janet is passionate about farming and in partnership with her son James, a successful chef, she manages Brightside Farm which supplies the Johannesburg eateries he owns with 95% of their ingredients. Brightside has also invested in the local Magaliesberg community for more than 30 years, teaching people construction skills such as building and welding. This meant that they could be employed to help build and furnish James’s various restaurants and, when the time came, Janet could put them to work renovating her son’s new house. James wanted the main open-plan space to be bright and airy with large windows drawing focus on the surroundings. “I also wanted the palette and wall and floor finishes in various textures to reflect the hues of the Melville Koppies,” he explains.
As food plays a big role in bringing the important people in his life together, the kitchen had to form a central part of the layout; James was keen on creating a space where he can cook while also entertaining guests. The plan was to keep the shell of the house and slightly adjust the indoor footprint to improve the flow. With Janet at the helm, the construction workers knocked out walls surrounding the kitchen, opening up the space for an open-plan kitchen, living- and dining room setup. A facebrick kitchen counter with concrete lintels and a cement top was installed to add texture. Combined with exposed copper piping, it gives the space a subtle industrial look. Because the small kitchen didn’t allow for a separate scullery, Janet added a facebrick extension to the existing wall to hide the sink and washing machine. >>
Natural light streams into the dining area through well-positioned skylights. The dining table is an old South African Rail Services bench, and James collected and restored the globe chairs over time. For the flooring throughout the house, he opted for a fresh cast concrete slab floated over with a cement stain. Pendants from Amatuli
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The facebrick kitchen counter stands out against the dark Earthcote Pandomo wall. Instead of a splashback behind the stove, James and Janet opted for a simple stainless-steel plate. Checkerboard tiles add a touch of character. Although the kitchen is small, the layout is practical and well planned with plenty of space for James’s cookware and crockery collection. Ghost counter stools from Kartell
Paint colour
Earthcote Pandomo Black Cat
A chef by trade, it was important for James to have a dedicated space for chopping. An imported butcher’s block was built into the counter above the wicker drawers.
Paint colour
Earthcote Pandomo Vuvuzela Clay
Attention to detail Extending the simplicity of the cement flooring, Janet introduced a similar swirly, veined look on the walls – Earthcote Pandomo Black Cat in the kitchen and Vuvuzela Clay in the adjoining dining- and living rooms. Textured paints from Earthcote were also used to create statement walls in the TV room and two bedrooms. The construction phase took only four months, and James moved in in May 2010. Keen to put his own stamp on the home, he steered away from ready-made furniture and employed the skills of the folks at Brightside. “Every piece of furniture was either custom built or repurposed for the house. I was lucky enough to be able to have all the steelwork, from the coffee tables to our patio furniture, built out on the farm, according to my specifications.” For all the couches and soft furniture, James turned to Paraphernalia Upholstery armed with precise measurements and preselected fabrics. Over the years, he has introduced more bits and pieces, all carefully chosen based on sentimental value and unique character. In line with James and his partner Diane Lecluse’s lifestyle (Diane works as a production manager), the outdoor entertainment areas provide a welcome escape from the city. The covered stoep with its terracotta tiles is a cool sanctuary in summer, while the outdoor dining area at the bottom of the garden is the ideal spot for entertaining (see page 38). “Sitting under the bougainvillea-covered arch, you actually don’t feel like you’re in the heart of Jo’burg,” says James. Installed by Pappa’z Oven’z in 2015, the outdoor pizza oven became a much-used item during the Covid-19 lockdown. “We’ve started to use it more often – it gave us something to do when we couldn’t visit our favourite eateries,” says James. Although the couple has found a new routine in their home during these challenging times, they look forward to the opportunity to share their space with loved ones once again. “I love to entertain and find happiness in having mates around for a couple of laughs, good wine, and hopefully good food prepared in my kitchen – by far my favourite spot!” >>
James, who owns amongst others the famous il Contadino eatery in Parktown North, loves to cook and entertain at home too.
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In the main bedroom, the feature wall behind the bed creates a beautiful contrast with the mustard velvet scatter cushions. The chest is an antique piece. Headboard made by Paraphernalia Upholsterers
Paint colour
Earthcote Moerkoffie Green
36 home August 2020
Paint colour
Plascon Grey Feather
The unusual artwork was enlarged from a postcard James liked, then airbrushed and printed on a large canvas.
James bought fabric remnants at a Sullies sale and Paraphernalia Upholsterers turned them into scatter cushions for the guest bedroom.
James found the bathtub at a scrapyard and had it reconditioned to take pride of place in this bathroom. The rough plastered wall was ďŹ nished with a stark black paint, creating a beautiful backdrop for plates that James bought in Cape Town. A shelving unit from one of James’s restaurants was turned into a knick-knacks shelf and clothes rail for the guest bedroom.
On the covered stoep, James and Diane often take in the views while lounging on the steel-frame furniture he had custom made. James found an old arched window at a scrapyard and had it fitted with a mirror cut by Linden Glassworks.
Cushion fabric from Sullies
The outdoor dining area was built next to an old yellowwood tree. The black-and-white checkerboard effect was created with stoep paint.
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The house was in a bit of a state but I knew that with a few changes – and that view – it would be gold. – James
Subdivided in the ’70s, the house still has its original patterned window bars. Its foundations are laid on ancient rocks that form part of the Kaapvaal Craton.
STOCKISTS Amatuli 011 440 5065, amatuli.co.za Brightside Farm brightsidegroup.co.za Earthcote 021 447 0217/14, paintsmiths.co.za Kartell truedesign.co.za Linden Glassworks 011 782 9246, lindenglassworks.co.za Pappa’z Oven’z 071 460 9539, pizzaoven.co.za Paraphernalia Upholsterers 082 335 3745 Sullies 011 830 2834, sulliesfabrics.co.za Superbalist superbalist.com
All dressed up!
ns ea o nves ng n a cos y renova on, ar s Heidi Lund used splashes of paint and bold colour to give an old home a brand-new look.
By Beatrice Moore-Nöthnagel • Photographs Francois Oberholster • Styling Marian van Wyk
reader home Paint colour
Dulux Flamingo Fun 1
Paint colour
Plascon Banana Leaf
WHO LIVES HERE? Heidi and Peter Lund with their dogs Sweeti Pi and Buddi, cat Peanut, and a family of chickens WHERE Swellendam SIZE 150m2
The wicker furniture was painted with Woodoc 30 Exterior Polywax Sealer which was tinted with the Woodoc Colours Brights range in Orange and Full Moon, which is a white to temper the orange. Floor tiles from Langeberg TeĂŤls
August 2020
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W
hen Heidi and Peter Lund moved into what was an almost 100-year-old house in Swellendam in April 2018, they planned to change just about everything. However, after establishing that almost all the internal walls were load-bearing and the plumbing and wiring needed to be replaced, the quote for the renovation soon exceeded the original price of the house. So they decided against a major renovation and opted to “dress the old dame in a different way” by utilising paint and colour to make their new home more cosy. “After living in the house for about five months, we realised that the building was actually very solid and all that was needed was to make it comfortable for us,” says Heidi. “For the first time, I understood what it meant when people said that you should live in a house for a while before making any changes.” As an artist, colour has always had a significant influence on anything Heidi lays her hands on. “I actually see myself more as a colourist than an artist,” she says. So with the exterior of the house painted in a contemporary grey, one could almost be fooled into thinking that the interior would follow suit. However, a pink front door offers a hint as to what awaits inside. “I like a sensible grey but when you open my front door, you’ll find little jewels and pops of colour inside,” Heidi adds. “I never planned it like this – it just happened! Visitors often say they wish they could use such bright colours in their own homes, but that they would never be able to make it work.”
Strips of fabric were podged onto the tabletop and sealed with Plascon Waterbased Glazecoat Clear Matt.
42 home August 2020
Wooden cladding hides unsightly partitioning used to close off the front stoep – the Lunds love this look.
Heidi bought the artwork on the splashback specifically for its red colour; it contrasts beautifully with the turquoise mosaics. A dilapidated window was replaced with a clear glass panel and the space was fitted with shelves repurposed from an old bookcase. The glassware was collected over the years and most of the blue glass containers come from Saudi where the Lunds lived for a while.
A funky kitchen The Lunds decided not to make any structural changes but the wooden kitchen floor was completely rotten and had to be replaced. Since Heidi isn’t a big fan of white, she painted the floors turquoise with PVA paint, which was thinned down by half with water. After two coats of the PVA mixture were applied on the raw wood, the floor was sealed with three coats of Woodoc 25 Water-Borne Matt White. The walls are painted in a darkish grey, which was specially mixed. “I actually wanted a black-and-white kitchen,” says Heidi. “Peter wasn’t sure about the original dark colour I chose for the walls, so I decided to go two shades lighter, but then I wasn’t happy. The paint couldn’t be tinted because it was the wrong base. It goes to show that things are never set in stone; we just went with the colour anyway. Luckily, it works beautifully with the turquoise-andgreen colour scheme.” The sink and cupboard underneath also had to be replaced. Heidi painted the new cabinet with Annie Sloan Antibes Green, but the apple-green didn’t quite work against the turquoise mosaic tiles. Ever the colourist, she tempered the look by painting over the first coat with Annie Sloan Provence, which is more of a faded bluegreen; it was then sealed with Annie Sloan Clear Wax. “The green breaks up the darker wall colours and turquoise floor,” explains Heidi. “While the space in our kitchen is limited, it doesn’t feel cramped and it’s a fantastic area to work in.” >>
Cupboard under sink from Bespoke Designs; granite top from Du Toits Granite
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Paint colour
Dulux BG 5/F
The cabinet was painted with Creative Chalk Paint in the colour Cranberry; Annie Sloan Barcelona was used on the doors and drawers, then sealed with Annie Sloan Clear Wax.
Inspired by colour Not many people are brave enough to paint old wooden floors white, let alone a bold colour such as purple. Yet, in Heidi and Peter’s dining room a purple floor creates a magnificent base for painted furniture and artworks, mostly Heidi’s own. The Lunds ended up with about 11L of Woodoc Water-Borne Floor Matt White from a project in their previous house and decided to use it wherever they could. For the floors, they added Woodoc Colours Brights in Purple and Pink to create the exact shade that Heidi wanted. Asked to describe her décor style, Heidi laughs and says it’s “very eclectic”. “I’ve always been attracted to colour. I grew up in Tamboerskloof in Cape Town and I fondly remember the smell of my mother’s pots of Pelikan Plaka paint; she attended the Michaelis School of Fine Art. “When it comes to my own décor, I never quite know where I’m going to land up. I don’t follow a step-by-step approach – I’ve always just been inspired by colour.” >>
44 home August 2020
Paint colour
Plascon Banana Leaf
Heidi collects pretty tin items, like the star she mounted on the front of this painted kitchen cabinet.
Nests and bones that Heidi finds on her walks are put on display.
Floor tiles from Langeberg Teëls; hares on wall from Dassiesfontein Farm Stall
On the stoep
After falling in love with the pink on the front door, Heidi thought it would work just as well on their back stoep. “I love that colour so much – I would have painted the entire exterior of the house pink if I hadn’t already bought the grey paint!” she says. While she isn’t one to stick to a single theme, Heidi has featured specific colours in her décor as is evident in the pink, turquoise, green, yellow and
orange on the stoep. “The orange is new for me, but it looks great against the pink and sparks interest. “In winter, we spend most of our time on the back stoep, while in summer we enjoy the shade of the front stoep,” says Heidi. “This house is the gift that keeps on giving. The longer we’ve lived here, the more we’ve discovered and the more the house has revealed itself to us.”
Paint colour
Plascon Paris Paving
[ HEIDI’S TOP COLOUR TIPS ] • If you’re not sure which colour to use, study a favourite rug, wall hanging or picture and select one of the more subtle shades in that object to use as a highlight elsewhere. For example, a red elephant wall hanging in my dining room has a turquoise thread running through it and this inspired the turquoise walls. • Don’t be afraid to work with the colours you love – make sure these ‘echo’ throughout your home and resonate in your space. • Trust yourself! You don’t have to stay stuck in an old way of doing things – follow your instincts.
I like words and chose the greys, in part, because of sentimental reasons; Paris Paving reminded me of our 25th anniversary in Paris. The name Bovine sounds almost like divine! – Heidi
STOCKISTS Bespoke Designs 087 238 2696, bespokedesigns.co.za Dassiesfontein Farm Stall 028 214 1475, dassies.co.za Du Toits Granite 021 982 0603, dutoitsgranite.co.za Langeberg Teëls 028 514 1424, langebergteels.co.za Woodoc 0800 411 200, woodoc.com
Heidi always incorporates black and white in her work and décor as it’s a great counterpart to colour.
The bedroom is still a work in progress. “I’m thinking a dark mulberry colour for the walls – something between purple and pink!” says Heidi. The headboard is an old junkyard find that previously had a scaffolding shelf and was used as a towel rail. The Lunds love to repurpose items they like. The bed linen is from Pottery Barn in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia where the couple used to live.
Paint colour
Plascon Tribecca Corner August 2020
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Practical and stylish
KEEP COSY WITH
ISOBOARD Improve your home’s insulation with energy-efficient IsoBoard.
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soBoard offers an easy-to-install insulation solution to fit to new builds or retrofit to existing buildings. This enables your home to manage external temperature fluctuations with ease, maintaining comfortable living and working spaces for the lifetime of your building. Suitable for all the different areas in your home, this environmentally responsible thermal insulation solution is as versatile as it is effective. You’ll keep your home’s temperature steady, which means using less electricity for heating or cooling.
48 home August 2020
IsoBoard is easy to install; watch the video at homemag.co.za.
PROMOTION
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Adjacent boards interlock with tongue-and-groove edges, providing easy installation and a continuous layer of thermal insulation.
For more tips, tricks and information, visit isoboard.com, like us on facebook.com/isoboard and follow us on Twitter @isoboard.
GET IN TOUCH CAPE TOWN 021 983 1140, southsales@isoboard.com DURBAN 031 569 1800, dbnsales@isoboard.com PRETORIA 012 653 8204, northsales@isoboard.com
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fireplaces
A hearth Whether your fireplace is an open wood-burning one, a closed combustion stove or a structure in which you can also braai, make it a focal point where the whole family can get together. By Shané Barnard Photographs Francois Oberholster and Elza Cooper • Styling Marian van Wyk and Amanda van Wyngaardt
50 home August 2020
Rustic charm A brand-new fireplace was high on Winston Williams and his family’s wish list when they renovated their home in Kuils River in 2018. They entered their project in Home’s 2019 Fix it with Flair competition and we were so impressed that we simply had to share it with our readers! The fireplace takes pride of place in their open-plan living area. “It is wonderful to watch the fire and hear it crackle, even if we are in the kitchen on the other side of the room,” says Winston. The chimneybreast extends beyond ceiling height into the exposed roof beams, creating the illusion of space, while the exposed bricks lend rustic charm to the structure. Metal holders for firewood gifted by a friend; blue cushion from African Design Collective; leather ottoman from Moroccan Warehouse; stool from MRP Home
2 Cool contrast
Top to bottom If you heat your home, it makes sense to insulate it well, otherwise the warmth will be lost. That’s why the De Swarts installed an IsoBoard ceiling here. “About 40% of the heat in your home escapes through the ceiling,” says Mark Russell of Isoboard. “With ceiling insulation, your home will be up to 5% warmer in winter.”
This contemporary fireplace is a showstopper in Daphne and Stephan de Swart’s open-plan living room in Somerset West. Architect Donovan Hanekom of DH Architecture designed the space around the fireplace and its built-in bench. “We initially wanted a freestanding combustion stove but our budget wouldn’t allow for it. I’m a big fan of the design app Houzz, and that’s where I got the idea for the bench next to the open fireplace,” says Daphne. A raw cement finish goes perfectly with the industrial style of the space; a dark blue wall behind the fireplace softens the look. The bench’s backrest is just wide enough to serve as a display shelf, while there is ample storage space for wood and other items under the seat and fireplace itself. “Stephan loves to braai. He would probably braai in the house too but, so far, I’ve managed to persuade him otherwise!” >>
Paint colour
Laminin Paints Midnight Blue
Cushions from MRP Home
3 Effortless warmth After the first winter in their home in Kalk Bay, Alma Kennedy and Nico van Niekerk decided their open-plan kitchen needed a fireplace. “We wanted to heat the room in the ‘cleanest’ way possible and since we also rent the house out, we wanted to install something that works easily. That’s why we chose this Monia Bianco fireplace which works with compressed hardwood pellets,” explains Alma. Thanks to a built-in electric fan that disperses the hot air from the fireplace throughout the room, the entire space heats up quickly and the temperature of the fireplace remains constant. “It takes very little effort. You don’t have to add firewood to the fire all the time and the wood pellets last a long time,” adds Alma. She turned this corner into a focal point in the kitchen by hanging a collection of prints (purchased on holiday in Hôi An, Vietnam) in identical black frames on either side of the flue. The stainlesssteel flue bends out towards the home’s exterior. Fireplace from Italfire; pendant lamp from Illumina Lighting Solutions
[ HOW DO PELLET FIREPLACES WORK? ] “Pellet fireplaces are similar to wood-burning fireplaces,” explains Leonardo Errera of Italfire. “But instead of burning firewood, it burns compressed hardwood pellets. You control the temperature by means of a thermostat attached to the device. You simply fill the hopper (pellet storage container) with pellets and with the push of a button your fireplace is lit.” A fan called a combustion blower pulls outside air into the stove and blows out smoke and fumes through a stainless-steel flue. Another fan called a convection blower sucks cold air in the room into the stove, where it is heated, and then recirculates the hot air, helping to distribute the heat evenly. The stove will automatically use the correct number of pellets to maintain a constant temperature – all you have to do is keep the tank filled with pellets. A built-in timer will automatically shut down the fireplace at the time you choose. Pellet stoves burn very hot and clean – there’s hardly any ash left behind, compared to woodburning fireplaces. To clean the stove, you simply remove the pan at the bottom. The glass does not develop soot build-up, but rather ash which can simply be wiped away with a damp cloth. “The locally produced pellets, made from compressed sawdust and offcut wood, come in 15kg bags and are available from most reputable fireplace companies in all major towns in SA,” says Leonardo. CONTACT 021 948 3411, italfire.co.za
52 home August 2020
4 Quintessentially quaint About 24 years ago, Trix and Koos Grové came across this cast-iron stove during a “buying trip” for their antique store Napier Antiques. The stove dates from the 1800s and may even have come from England, says Trix. “The flames are visible through a door in the front, and a convenient drawer underneath catches the ash and makes cleaning easy. After lighting the fire, we simply stoke it from above. “The intricate design of the stove caught my eye when we were in Cradock. We knew right away that we would keep this gorgeous piece for our own home!” Eleven years later, when the Grovés built their house in Napier, the stove was finally given a spot in their open-plan lounge and dining room. In fact, they planned the space around this element: shelves on either side frame it almost like a work of art and besides providing a display area for vases, books and pots, they also serve as storage space for firewood. “A fireplace was the hub of the living area in all the homes we’ve lived in. We wanted it to be the same here,” Trix says. “It’s amazing how hot it makes the space. When we don’t use it for a while, the stove takes on the most beautiful rust colour but it disappears completely as soon as we light it again.” >>
WHAT’S THE RIGHT SIZE FOR A CLOSED COMBUSTION STOVE? Before you decide, you need to know the size of the room(s) you wish to heat. Calculate it like this: multiply the width of the room by its length and height – this gives you the volume in cubic metres. You will then be able to choose the right fireplace size (indicated in kilowatts). According to Morné le Roux of On Fire, you should be able to heat between 30m3 and 35m3 per kilowatt.
The stainless-steel flue bends up between two wooden beams, through the ceiling and into the roof. A small ledge on the same level as the lower shelves protects the cement floor under the stove.
August 2020
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fireplaces
5 Living on the ledge
It’s in the detail!
Andrea used subtle grey tiles to protect the concrete ledge underneath the fireplace.
When Guy and Andrea Osler converted their holiday home in Struisbaai into a permanent residence, they knew they wanted a freestanding, wood-burning fireplace as a focal point in the open-plan living- and dining room. By placing their Godin Fonteval combustion stove with its matte black flue on a ledge, the fireplace is at eye level when people are seated in the lounge area. “We initially decided to have the fireplace elevated as our youngest daughter was just two years old when we moved. But as the living space is a large area, I think the elevation also helps to heat the whole room quickly,” Andrea says. “It really keeps the space warm and cosy in winter – even the office and library upstairs are heated when it’s burning!” Firewood fills the space under the fireplace during the winter months, and in warmer months when the family uses it less frequently, Andrea likes to neatly stash logs in a couple of baskets. Fireplace from The Fireplace Studio; Malawi chairs, cushions, side table, rug, eyelet curtains and ceiling fan all sourced by Malachite Interiors
[ FOCAL FIREPLACES ] A beautiful fireplace adds character to any room and value to your home. The choice of finishes is seemingly endless – gather a few ideas you love and start the process of elimination according to what your requirements, aesthetic and budget will allow, says Shelley Gordon-Williams of Malachite Interiors. “The simplest way to make your existing fireplace a feature is to style your mantlepiece, if you have one. Play with a display of ceramic vases or a lovely pair of wooden candlesticks, for example. Use larger pieces and items don’t have to be balanced either.” Shelley says that a statement mirror above a fireplace will reflect light and make a room feel bigger. Alternatively, an artwork can introduce colour and texture. Televisions installed above a fireplace are not ideal, unless the heat generated from the fireplace is redirected away and a proper mantle is in place. The least expensive option is to paint over existing brickwork in a neutral colour; this will transform a rustic fireplace surround into a more contemporary one. Consult your local paint store as to which paint is recommended for this purpose. Incorporate a wood storage solution that makes a display of your logs – this adds to the overall effect. CONTACT 082 901 2564, malachiteinteriors.com
54 home August 2020
[ SAFETY FIRST ] Keep these tips in mind if you heat your home with a closed combustion stove, says Morné le Roux of On Fire: POSITION Make sure your closed combustion stove is far enough away from the wall (at least 100–150mm) so that it does not cause damage. The size of your fireplace will determine this distance; consult your supplier. Also note the proximity of your furniture to the fireplace. When it comes to décor, avoid having anything flammable such as wood, paper or synthetic fabrics too close to the fireplace. Vinyl tiles are actually plastic, so they are not a good choice for flooring. FLOOR PLATE On wooden floors, laminate floors or carpets, you must have a heat-resistant panel under your fireplace for safety. It can be tempered glass, granite or steel (the latter is the cheapest). Its main purpose is to protect the floor if an ember falls when adding more firewood. FLUE Freestanding closed combustion stoves can have a stainless-steel or enamel flue. Stainless-steel flues change colour as they heat up. You can, however, coat yours in heat-resistant paint. For safety, all flues in the ceiling and above the roof must consist of insulated pipes (a pipe within a pipe, with insulation between the two). This prevents condensation, which may damage your closed combustion stove in the long-run. MAINTENANCE Your fireplace must be serviced annually. The flue must be swept and the waterproofing checked. The door seal will also need to be replaced after a few years – your service provider will stock all the necessary parts. CONTACT 021 554 3473, on-fire.co.za
6 Multipurpose
Six years ago, when Jonker and Penny Winterbach renovated their home in Melkbosstrand, a new braai room with a fireplace big enough for a spit braai was part of their plans. “The braai fireplace had to be low enough so the kids can reach it when we toast marshmallows and high enough so that Jonker doesn’t bump his head when he turns the grid,” says Penny with a smile. “Of course, there had to be enough storage space for all the braai wood and it had to be at the perfect height for sitting with your feet up on the ledge – like at a Bushveld braai!” Black-and-white decorative tiles protect the vinyl floor and facilitate cleaning, and also contrast beautifully with the traditional look of the ornamental hearth. The back of the fireplace consists of brown fire bricks that were treated with a layer of dark grey roof paint. Shelves made of old Oregon pine planks from a cellar in Tulbagh provide storage space for books and ornaments. Penny refurbished an easy chair that her father discovered at a second-hand store 14 years ago. “The footstool is actually my mother-in-law’s old ball-and-claw side table; it was upholstered in matching fabric,” says Penny.
Paint colour
Dulux Night Jewels 3
Tip Tiles offer a simple way to protect the floor around your fireplace or braai and there are designs and colours to suit every style. Porcelain tiles are good heat conductors. When choosing tiles, make sure you use a tile adhesive that will not deteriorate due to the heat. Tiles from Italtile
7 A perfect match When the heat from their fireplace caused fine cracks in the wall behind it, Maryke and Clifford Roberts of Strand needed to come up with a plan that was not only practical, but also aesthetically pleasing. Their solution? Pressed-steel ceiling panels that Maryke found at Gister, an antique store in Somerset West. “We first treated the wall with heat-resistant paint but it still cracked. Then we considered tiles but we really wanted to bring in something old to give this corner more character,” she says. To protect the original Oregon pine flooring of their home, built in 1933, the couple chose a black marble protective floor plate. “The simple look of our Godin stove complements any décor style,” says Maryke. “We didn’t want the colour and design to inhibit us if we decided to change the living room sofa, carpet or wall colour later.” A black enamel flue completes the classic look.
Fireplace from On Fire
Paint colour
Dulux Grey Forest
To the left of the fireplace, a built-in bookshelf transforms this wall in the open-plan kitchen and living area into a pleasing focal point.
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fireplaces
8 Mosaic masterpiece The once boring chimneybreast in Dorette and Jannie Jooste’s home in Centurion is now a piece of art. “I’d been looking for a challenge like this for years,” Dorette says. “We’ve been living in our house for 10 years and for the past nine years I knew I wanted this wall mosaic. The fireplace is in the living room, which is the heart of our home – and that’s precisely what the red mosaic heart represents.”
Before
Paint colour
Plascon Moody Blue
Dorette embarked on her project at the end of 2018, completing the piece only a year later. “I literally planned it piece by piece, drew each one and then did the mosaic work. Sometimes weeks went by and I didn’t touch the wall. Then I’d come up with another idea and start the next piece.” She used leftover tiles from previous projects and cut them smaller with a mosaic cutter. Each image is significant: from the guitar and drums that represent the bedrooms of their children Frits (8) and Janu (7) to the footprints of their pets, Beagles Luke and Leia and cat Schmi. “There are even some bees that represent a beehive that was in the chimney for a long while when I was busy with my mosaics.” When the project was finally finished, Dorette painted the walls on either side of the fireplace a deep blue to accentuate the blue tiles in the mosaic. Now the family love spending time around their ‘new’ fireplace! Cushions from Woolworths; rug, basket and blankets from MRP Home CONTACTS AND STOCKISTS African Design Collective africandesigncollective.org; facebook.com/African Design Collective DH Architecture 021 850 0807, dharchitecture.com Gister 021 852 4827, facebook.com/gistervintagedecor Illumina Lighting Solutions 021 979 3940, illuminalighting.co.za Italfire 021 948 3411, italfire.co.za Italtile 0861 555 109, italtile.co.za Laminin Paints 021 851 0337, laminin-paints-western-cape.business.site Malachite Interiors 082 901 2564, malachiteinteriors.com Moroccan Warehouse 021 461 8318 MRP Home 0800 212 535, mrphome.com Napier Antiques 028 423 3314, facebook.com/napier.antiek On Fire 021 554 3473, on-fire.co.za The Fireplace Studio 021 712 3713, fireplacestudio.co.za Woolworths 0860 022 002, woolworths.co.za
MAY 2020 RSA R75.00 (VAT INCL
UDED) NAMIBIA N$75.00
HELL IS THIS?
FABULOUS THINGS ABOUT MENOPAUSE
THE SEX THERAPIST’S ADVICE FOR JADED COUPLES
AESTHETIC GYNAECOLOGY WOULD YOU FIX YOUR FRILLY BITS?
JEN GUNTER, THE MOST OUTSPOKEN GYNAECOLOGIST IN THE WORLD
(and sworn enemy of Gwyneth Pa 20003
ltrow)
HOW LONG CAN YOU STAY ON HRT?
Joanna Lumley & Jennifer Saun ders On the friendship of women and (dis)gracefully
PROMOTION
HEART OF OUR HOME free standing designer kitchens
w w w.milestonekitchens.co.za
The Sandy family from left to right: Dale, Robyn, Leigh, Rob and Stacey.
Thanks to Milestone Kitchens’ unique online service, this family now enjoys a stylish, streamlined space.
We spend so much time here as a family – it’s been such a blessing during lockdown. – Robyn Sandy
Before
milestonekitchens2010
A
fter 22 years, the Sandy family of KwaZuluNatal were more than ready for a kitchen update. And Milestone Kitchens were ready to assist them – online! After selecting their choice of stylish and convenient freestanding units, the Milestone Kitchens team helped the family design their kitchen layout. The fully assembled units were delivered to the Sandys’ home where the family arranged the space to perfection – all they needed was assistance from a plumber and electrician. Simple and stress-free!
MilestoneKitchens
@milest0ne_kitchens
The design team: Phumla Majola, Silvia Miles and Sabrina Miles.
For more information, visit milestonekitchens.co.za.
‘WE GOT THE MOST OUT
OF OUR GARAGE’ By Shané Barnard • Photographs Francois Oberholster Styling Carin Smith and Jani Augustyn-Goussard
Paint colour
Paint & Decor Snow
The Loofers are one of Home’s three finalists in our Declutter Competition in collaboration with Gumtree; with the help of our experts, this zone was turned into an attractive workspace! Before Shaheeda Loofer
A dedicated space for pots, plants and gardening tools is clearly demarcated by a painted green block of colour. A folding potting station made from pallets bought on Gumtree uses vertical space, which means that everything is tucked away neatly after use. Another pallet provides ample storage for smaller gardening tools and a nifty hook keeps the hosepipe in place. Copper watering can and wooden box from H&M Home; gardening tools and mint-green watering can from Builders
COMPETITION This corner of the garage, which leads off the kitchen, is now a dedicated ‘laundry’ located close to Shaheeda’s washing line outside. Home’s DIY guru Deon de Goede built a custom laundry station where the washing machine and tumble dryer are neatly tucked away under a counter that provides plenty of space for sorting and folding clean clothes. A clothes rail installed at eye level under the shelf above is convenient, while items that are used less frequently can be stored in baskets on the shelf. Rug, laundry baskets, laundry tin, large glass jar and frames from MRP Home; paint provided by Paint & Decor
Paint colour
Paint & Decor Early Bird
Paint colour
Paint & Decor Custom Mix
W
hen Shaheeda and Rediwaan Loofer moved into their home in Plumstead, Cape Town nine years ago, they immediately began renovations to convert the small three-bedroom house into a spacious family abode. This process was only completed eight years later in 2019 – and the garage was left cluttered with boxes, leftover building materials, half-empty paint tins and general chaos. “We just shut that door!” Shaheeda confesses. With the help of our declutter experts Carin Smith and Jani Augustyn-Goussard, the garage has now been transformed into a functional space where the washing machine, tumble dryer and gardening tools can take their rightful place, with enough space for a car too! The first task was to clear out all the debris and identify three working zones: a laundry, a potting station, and a storage space for tools such as rakes and brooms. A coat of white paint freshened up the garage and the various areas were then demarcated in a crisp green and blue. >>
COMPETITION
On the job Carin and Jani, also presenters on the declutter show Pak weg, pak reg on Afrikaans lifestyle channel VIA (channel 147 on DStv), searched for affordable storage solutions on Gumtree and came across a set of wooden pallets still in excellent condition – just around the corner from the Loofers’ home! The versatile pallets were used to create a wall-mounted potting station as well as storage space. Then it was time to pack everything away in its appropriate place. “It really is an incredible change; I catch myself smiling when I’m doing the laundry!” Shaheeda says. “This experience has inspired me to tackle other rooms in our home and the biggest lesson I’ve learnt is that you don’t need much to create change – you just need vision and a few quality pieces.”
THE DECLUTTER EXPERTS
and VIA presenters Leftover pallet planks were painted and the team added hooks to create additional storage against the wall and keep the floor clear of clutter.
Carin Smith
Basket and ironing board cover from MRP Home; denim apron from H&M Home
Jani AugustynGoussard
Curtains underneath the counter (left) keep the washing machine and tumble dryer out of sight, while other cleaning supplies are stashed away in a central cupboard. Another wooden pallet was installed on the wall to keep rakes and brooms stacked together. More wooden hooks provide hanging space for smaller items. Garden rake from Builders
[ ON THE BOX ] Tune in to Pak weg, pak reg on VIA (DStv channel 147) at 19:30 on Monday, 10 August to see how Shaheeda’s garage was transformed! In each episode, the team declutters a reader’s home and transforms it into a practical living space; episodes will be broadcast every Monday until 26 October. STOCKISTS Builders 0860 284 533, builders.co.za Gumtree gumtree.co.za H&M Home 0860 690 707, hm.com/za MRP Home 0800 212 535, mrphome.com Paint & Decor 021 976 0114, paintdecordiy.com
DStv Channel 147
Pak weg, pak reg Spick-and-span rooms VIA Carin and Jani’s 10 smart steps From 3 August Mondays 19:30 viatv.co.za
VIATV
viatv
Shelly Bergh
Snuggle up! Make your very own quilt for winter.
By Shelly Bergh • Photographs Francois Oberholster
QUICK PROJECT GUIDE Hard labour 2/10 Skill level 2/10 Time needed Weekend project Do it yourself for ÂąR343 (excluding printed fabric*): batting R68, sheeting R132, bias binding R23, embroidery thread R120 *printed fabric from R350/m2
64 home August 2020
Printed fabric by Smart Art; bedding from Woolworths
do it yourself
You will need SHOPPING LIST
TOOLS
• 2 x 2m printed fabric • 2 x 2m batting • 2 x 2m sheeting • 10 x skeins of embroidery thread in the same colour • 10m bias binding
• scissors • pins • water-erasable marker • plank (144mm x 22mm x 2.4m) to use as spacer and straight edge (you can use a ruler, if you prefer)
• embroidery needle • overlocker • sewing machine • iron
Get started...
1
2
1 Place the printed fabric on the batting and cut the batting to the same size as the fabric. 2 Repeat step 1 with the sheeting.
3
3 Position the batting between the printed fabric and the sheeting; the printed fabric should be right-side up. Pin the three layers together all along the edges.
4
4 Position the plank on the edge of the fabric and draw a line across the fabric with the water-erasable marker.
Continue drawing more lines across the fabric, using the plank’s width as a spacer. Do the same in the opposite direction.
5
5 Using the embroidery thread, sew basting stitches all along the lines you measured in step 4 (this is quite a time-consuming process). >> August 2020
home
65
7
6
6 Once you’re done with all the hand-stitching, use the overlocker to sew the three layers together and neaten up the edges.
8
8 Wrap the bias binding around the edge of the quilt and pin in place.
9
9 Sew the bias binding in position with a sewing machine. Tip Don’t start at a corner; rather start somewhere in the middle of a side.
11
11 Take the needle out of the fabric. Fold the bias binding around the corner of the quilt so it makes a mitred corner. Pin in place and continue sewing.
12
12 When you get back to where you started, cut the bias binding about 3cm longer. Fold a seam in it and sew in place.
Tip The watererasable lines will wash out with the first wash.
STOCKISTS Smart Art 021 447 0872, smartart.co.za Woolworths 0860 022 002, woolworths.co.za
7 Use a hot iron to press the bias binding in half.
10
10 When you get to a corner, keep sewing until you reach the edge of the quilt.
COMPETITION
T o o Champs 2020
GET BUSY WITH
TJHOKO CHAMPS! This exciting chalk paint challenge is in full swing and entries are pouring in – pick up your paintbrush and enter now.
M
ore colours, more techniques – and loads more creativity! This is what we are seeing among the evergrowing group of Tjhoko Paint enthusiasts across the country. Whether it’s old upholstered easy chairs and worn-out melamine kitchens revamped with Tjhoko’s chalk paint, or boring floors that have been given a new lease on life with Stencil of Paris, Tjhoko Paint is the paint of choice when it comes to decorative projects. And because it’s self-sealing and requires no sanding before application, transforming something old into something new and beautiful has never been easier. Show us what you’ve done and you could be crowned this year’s Tjhoko Champ. Not only that but you also stand a chance of winning fantastic prizes – and having your project featured in Home to inspire all our readers.
HOW TO ENTER 1 To enter, all you have to do is jazz something up with Tjhoko Paint, take a picture and upload it (with a before picture) to paintit.tuis.co.za. 2 Fill out the form with the details of your project and click on “submit”.
Brush stroke Freepik.com
Remember • You can enter anything from a set of napkins stencilled with Tjhoko Paint to a wardrobe intricately decorated with a layered effect – as long as you have used Tjhoko Paint products. • Entries close at midday on Thursday 17 September 2020, after which readers can vote for their favourite. The Tuis I Home team will determine the Top 10, taking into account readers’ preferences, then chalk paint guru Nadine Vosloo will select the overall winner.
Nadine Vosloo
FIRST PRIZE The winner receives: • R10 000 cash • A Tjhoko hamper to the value of R3 000 (excludes Tjhoko Paint’s new fabric and wallpaper range) • A personal master class with Tjhoko Paint expert Nadine Vosloo Terms & conditions apply
SECOND PRIZE The runner-up receives: • R3 000 cash • A Tjhoko hamper to the value of R3 000 (excludes Tjhoko Paint’s new fabric and wallpaper range) Terms & conditions apply
August 2020
home 67
Contemporary or classic? Deon shows you how to make a shelf to suit your style in just three steps. Deon de Goede
By Deon de Goede Photographs Francois Oberholster Styling Marian van Wyk
QUICK PROJECT GUIDE Hard labour 3/10 Skill level 6/10 Time needed 4 to 5 hours Make this shelf for ± R1 110: timber R980, screws R20, glue R30, sandpaper R10, wood filler R30, steel R40
68 home August 2020
PROJECT NOTES • Measure twice, so you only have to buy once. • Sand your planks beforehand. • Remember to drill pilot holes.
do it yourself
1 Trendy with steel
#
You will need
SHOPPING LIST • 22 x 69mm planed pine, cut to: two 1 540mm lengths (front) four 320mm lengths (sides) • 18mm plywood, cut to: four 1500 x 300mm shelving planks • pine wood filler • Alcolin Fast Set Glue
• 25mm square tubing, cut to: four 300mm lengths and two 400mm lengths (struts) • 25 x 3mm flat iron, about 300mm long (screw plates) • one packet 6mm x 50mm chipboard screws • 150-grit sandpaper • four 6mm x 70mm coach screws • four 8mm nylon wall plugs
TOOLS • cordless drill, 3mm and 8mm masonry drill bit • pencil • tape measure • welding machine and welding equipment • ratchet spanner
Here’s how... 1 Saw the ends of the 1 540mm front pieces at a 45° angle. Place two 1 500 x 300mm shelf planks parallel to each other; glue and screw a front piece across both (see photo 1). Saw the ‘front’ end of the 320mm side pieces at a 45° angle. Glue and screw two of the sides to each end of the plywood. Repeat the process to make a second shelf. Fill the screw holes with wood filler before sanding the shelf to a smooth finish, then varnish or paint in the finish or colour of your choice; we used Annie Sloan Dark Wax.
1
2 Drill the holes for the screw plates in the flat iron before cutting it into 60mm lengths (this makes it easier to hold). Weld one piece of 300mm square tubing at a right angle on each end of a 400mm square tubing piece. Weld one 60mm screw plate at a right angle to both 300mm ‘legs’. Allow the steel struts to cool completely before painting them black; we used Sabre Paints’ rustresistant One Can Etch Primer.
2
3
3 Mark the position of the steel struts on the wall and make sure everything is level. Drill four 8mm holes with the masonry drill bit and push the wall plugs into the holes. Screw the coach screws into the wall. Position the shelves and secure them in place by screwing the chipboard screws through the steel struts.
do it yourself
2 Timeless wood
#
You will need SHOPPING LIST • 32 x 220mm planed pine, cut to: two 700mm lengths (uprights) two 900mm planks (shelves) four 260 x 100mm lengths (struts) • pine wood filler • Alcolin Fast Set Glue • one packet 6mm x 50mm chipboard screws • 150-grit sandpaper • two 6mm x 70mm coach screws • two 8mm nylon wall plugs
TOOLS • cordless drill; 3mm and 8mm masonry drill bit • pencil • tape measure • ratchet spanner QUICK PROJECT GUIDE Hard labour 3/10 Skill level 4/10 Time needed 1 to 2 hours Make this shelf for ± R910: timber R820, screws R20, glue R30, sandpaper R10, wood filler R30
Here’s how...
1 Ceramic bowls from Nada Spencer Ceramics
1 Saw the 260 x 100mm planks at 45° in opposite directions (see sketch). Place the two 900mm shelf planks at right angles on the two 700mm shelves (see photo 1). Measure and mark where you want the shelves to go, as well as where the struts will go.
100 mm
45°
45° 260 mm
2 2 Drill pilot holes between the marks on the 700mm planks. Now place the 700mm planks on top of the 900mm shelves; glue and screw together. Turn the shelves over and screw the four struts into place.
3 3 Mark the position of the shelf on the wall and drill the holes for the wall plugs with the 8mm masonry drill bit. Push the plugs into the holes and screw the bracket into the wall with the coach screws. CONTACT AND STOCKISTS Deon de Goede 084 589 5026, deon@diydeon.co.za Nada Spencer Ceramics nadaspencerceramics.com Sabre Paints 021 931 7231, sabre.co.za
70 home August 2020
Timber supplied by Timber Connection (timberconnection.co.za)
PROMOTION
RAISE THE ROOF! Update and upgrade your home with a lick of durable Paint Master Roof Master. Like this colour?
Greys are still bang on trend. Choose a lighter hue such as Roof Master Platinum or opt for a darker grey such as Roof Master Charcoal, Roof Master Dark Charcoal, or Roof Master Black.
W
ith Paint Master Roof Master your home’s roof will look its best. Always. Formulated using only the finest pure acrylic latex, this flagship roof paint has a 10-year guarantee*. It also boasts exceptional colour and UV stability, thanks to exceptional pigment loading. Choose from 12 standard roof colours: go to paint-master.co.za, click on “ROOF” to view the palette, and start dreaming. Applied with the correct primers and according to the manufacturer’s instructions, this product will exceed your expectations. • Find a stockist near you and order your paint online at paint-master.co.za.
Did you know? Paint Master Roof Master is a new generation, all acrylic, long-life roof paint. Here’s what you can expect: • Good durability and UV-resistance – perfect for SA’s harsh climate. • High water-resistance. • Excellent adhesion and flexibility. • No-mess application properties. • It’s quick-drying – you can easily apply two coats in one day. * For best results, apply to a properly prepared substrate; see instructions on the packaging.
Roof Master Platinum
Roof Master Charcoal
Roof Master Dark Charcoal
Roof Master Black
August 2020
View the full colour range at paint-master.co.za.
home 71
advice
Email your queries to experts@homemag.co.za
Ask the experts Compiled by Shané Barnard
Need help with designing a balustrade or creating the perfect palette for your home’s exterior? You ask – we find the answers.
Step in the right direction Mary Marshall of Cape Town writes Two years ago, I renovated my cottage, including a staircase. I was inspired by a beach house in Yzerfontein with a very open flat-steel handrail, which was replicated and installed by professionals. When we applied to have the renovations approved by Council, I was told my staircase “wasn’t up to code” and that the gaps between the bars were too wide. It was a great disappointment as the custom-made balustrade cost a lot of money. I’ve seen homes with no balustrades or railing on the stairs. If I removed my balustrade completely, would I get my house approved? Nadine Naidoo of Meik Architects replies There are two ways in which you can obtain sign off through compliance. The first option is to modify the balustrade so that it’s compliant. The relevant regulation states that “a balustrade must be at least 1m high and shall not have any opening that permits a 10cm-diameter ball to pass through it”. If you inserted additional members into the balustrade so that the gaps have less than 10cm between them, the balustrade will comply – provided it is at least 1m high measured vertically from the pitch line (the imaginary line along the tip of the steps). The second option is to remove the balustrade. The regulation states that “any flight of stairs that contains more than five steps shall be provided with at least one continuous handrail extending the full length of such flight”. This is applicable to domestic residences (H3) and dwelling houses (H4). In short, if your home falls into the H3 or H4 category, you can remove the balustrade and get sign-off. Odd as it may seem, removing the non-compliant balustrade will equate to compliance. However, if you choose this option it would be advisable to have a copy of the regulation on hand to discuss with the inspector. First prize would be to modify the balustrade to obtain compliance as it’s always safer to have a balustrade than not. CONTACT meik.co.za
72 home August 2020
ASK US ON FAC EBO OK Do you have an urgent question that just can’t wait? Then join our Tuis|Home Experts group on Facebook and get help from the team, professionals and other readers.
A fresh take Doreen van der Linde of Wolmaransstad writes I’d like to paint my house and I’m considering different shades of grey for the walls and roof. Will this colour complement the style of the building? Brendan Hart of Mayat Hart Architects & Heritage Consultants replies Traditionally, original Cape Dutch buildings were painted in a limewash. This is a warm off-white colour, not necessarily the pure white we think of today, which can be quite harsh. Occasionally, some colour would be mixed into the limewash, such as a yellow ochre or even subtle shades of pink. These homes would also feature painted timber windows, not exposed wood. If you’re using greys, I’d recommend a warm grey (one with a red or yellow undertone) or even a grey with a subtle green undertone (like concrete); avoid a blue-grey or a cold grey. Paint your roof a darker grey than the walls and play with the level of contrast between the two. Or you could be daring and paint both quite dark for a contemporary look. If you want to add more interest, you can highlight the details on the gable and the door surround in a different shade; for example, you could paint the walls in a light grey and the details in white. When it comes to a modern interpretation of a traditional style such as this, you don’t have to worry about historical accuracy – so have some fun! CONTACT mayathart.com
Photograph Warren Heath/Bureaux
If you’re considering warm greys for your home’s exterior, Dulux colour consultant Palesa Ramaisa suggests the colours below for your roof and walls, plus two options for accent shades on elements such as gutters. CONTACT dulux.co.za WARM COLOURS Dulux Roofguard Abbey Lane
Dulux Elephant Tail
Roof
Accent shade: Gutters
Dulux Weatherguard Berg Cloud
Dulux Grey Fur
Main walls
Accent shade: Gutters
advice
Email your queries to experts@homemag.co.za.
Quick questions Q: Where did Sonja and Francois Nolte find the three prints in their new dining area and braai room, as featured on page 62 of your March 2020 issue? – Lesley Mocke, Witbank A: The prints on either side of the braai were second-hand finds at the Milnerton Market; the bicycle print is from Home Depot (homedepotstores.co.za).
Q: Where can I find the rug featured on page 59 of your March 2020 issue? – Denise Miller, Centurion A: The homeowner, Kay Price, bought two identical rugs at Weylandts (weylandts.co.za) and stitched them together to create the mirrored effect.
Q: Your DIY contributor Shelley Bergh used a rattan mat for her cupboard revamp on page 67 of the March 2020 issue; where can I get something like that? – Annick de Freitas, Cape Town A: She bought the rattan weave from Grindlay Fabrics (grindlay.co.za).
Q: Which paint colours did the Raubenheimers use in their living room as seen on page 45 of your March 2020 issue? – Correen Reeves, Eshowe, KZN A: The Raubenheimers mixed and matched different paints. You can try these colours from Dulux (dulux.co.za): Edamame Green, Calming Grey and Darkened Puddle.
Q: Where can I find a rug like the one on page 34 of your July 2018 issue? – Suria Bonthuys, Cape Town A: Many homeware stores have a wide selection of rugs in classic designs. Try Haus (hertexhaus.co.za), Superbalist (superbalist.com) or Morelli Rugs (morellirugs.co.za).
Q: I love the patio chair on page 38 of your May 2020 issue; where can I buy one? – Heleen Pretorius, Potchefstroom A: We’ve seen similar Acapulco chairs at Leroy Merlin (leroymerlin.co.za), Mad Chair Company (madchaircompany.co.za), Esque (esque.co.za) and Elevenpast (elevenpast.co.za).
Stash it or trash it? The power of a painting
Sivan Goren of Westdene, Johannesburg writes My partner inherited this painting, titled Hospital Patient, by Marianne Podlashuc. Can you tell us more about the artist and how much the painting is worth? Ruarc Peffers, managing director of Aspire Art Auctions, replies Dutch-born Marianne Podlashuc was a post-war painter born in 1932; she witnessed the horrors of the Nazi occupation of The Netherlands as a child during World War II, and this left an indelible impression. In her seminal publication, Art & Artists of South Africa (1983), Esmé Berman notes that Podlashuc was “possessed of a profound social consciousness and projects it in powerful, stylised images of lesser-privileged local communities”. Podlashuc came to live in South Africa in 1953. Famously, her painting titled Three Boys was used by Penguin Books as the cover image for Alan Paton’s Cry the Beloved Country. Hayden Proud has written about how her “open expression of her social conscience through her art prefigured the mood of much of the politically-motivated South African art that was produced when opposition to the apartheid government intensified in the 1970s and 1980s”.
Her work is imbued with a sense of social consciousness which would have been quite daring at the time of its production, and her awareness of what was happening around her at the time gives her subject matter a sense of expressive social realism. Most white artists painting in SA in the 1960s concentrated their efforts on abstraction and Podlashuc’s figurative work further set her apart and removed her from the mainstream. Her work was featured in an exhibition at SMAC Gallery in Stellenbosch and has been offered at auction multiple times, with prices ranging from a few thousand rands to just short of R90 000 which was achieved in 2013. She died in 2004. Her husband, Alexander Podlashuc, was also a painter. The subject matter and palette of this particular painting is a little bleak which, in turn, will have an effect on its desirability and consequent value. CIRCA 20th century VALUE Between R10 000 and R15 000 CONTACT aspireart.net August 2020
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Email your renovation to experts@homemag.co.za.
Entrance Lobby
Don’t move, improve!
Kitchen
Bought as an investment after a cheeky offer, a small run-down apartment was turned into a stylish space where the owners could put down roots. By Marian van Wyk • Photographs Francois Oberholster
All in proportion Homeowner and interior designer Wouter le Roux shares his top tips for small spaces: Lightweight furniture Opt for chairs you can ‘see through’, a sofa on legs and multi-purpose or modular pieces like nesting and over-the-sofa tables. Add height with a tall floor lamp, plants and floor-toceiling doors. More light is better Choose finishes that reflect natural light, such as flooring in a light colour or glass doors as partitions. Thanks to dimmer switches – even in the bathroom and under counters – you can create the mood you want, whether hosting a cocktail party or getting stuck into a craft project. But never mix atmospheric and task lighting! Create storage Be sure to include clever storage solutions, especially for the five ‘horrors’ of a small apartment: the mop, vacuum cleaner, ironing board, rubbish bin and large suitcases. One in, one out If you buy new shoes, an existing pair must be donated to your local shelter – there’s no room for Imelda Marcos aspirations here! The same goes for homeware and kitchenware. Dark colours If cleverly used, these can create the illusion of greater space and a luxe atmosphere, but the key is to break up the palette with bold accent colours, light tones, white borders and contrast. Plug points Pay a little extra and install a cluster of electrical sockets and USBs on either side of your couch. There should be at least one cluster in every corner of a room. This way, you avoid ugly and inconvenient extension cables. Be bold Take a few risks! Interior design should be fun and reflect your personality – you can always change the look again. Repainting or recovering something in five or 10 years isn’t going to break the bank – but do go for quality when it comes to permanent finishes.
78 home August 2020
In the living area, a rug transforms the floor into a ‘fifth wall’ by adding pattern and texture. When Wouter and Brendon couldn’t choose between two sofas at Klooftique, they merged the aesthetics of both and had this sofa custom made. Chairs and coffee table from Chair Crazy; Picasso Splash rug from Hello Charlie Interior Design Studio; floor lamp from Woltemade; scatter cushions from MRP Home
Living area
Bathroom
Bedroom
Framed by timber wall mouldings, the Eero Saarinen Tulip table and chair set takes pride of place in the living room. Wouter’s grandfather Hannes Bekker bought this 1950s design classic in Switzerland, where he lived in the 1970s, and brought it to South Africa in the 1990s. For 10-year-old Wouter it was love at first sight, and almost two decades later his grandfather gifted it to him.
A metal server is used as a TV cabinet. The artworks on the wall are hand-embroidered Chinese silk remnants, which Wouter found behind a pile of prints at a Decorex stand.
Laminated flooring in the design Krono Nevada Oak from SQM Flooring; painting by André du Toit
WHO LIVES HERE? Wouter le Roux and Brendon Foster WHERE Chelsea Village, Wynberg SIZE 67m2
eeling Novilon, a dated kitchen, a run-down bathroom and wall-to-wall chocolate-brown carpets made Wouter le Roux very happy when he first viewed this apartment in Wynberg’s vibey Chelsea Village. Others saw trouble, he saw an opportunity. “The flat had a simple yet functional layout,” explains Wouter of Hello Charlie Interior Design Studio. The bedroom and bathroom were separated from the living areas, so there was no need to demolish walls. Another bonus was an abundance of natural light, thanks to existing large windows. When Wouter and his partner Brendon Foster bought the apartment in November 2018, the intention was to rent it out permanently; however, those plans quickly changed. Brendon explains: “The penny dropped when we realised we could get a very good rental income from our bigger Rosebank apartment, where we were living at the time.” A month later, Wouter and Brendon were living in the unrenovated flat, stippled chocolate walls and all. Wouter knows the value of familiarising oneself with a space before making changes; this way, he could plan the renovation down to the finest details, like where the vacuum cleaner would be stashed when the dust had settled. Four months later, in April 2019, the builders were on site, Wouter was in temporary accommodation, and Brendon in Johannesburg for work. >>
advice
Mirror image French doors on opposite sides of the living area (left) create transition breaks, or pauses, where the entrance hall leads to the living area, and the living area to the bathroom lobby. “I made the bottom panels slightly larger with fluted glass to accentuate the height.”
Steel-framed French doors by Hello Charlie Interior Design Studio
Before For Wouter, well-planned lighting is nonnegotiable: “You can spend a fortune on the most exquisite décor and then kill it with a glaring overhead light. We have no central ceiling lights; everything is offset with dimmers and paired with floor or table lamps.” Wouter spray-painted the bunny lamp (left), which he found at MRP Home many years ago.
Side table from Chair Crazy
Kitchen cupboards and shelving by Hello Charlie Interior Design Studio; matte Rock floor tiles from SQM Flooring; Fiandre Unipepper 6mm porcelain countertops from Stonehenge Marble and Granite
The renovation Built in 1951, the apartment presented many challenges and unforeseen expenses. “The bathroom was the worst; skew walls needed straightening with layers of plaster and very old, rusted plumbing needed urgent replacement, all of which became an enormous challenge within the three-week timeline I had set,” Wouter recalls. In the living areas and bedroom, carpets were ripped out and laminated flooring in a light oak colour was installed for a seamless flow from the front door to the bedroom at the opposite end. The kitchen and bathroom got identical floor tiles. The kitchen was gutted and redesigned in black with high-gloss finishes, built-in appliances and plenty of concealed storage, not to mention open shelving with space for 40 dinner plates and so many glasses that Wouter won’t reveal the exact number. “There’s a reason for that,” he says with a laugh. “The kitchen is often put to the test when we throw parties for more than 20 people.” Wouter and Brendon are very pleased with the outcome. “We love our home; it’s incredibly comfortable. Because it’s small, we’re surrounded only by pieces we truly love! A home should be a sanctuary – and that’s what we’ve created here.” A square grid-like tile layout on any floor is a modernday no-go! Instead, use rectangular tiles (or turn squares into rectangles with a water jet cutter) and lay them in a stretcher bond pattern – this creates movement and an interesting pattern, says Wouter.
The couple and their friends had intense debates on whether or not the kitchen should be open plan. Wouter is happy that he stuck to the insights that came only after living in the unrenovated apartment: “Not only is all the usual kitchen mess ‘concealed’ but as a separate room the kitchen is now another escape in a small apartment.”
[ WOUTER’S ADVICE ON DESIGNING A SMALL KITCHEN ]
“It all depends on lifestyle!” he says. “Fortunately, appliances are getting smaller and you can squeeze quite a lot into a small space.” Here are a few things he considers to be essential: • Make space for a full-size fridge – bar fridges are for students and bars only! • Optimise counter space as far as possible – hide essential appliances behind doors and pull them out only when needed. • Optimise storage space within cupboards with items such as pull-out baskets and spice racks. • Avoid gas cookers, which expend so much heat; instead, use an induction stove which is faster, easier to clean and far more efficient. This will also blend with a slim countertop and take up less space. An eye level oven is practical as it frees up space under a counter. • Invest in high quality finishes and countertops. This will create a high-end look and since it’s a small space, you won’t break the bank with the purchase of lots of other items. • Rather than installing a double kitchen sink, use a single deep sink that saves on width space. • A kitchen is a major selling point when it comes to the value of your property – make sure the investment is worth it!
Before
Wouter combined rectangles and squares in the open steel-and-oak shelving to create focused display areas. “With some open shelves, the kitchen has become an unintended living space where we can combine books and trinkets from our travels and flea markets with everyday kitchenware.”
Before
‘I’m a hoarder, disguised as a minimalist’ Wouter has successfully combined timeless classics like his grandfather’s original 1950s Tulip table and chair set with contemporary pieces, while quirky accessories add warmth and character. “I’m partial to minimalism and clean lines, which allow your eyes to travel uninterrupted through a space. However, I do enjoy curating and displaying pieces I love. I guess I’m a hoarder disguised as a minimalist,” he confesses. Wouter used indoor plants to soften hard architectural lines. “Elements from nature add texture and pops of colour without competing with other shades in the interior,” he says. His love of dark colours for dramatic effect is evident throughout the apartment. Since the kitchen and bathroom can be seen simultaneously from the entrance hall, Wouter gave these two rooms a similar treatment in black. “The idea was to have the kitchen, which is nearest the front door, as a black starting block,” he explains. The black theme continues subtly through the living area with black highlights in light fittings, ceiling fans, metal door frames, light switches and electrical sockets, and then transitions into an almost all black bathroom. Despite his love of crisp whites and dark colours, Wouter wanted a tranquil, uniform colour for the living areas and bedroom. “The lounge has an abundance of natural light, so it seemed logical to keep this space airy and relaxed. We worked our way through numerous swatches, until one of my trade suppliers at Dekro Paints came to our rescue with the colour Shady Knoll. It has the perfect ratio of grey to olive-green, depending on how the light falls on it. >>
Equipe Spain wall tiles in the colour Moss Green from Limegreen Sourcing Solutions
The bedroom is compact and tall, slim floor lamps are used as bedside lights, keeping the pedestals clutter-free. Blinds and headboard from Hello Charlie Interior Design Studio; chartreuse throw from Hertex Haus; pedestal from Popstrukt
Paint colour
Dekro Paints Shady Knoll
With both north- and east-facing windows, UV roller blinds and block-out curtains are essential in the bedroom. The bottom half of the street-facing window was sandblasted for privacy by previous owners. The original built-in cupboards were refurbished with paint and new handles. Rug from Hertex Haus
For the entrance hall, Wouter designed laser-cut metal floating shelves. They are fixed to the wall with bolts with spacers behind them, which are concealed by books and objects. Wall painted in Dekro Paints Shady Knoll; metal shelves by Hello Charlie Interior Design Studio
[ ONCE THE DUST HAS SETTLED… ]
Artwork Instead of hanging everything at eye level (as the golden rule suggests), I find it interesting to place some artworks in a lower position: imagine a cosy corner with a chair and side table and a beautiful piece of art at eye level when seated. The same principle applies to the floor space and using a striking rug that becomes another ‘artwork’. Rugs anchor a space; they create spatial definition between dining and living areas in an open-plan room where furniture can tend to ‘float’. Proportion is key: make sure you get the right size rug for your space; it should sit under the front legs of a sofa and occasional chairs. Proportion Avoid having all the furniture and furnishings in a room in the same height, colour and style as this can make a space look dull and motionless. It’s important to feature a piece that ‘grounds’ a space – such as a large sofa. Auxiliary pieces, not necessarily in the same style, should complement the overall aesthetic. A fine balance between ‘heavy’ pieces, like a sofa and floor lamp, and ‘lighter’ pieces, like chairs and a coffee table, makes for perfect proportions in a living area. When in doubt, tape it out! Sometimes, I even cut out templates in newspaper and place them on the floor to check how much space an item will take up. I believe a technical drawing doesn’t always give you full scope on proportion and it’s sometimes a good idea to check manually.
82 home August 2020
Paint colour
Plascon Ewa
Paint colour
Plascon Antique Petal
Matte porcelain wall tiles and matte Rock shower floor tiles from SQM Flooring; Lazio vanity unit with Genova basin mixer from Continental Bathroom Supplies; mirror with LED backlight from Arkivio
Shower panel by Hello Charlie Interior Design Studio
A black palette lends a masculine feel and the illusion of space to the bathroom (above and right), where a white wall opposite the window bounces light into the room.
[ RENOVATING A RENTAL PROPERTY ]
Even though Wouter and Brendon live here permanently, they revamped the apartment with the intention to let it at some point in the future. Here are Wouter’s tips if you’d like to do the same: Size matters The benefit of a small apartment is that it’s relatively affordable to renovate the entire space to perfection without breaking the bank. The balance between rental return and your capital outlay or bond repayments is better in smaller one- or two-bedroom apartments. At the relatively lower end in Cape Town, for example a R1.5 million property, you can get a rental income of about R15 000 per month for a beautiful apartment. However, when applying the same ratio, you are less likely to get a R40 000 monthly rental income on a R4 million house. With smaller apartments your risk is spread across a few rental properties, as opposed to one expensive house where all your eggs are in one basket. Buy ready to move in, or not? When buying a renovated property, one gets the cookie-cutter homestaged interior that appeals to everyone – think beige walls, a white kitchen and cluster mosaic tile stripes in the bathroom. Most often, you will pay a premium for a renovated property. An unrenovated ugly duckling like the one we bought, gives one the opportunity to add unique designer touches.
TOTAL R276 986
Before
Kitchen cupboards & shelves, tiles, counters, appliances, sanitary ware 117 730 Bathroom plumbing, sanitary ware, tiles, fixtures 45 071 Builder’s cost
68 335
Electrician
7 800
Floor tiles and laminate (incl. installation)
14 650
Air-conditioning (incl. installation)
18 000
Entrance hall floating shelves
5 400
STOCKISTS André du Toit AndréduToitArtandCeramics/facebook.com Arkivio arkivio.co.za Chair Crazy 021 465 9991, chaircrazy.co.za Continental Bathroom Supplies 021 511 9997, continentalplumbing.co.za Dekro Paints dekro.co.za Hello Charlie Interior Design Studio 071 879 1297 hellocharlie.co.za Hertex Haus 0860 437 839 hertexhaus.co.za Klooftique 021 424 9458, klooftique.com Limegreen Sourcing Solutions limegreenss.co.za MRP Home 0800 212 535, mrphome.com Popstrukt popstrukt.com SQM Flooring 021 713 6011, sqmflooring.co.za Stonehenge Marble and Granite 021 555 1059, stonehenge.co.za Woltemade 072 831 6871, woltemade.co.za
advice
Email your queries to pets@homemag.co.za
Animal antics Compiled by Beatrice Moore-Nöthnagel
Furry friends forever
On the lookout
Lilly and Miley keep a close watch on the neighbourhood. – Joné de Wet, Paarl
Quiet contemplation…
Rescued pup Luna is safe and warm in her new home. – Shaun and Celeste Mcturk, Springs
Cat in a hat Whatcha lookin’ at?
Don’t mess with Luka, the Yorkie/Chihuahua cross. – Mariechen Schoeman, Langebaan
Cairo is rather pleased with his winter outfit. – Danielle Botha, Thabazimbi
Q&A
When it’s an emergency! Pete van Zyl of Port Elizabeth writes
We’re planning a month-long holiday and we’ll be taking our two pooches with us. Any advice on what to pack for emergencies (we’ll be in remote places far from a vet)?
Bedtime buddies
Gus and Ivy know how to keep warm! – Megan Mathias Oosthuysen, Johannesburg
Hot product
Sleep like a log
Banksy has found the hot spot! – Sue Anthony, George
Treat your furry friends to Field+Forest’s range of flavourful wet foods (R45 per tub). With luxury choices such as Succulent Lamb, Tender Duck and Delectable Salmon, your dogs will feel like royalty! Each meal is made with real proteins, a blend of spices, and selected fruits and vegetables – all fortified with the important vitamins and nutrients. Visit fieldandforest.co.za.
Each owner whose pet is featured here wins a Dream Pod for dogs or a Kitty Castle for cats from Wagworld (wagworld.co.za). Available from leading vet and pet shops, the Dream Pod will fit in beautifully with your décor, while offering your furbaby a cosy and comfortable spot for the sweetest dreams ever. The nest-shaped Tiny Tulip bed comes with beautiful upholstery fabric on the outside, plush coral fleece on the inside and a double layer of filling to ensure extra comfort and warmth. Send your pics (at least 2MB each) and contact details to pets@homemag.co.za – you could be a win t @h ld b inner too! See competition rules on page 128.
WIN!
Dr Omar Mehtar of TAH Sitari (Somerset West) replies If you take your pets on holiday, it’s always a good idea to find out beforehand where the local vets are situated. However, some of the more common scenarios can be treated or at least managed until a vet is available: Bee-stings Dogs are naturally inquisitive and often get stung on the nose or lip. It’s usually a little painful, then itchy and then the dog’s face starts to swell up. Some dogs also break out in hives (small bumps all over the body). Most dogs can be treated with a conservative approach if it’s just one sting (versus a swarm) and the animal doesn’t have an allergic reaction. Make sure your pooch is breathing normally and is still alert. You can give pets human Allergex as an antihistamine; check with your vet what the correct dosage is for your dog before leaving home. An antihistamine will reduce the swelling and symptoms should subside about four hours after taking the medication. Small cuts and nicks Use warm water with a teaspoon of salt dissolved in it to gently clean the wound. If it is bleeding, apply pressure with cotton wool for two minutes (time it). This should stop all minor bleeding. Tail, foot and ear wounds tend to look more serious than they are when they bleed. Make sure to keep the wound clean. Vomiting and diarrhoea A full-grown adult dog can get diarrhoea and vomit after a change in their diet or if they eat garbage, or even poop. Keep a close eye on your pets when you’re in a new or unfamiliar environment: check whether they are behaving normally; are they still eating and drinking? Have Diomec paste, a prebiotic, at the ready if your pooch shows early signs of a tummy bug and make sure that your pet stays hydrated, as they can easily dehydrate. NOTE If your pet presents with excessive bleeding, breathing problems, seizures, snake bites or scorpion stings, get them to a 24-hour clinic immediately! REMEMBER It’s always a good idea to have pets checked by a vet before going on holiday. Your vet knows your pet’s history and can prescribe an emergency supply of pain medication, prebiotics, natural calming medication, and activated charcoal tablets in case of poisoning. CONTACT tah.co.za August 2020
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advice
Send garden info and queries to gardens@homemag.co.za. IT’S NOT TOO LATE!
Gardening notebook
Gillian Eva
Although August is traditionally the windiest month inland, wind is a factor in coastal gardens for most of the year.
If you didn’t prune in July, it can still be done in the first two weeks of this month. In those really cold parts of the country that experience severe frost, rather delay pruning until the last week of August or even early September.
Compiled by Gillian Eva • Photographs Francois Oberholster and supplied
Movement in the garden
Photograph Kosie Janse van Rensburg
T
here are many sounds and movements to be heard and enjoyed in a garden – in the bending of branches and in the rustling of leaves; as trees catch the first whisper of a restless wind; in swaying palm trees and tall, creaking bamboo. Ornamental grasses demand attention as they toss and ripple when the breeze moves through them, and as they shimmer in the sunshine and whisper in the moonlight. With their differing growth habits of tassels and spikes, plumes and fountains, and subtle shades of green and gold, copper and bronze, red and purple, grey and blue, ornamental grasses provide drama and interest in the landscape, adding movement among bold plant forms and static architecture. Grasses provide a habitat for insects, shelter for small wildlife and are pollinated by wind. Choose indigenous species such as Gongoni grass (Aristida junciformis) and Albertinia thatching reed (Thamnochortus insignus), or exotic Japanese silver grass (Miscanthus sinensis).
86 home August 2020
Miscanthus sinensis
Thamnochortus insignus
Aristida junciformis
Coping with wind
As a light breeze, wind in the garden is a gentle ally; as a strong wind it is a powerful adversary that causes damage. Trees creak and bend and branches come crashing down, soft and large leaves are shredded, and flower heads are snapped off. Roots are weakened when rocked by wind. Lessen the force of the wind by planting a windbreak in the form of hardy trees and shrubs. This works well when the toughest shrubs are grown along the outward line of defence to create a barrier, and less hardy shrubs are grown in front of this outer row. A solid wall is not a good choice as a windbreak as it creates turbulence, but if necessary for security, grow hardy shrubs on both sides of the wall to filter the wind. Lessen wind damage within the garden by planting hedges and shrubs that will shelter and protect. A windy patio can also be protected by enclosing it with a vine-planted trellis. Indigenous trees that withstand wind include false olive (Buddleja saligna), coast silver oak (Brachylaena discolor), karee (Searsia lancea) and yellowwood (Podocarpus henkelii). In cold winter gardens, boundary plantings of conifers help deflect wind and protect plants. The choice of plants in exposed coastal gardens is limited to those that can withstand continuous buffeting from wind and deposits from salt-laden spray. Sand olive (Dodonaea viscosa var. angustifolia), with green-tinged purple leaves, is hardy, fast-growing, wind-resistant, good for screening and stabilising sand dunes.
Dancing in the breeze
Plants that bring movement to the garden as they sway in the breeze include cosmos, fairy bell (Dierama pendulum), gaura (Oenothera lindheimeri), Japanese anemone, poppy, meadow rue (Thalictrum), white lace flower (Orlaya grandiflora) and bronze fennel (Foeniculum vulgare ‘Purpureum’).
Ground morning glory
Waterwise plant of the month
Ground morning glory
Despite its common name, the ground morning glory (Convolvulus sabatius syn. C. mauritanicus) is not an invasive plant in South Africa. Originating in Italy and North Africa, this groundcover forms a low, trailing mat of round green leaves and bears funnel-shaped lavender to violet-blue flowers in summer and autumn. It is excellent for rockeries, for spilling over low walls, or as an edging in hot sunny areas. It is also lovely in containers or hanging baskets. Once established, it is drought resistant.
Lawn spring-clean
Bronze fennel
August is the month to give your lawn some love by removing any accumulation of dry grass (thatch) with a stiff broom or rake to allow air, water and fertiliser to reach down to the roots. To further encourage healthy growth, and particularly if the ground has become compacted where there has been continuous foot traffic or the area is badly drained, aerate the soil using a garden fork. The tines of the fork should be inserted vertically, not at an angle, to avoid creating an uneven or bumpy surface. After aerating the lawn, water thoroughly before applying a lawn fertiliser. After you have applied the fertiliser, water well to dissolve any granules that may have lodged in the blades of the grass. Finally, fill any depressions in the lawn surface with sterilised compost or lawn dressing. By Kay Montgomery
Grow your own! With spring around the corner, now is the time to prepare the soil for spring and summer crops, turn the compost, wash out seed trays and sow indoors or in a warm, sheltered position.
We love succulents!
Cephalophyllum alstonii Often referred to as the ‘most beautiful’ vygie of all because of its large, brilliantly coloured blooms, Cephalophyllum alstonii is a fast-growing perennial that is extremely heat- and drought-tolerant. Low-growing and spreading (50cm–1m) it is a tough but showy groundcover. The large flowers appear from June to September, providing much-needed pollen for bees and butterflies. Endemic to the Northern Cape and Western Cape, specifically in the Ceres region of the Karoo, it is able to cope with light but not heavy frost. Different types For a wider colour range, look out for the hybrid ‘Lido’ (pictured). Flower colours include magenta, orange, purple, pink, yellow and white. It is more compact than the species, with a spread of 35cm, making it suitable for containers and hanging baskets as well. How to grow It thrives in poor, well-drained soil or in pockets of soil in rocky outcrops. Plant in a position that receives full sun in winter and partial shade in summer. Let the soil dry out between watering. Fertilise once in spring with a low-nitrogen fertiliser. Trim to keep in shape if growth gets straggly. Pinch off spent blooms to encourage new flowers. Garden uses Plant as a groundcover or use as a hardy, waterwise alternative to lawn for pavement plantings or in hot, dry areas of the garden. Common problems White scale insects can sometimes occur on the leaves; spray with Margaret Roberts Organic Insecticide to smother the insects. Do not overwater because the roots are prone to rotting. CONTACT ballstraathof.co.za
Ficus benjamina Weeping fig (Ficus benjamina) is one of the most popular indoor trees because of its graceful arching stems, glossy leaves, and compact growth habit. It can reach up to 2m but responds well to trimming. Happy in double-volume spaces, a well-lit passage or patio where it will receive bright indirect light, it needs moderate watering. Feed with a liquid fertiliser once a month in summer (light green leaves indicate a lack of nutrition). Try not to move the plant unnecessarily as it is sensitive to changes in temperature or light and will then drop its leaves. Under- or overwatering may also cause leaf drop. CONTACT plantimex.co.za
INDOOR PLANT OF THE MONTH
Build healthy soil
There is a saying: “Healthy soil grows healthy vegetables that grow healthy people”. Putting effort into enriching and aerating the soil in August will produce healthy, productive vegetables for the rest of summer. Double-digging is a time-tested method that improves fertility without affecting beneficial soil life or displacing the topsoil. It is only necessary to double-dig beds every four to five years. In-between, lightly fork in compost and topsoil. Here’s how to double-dig: • Water well the day before. • Dig the bed in sections, about 1m² at a time. Remove the top 30cm of soil, about the depth of a spade blade, and put it to one side. • Loosen but do not remove the second layer of soil to a depth of 30cm. Fork a bucket of compost (10L) into the topsoil and the subsoil. • Dig the next 1m² section. The topsoil that is removed is mixed with compost and turned into the first section. • Keep on turning the topsoil from one section into the previous section until you reach the end of the bed. • At the end of the bed, take the topsoil from the first section and mix it into the last section. • The result will be a bed that is about 15cm higher than the surrounding soil. Rake it level, removing clumps and stones. Water the bed and cover with a mulch. Your bed is now ready for sowing or planting!
advice
KITCHEN GARDEN TASKS FOR AUGUST
Aphids love brassicas; use an organic insecticide to kill them.
Boost leafy greens such as blood sorrel and cabbage with kelp fertiliser.
• Fertilise leafy winter veggies with a kelp-based plant tonic. • Loosen compacted soil around your vegetables. • Increase watering as temperatures start to rise. • Control snails with organic snail bait (Ferramol) and aphids with an organic insecticide. Swiss chard ‘Bright Lights’
Veggies to sow now Summer rainfall regions Bush/runner bean, beetroot, brinjal (sow indoors), cabbage, capsicum (sow indoors), carrot, lettuce, garden peas, radish, rhubarb, spinach, Swiss chard, tomato (sow indoors), turnip. Winter rainfall regions Beetroot, brinjal (start indoors), capsicum (start indoors), carrot, lettuce, mealie, parsnip, garden peas, radish, rhubarb, bush and trailing squash, Swiss chard, tomato, turnip. Lowveld and KwaZulu-Natal coast Asparagus, bush/runner bean, brinjal, capsicum, carrot, cucumber, mealie, melon, pumpkin, radish, bush and trailing squash, Swiss chard.
Ask
Ask JJ The sting in the fruit Johan Squires of Bloemfontein writes The fruit on my orange and lemon trees is being stung by something. In previous years, the problem was limited to the orange tree but now the lemons are also affected. Once the ‘sting’ is visible on the skin of the fruit, the orange rots soon afterwards. JJ replies Generally, citrus is not stung by fruit flies but when this does happen, I recommend using Efekto Eco Fruitfly Bait. Apply to the branches and stems of the orange and lemon trees. The bait will attract the fruit flies away from the fruit. Re-apply regularly during the rainy season. >>
The wrong cut? Santie van Blerk of Bela-Bela writes I pruned my ‘Arianna’ roses in mid-July, and see that the strongest new shoots on some of stems are further down, below where I cut. D incorrectly when pruning?
‘Arianna’
Ludwig replies I always say that the rose decides for itself where to sprout and how you cut does not affect that. In August, you have a chance to do corrective pruning. Cut back to the strongest shoot or let the rose sort itself out. It is all about the expected quality of blooms – for longer stems and large blooms, remove one or two of the competing stems on main branches as well as twiggy new growth. CONTACT ludwigsroses.co.za
Listen to JJ’s gardening tips and tricks on Derrich Gardner’s show Brekfis met Derrich at 07:40 every Saturday on RSG. August 2020
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Garden goodies Compiled by Beatrice Moore-Nöthnagel Garden Master 3-piece pruning set R310, Makro
Lasher starter kit (includes gloves, garden spade and fork) R550, Builders
Garden Master Californian Poppy seeds R19.80, Makro
New in nurseries Winter colour Hertex Haus Delicious Botanical rug (160 x 230cm) for undercover patio use R2 799, yuppiechef.com
Aluminium pruning shears R200, takealot.com
Sixth F Floor Binling hanging planter R399, superbalist.com
Alva short stand gas patio heater (1 250mm H) R2 799, Builders
Brighten up the winter garden with Cineraria ‘Senetti’, a new, taller-growing cineraria hybrid with huge heads of daisy-like blooms in vivid blue or magenta, with white centres. Plants grow up to 60cm with a 45cm spread, and bloom right into summer. It is a showstopper in the garden and in containers. Plant in full winter sun or semi-shade. Water regularly so that the soil doesn’t dry out and boost flowering with a liquid fertiliser twice a month. After the first flush of blooms, cut back by half to encourage a second flush. Note that it stops flowering when night temperatures reach 26ºC. CONTACT ballstraathof.co.za
Gardening gloves R550, takealot.com
Herteex Haus Rubix runner (80 x 200cm) for indoor or outdooor use R1 199, yuppiechef.com Cement bulb planter with wooden stand R159.99, MRP Home Lisbon pot R99.99, MRP Home
STOCKISTS Builders 0860 284 533, builders.co.za Makro 0860 600 999, makro.co.za MRP Home 080 021 2535, mrphome.com
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SPECIAL EDITION
Home Yard on sale now! Keeping cosy indoors is great, but spending time outdoors is even better...
Plans & plants for biodiversity
Advice for alle ywa ys FIRE PITS
yard
MAKE A CHANG CHANGE GE
Covid-19 Stay safe, keep busyy
A sociable stoep is a fantastic addition to any home. Striking black-and-white tiles give this gorgeous space the perfect finishing touch.
waterwise gardens
...with artificial grass, gravel & the perfect plants PLANT LISTS
Rethink your pool From solar-heating to an eco conversion
A kitchen in the garden? Oh yes! These entrants in our 2019 Fix it with Flair competition created a stunning space with comfy sofas, a pizza oven, and even a jacuzzi.
OUTDOOR DÉCOR
Jazz up your space with rugs, lighting, fabric & colour
DIY
i How to install a French drain i Make a cement bench i Build a cool canopy
SPECIAL EDITION 2020
Is your tired old swimming pool in need of an update? Five readers show you how they revamped theirs.
A cement bench – whether it be in a quiet corner or next to your fire pit – is easy to build yourself. We show you how!
crossword #144
Compiled by Gerda Engelbrecht
WIN!
One of eight NB Publishers books worth R375 could be yours.
Kitchen Queen by Lucia Mthiyane isn’t just another recipe book – it’s a visual feast in which Lucia takes us on an inspiring culinary journey. From teacher to actress, singer to TV personality and on to self-made foodie and social media influencer, Lucia has had a colourful life. Now she shares her favourite recipes, weaving her life story together with her unique take on food. Dishes include Leg of Lamb with Apples, Zulu Chicken, Spinach with Chorizo and, for those with a sweet tooth, Chocolate Brownies with a maize meal twist. Lucia generously shares recipes that not only fuel our bodies, but also nourish our skin and hair – and our souls. In Kitchen Queen, she offers us food infused with flavour and flair! The first eight readers whose correctly completed crosswords are drawn will each win a copy of Kitchen Queen worth R375. Send the completed crossword, and your details, to Home Crossword #144, PO Box 1802, Cape Town, or scan in your completed crossword and email it to competition@homemag.co.za to reach us by 31 August 2020. See our competition rules on page 128.
Name ............................................................................. Address .......................................................................................................................... Postal code .................. Cell .............................................. Tel. (w) ............................................. Email .........................................................
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Note: The solution to Crossword #142 is available online at homemag.co.za.
ENCHANTING
GARDEN JIGSAW PUZZLES Our 1 000-piece jigsaw puzzles of three of the most beautiful gardens we’ve featured are now on sale. A fun project for the whole family!
Order yours online at www.winkel.weg.co.za; search LEGKAART
reader garden WHO LIVES HERE? Rocco de Villiers and Clive van den Berg with their pooches Kleintjie (Irish Shorthair Terrier), Lochner and Bossie (Scottish Terriers) WHERE Parktown Ridge, Johannesburg SIZE OF PROPERTY 2 000m² TYPE OF SOIL Rocky
harmony A creative couple’s beautiful garden on a ocky outcrop in Johannesburg pays homage to English gardens but with a local twist. By Cecile Greyling • Photographs Elza Cooper
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The light green foliage of the Bauhinia natalensis contrasts beautifully with the darker green of the tickey creeper (Ficus pumila) covering the old stone wall.
Clivias and ribbon bush (Hypoestes aristata) are thriving in this lush bed.
Although the garden is wild in appearance, Rocco also likes more formal garden elements, such as topiaries. For this purpose, Plumbago auriculata, Cape honeysuckle (Tecomaria capensis) and Natal bauhinia (Bauhinia natalensis) have been used. He is also excited about the first apricot tree he espaliered – a traditional method of training a woody plant into a twodimensional decorative design.
I take photos of plants for my Instagram all the time. People love it and then they share pictures of their own plants with me. – Rocco
reader garden
Plectranthus ‘Mona Lavender’ provides a pretty picture from Rocco’s music room where the band practices. “The windowsill is low enough for the dogs to escape over when the music gets too rough,” says Rocco with a chuckle.
P
ianist and entertainment artist Rocco de Villiers and sculptor Clive van den Berg’s heritage home in Parktown, Johannesburg, boasts a fabulous garden with steps, low walls and charming secret nooks. But maintaining a garden like this when your house is built on a rock requires skill, passion and constant planning. Respected British architect Robert Howden designed the residence, Howden House, completing it in 1913. Rocco and Clive bought the property in 2001. They say the garden was a mess back then. “It was in such a state. There were ugly tiles and plants crying out for water. Others, on the other hand, were drowning in too much water. The previous owners religiously watered everything indiscriminately, whether it was dry or not. It was clearly by rote.” But hidden beneath the obvious neglect was proverbial gold that would make an avid gardener’s eyes light up like the Randlords of old: all the original stone pathways and stone walls surrounding the historic house had been preserved. “There was a solid foundation with which to work, which was fantastic,” says Rocco. “When you look at the stonework and how it was done, it is much the same as that of the house. This was Howden’s personal residence and with an old house like this, you soon realise how incredible the old stone masons’ workmanship was. The quality is unsurpassed.” The garden was cleared and then planted with indigenous grasses from all over the country. “Clive is knowledgeable about gardens,” Rocco says. “He has a passion for plants and knows exactly what he’s doing.”
Salvia leucantha is at its most beautiful in late summer and autumn.
However, eight years later, it was time for a change. “I told Clive he must design a garden with the feel of an English cottage garden, but I wanted to be part of the process because I’m keen to learn more about plants.” Clive accepted the challenge, and now Howden House’s garden is a wonderful conglomeration of plants, reminiscent of an English country garden but with mostly indigenous species. “The unkempt look was intentional,” Rocco says. “Like the ‘bed hair’ hairstyles of the 1990s. It looks natural but it took hours to get it that way.”
Shallow soil Although the garden’s wild appearance was planned, the site of the property played a major role. “We live on a rocky outcrop so the amount of usable soil for planting was minimal. We’ve had to incorporate huge amounts of soil over the past 20 years to make it work,” Rocco says. “Some of the beds are just pockets between the rocks. We realised from the get-go that you can’t just put in any old plant in this garden. For example, a tulip will never grow, the soil is simply too shallow.” The existing terraces and stone walls on the slopes in the back garden were repaired to give them a certain “look”, as Rocco puts it. “I didn’t want that area to look like a neglected park. But in midsummer, when it is lush and green, the back garden looks a bit like a forest on a slope. And although it was meticulously planned, it was partly a stroke of luck,” he says. “That’s how it goes here...” >> August 2020
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[ SET IN STONE ] John de Jager, owner of Stone Age in Klapmuts, shares his tips for using natural stone around your home: • The choice of stone will depend on personal taste, he says. “We often mix different types of stone to obtain various textures and colours. Different coloured cement can be used between the stones and sometimes we will even paint the stone. • Sandstone is an excellent option for hightraffic areas as it is not slippery when wet. It also doesn’t get too hot in sunny areas. • Dark stone on outdoor floor surfaces can get very hot in the summer sun, so choose wisely and keep in mind how much direct sun a particular area will get. • Be careful not to use slate near or in water as it disintegrates over time. CONTACT 021 875 5604, stonemasons.co.za
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Plans with water As the garden lies on a rocky reef, the shallow soil soon dries out. Water also cannot be stored at much of a depth and sinking a borehole is out of the question. Rocco admits that their water bill is quite high. But they do their best to use water as efficiently as possible. “We have learned how to use every drop – even the melted ice for my whiskey. We always tip out the ice tray on a plant that needs it.” Because the property has such a steep gradient, they also put a lot of effort into preventing any water that is used to irrigate the garden from being lost down the slope. “We have used all kinds of tricks, such as packing stones inside the beds so that everything doesn’t simply wash away when it rains – similar to a buffer on the inside of a dam wall.” They have made these ‘stone walls’ even more efficient at trapping water by cladding them with pieces of rotten wood from the garden and even sawdust. “It’s a great way to recycle natural materials,” explains Rocco. The couple also decided to remove the gutters of the house so that rainwater could run off next to the house into furrows which then lead to the beds. “There are other ways of conserving water, such as having tanks, but our water runs naturally into the garden. It’s quite a story, but I think we’ve mastered it now. Once you get the hang of it, it works. We are familiar with the contours and where the water will go.”
Purpose and meaning Rocco believes that when you garden, you should work with nature, rather than against it. While studying at university, he read books by British horticultural pioneer Gertrude Jekyll (1843–1932). Instead of stiff Victorian designs, she turned the horticultural world on its head with her ‘plant pictures’ – which she dubbed “pretty incidents” – using the natural texture, shape and colour of plants and flowers. “When I was at school, I always found it strange that gardens were so painfully neat. It felt like the plants were being punished. “Rather than raking up all the fallen leaves in beds, that leaf litter should be left there to decompose back into the soil as compost. It heals the soil and plants will thrive in the following growing season.” Rocco says he likes using found objects in a garden. “There must be a personal reason why you display things in your garden. Almost like the pictures you would put on your piano or desk. They are important to you, they have meaning. “When I come across something I love, I like to place it somewhere in the garden. Over time, it may get a little overgrown, maybe with a layer of moss. And then it becomes a special object that people are going to ask you about; then you can tell the story behind it. If your visitors see that it has meaning for you, that item won’t be regarded as kitsch or common because it is special to you,” he explains. “The older I get, the more important it is for me that the items I have around me mean something to me personally.” >>
Shortly after purchasing the property, Rocco and Clive darkened the pool with black Marblite. “We felt it went better with the architecture of the house,” explains Rocco. “And if it gets a little dirty, you can’t see it.” They are currently considering other options for the pool as it is not being properly utilised. “If we do use it, we have to add in chlorine. I don’t like that; it feels like I’m contributing to the hole in the ozone layer. I’ve started researching the idea of transforming the pool into a pond for indigenous fish.”
The African clay pot is one of two discovered at the bottom of the garden. “I don’t know how it got there but I love it.”
Clive’s assistant Hans Forster is an avid bonsai grower. This is part of his collection of indigenous tree species. Hans custom made the display rack to fit around the steps.
Barberton daisy
Rocco adores his little pots planted up with succulents, bulbs (such as freesias) and cheerful nasturtiums. “It feels homely to me. I chose the pots carefully. I took my cue from simple terracotta pots. I believe that all of the pots should look more or less the same. That’s how I do my show; I never tell the band to just dress as they please. For instance, I may ask them all to wear black – then it looks like a cohesive idea, rather than a mish-mash. It has a thread running through it.”
Kleintjie, the Irish Shorthair Terrier.
reader garden
Strelizia reginae
Plant list • Purple broom (Polygala virgata) • Black-eyed Susan (Thunbergia alata) • Silverleaf spurflower (Plectranthus oertendahlii) • Crane flower (Strelitzia reginae) • Aloe (Aloe arborescens syn. Aloe mutabilis) • Salvia spp. • Nasturtium (Tropaeolum majus) • Freesia hybrids • Soap bush (Noltea africana) • Parsley tree (Heteromorpha arborescens) • Plumbago auriculata • Cape honeysuckle (Tecomaria capensis) • Natal bauhinia (Bauhinia natalensis) • Arum lily (Zantedeschia aethiopica) • Barberton daisy (Gerbera jamesonii) • Silver bush everlasting (Helichrysum petiolare) • Roses • Apricot tree (espaliered) • Succulents • Vegetables such as spinach and onion >>
Actually, it’s Clive who needs to get all the credit for the garden. The things I’ve learned and my love for gardening come from him. – Rocco
reader garden
Bulbine frutescens
Photograph Gillian Eva
Plumbago auriculata
Veltheimia capensis
Zantedeschia aethiopica
Coleonema album
Cottage-style
indigenous garden If, like Rocco, you love an informal design with elements of an English cottage garden, but want to stick to indigenous plants, Stellenbosch garden expert Pietman Diener has the following advice: “When you think of an English cottage garden, roses are usually the first plant that comes to mind,” he says. “Nevertheless, it is entirely possible to give this style a South African twist with indigenous plants. Use elements such as shrubs trimmed into informal topiaries, paths made of natural materials such as stone or tree stump rings, mixed beds with an informal grouping of plants and pot plants in a variety of containers. By choosing indigenous plants, you can have the cottage-style garden you love but it will cope better with our more temperate South African climate.” British garden designer Gertrude Jekyll pioneered the cottage garden style. “She placed more emphasis on individual plants and how they contrasted with others or how they worked together to create an attractive bed. She used an abundance of plants and planted them in groups – in contrasting or complementary colours. It is precisely these informal, mixed beds that give a garden a natural or cottage feel.”
Plant list and groups Pietman says there are many indigenous plants that suit cottage-style gardens. “Select your favourites and plant a mix of them from the groups below. It doesn’t matter what combination you decide on, as long as there are plants from each group in the bed. There are many others from which to choose; ask your local nursery or nearest botanical garden for advice.
Gloriosa superba
Felicia amelloides
Bulbs • Candelabrum lily (Albuca nelsonii) • Arum lily (Zantedeschia aethiopica) • Zigzag crocosmia (Crocosmia paniculata) • Winter veltheimia (Veltheimia capensis) • Flame lily (Gloriosa superba)
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Photograph Gillian Eva
For informal topiaries and structure • Plumbago (Plumbago auriculata) • Big num-num (Carissa macrocarpa) • Brown sage (Salvia aurea syn. S. africana-lutea) • Cape may (Coleonema album) • Weeping sage (Buddleja auriculata)
Carissa macrocarpa Annuals • Wild foxglove (Ceratotheca triloba) • Namaqualand daisy (Dimorphotheca sinuata and other species) • Livingstone daisy (Dorotheanthus bellidiformis) • Namaqua marigold (Arctotis hirsute)
Ceratotheca triloba
Agapanthus
Perennials and shrubs • Stalked bulbine (Bulbine frutescens) • Garden red-hot poker (Kniphofia praecox) • Wild dagga (Leonotis leonurus) • Pelargonium spp. • Blisterleaf (Knowltonia vesicatoria) • Salvia spp. • Spurflower (Plectranthus spp.) • Hen and chickens (Chlorophytum comosum and other species) • Wild garlic (Tulbaghia violacea) • Cape scabious (Scabiosa africana) • Aloe spp. • Agapanthus spp. • Pig’s ear (Cotyledon spp.) • Blue felicia (Felicia amelloides) • Silver bush everlasting (Helichrysum petiolare) • Weeping bride’s bush (Pavetta lanceolata) • River indigo (Indigofera frutescens syn. Indigofera jucunda) • Soutpansberg flag flower (Syncolostemon obermeyerae syn. Hemizygia obermeyerae) • Cape honeysuckle (Tecomaria capensis) • Pink mallow (Anisodontea scabrosa) • Ginger bush (Tetradenia riparia) • Gazania (Gazania rigens)
[ TIPS ]
• Make sure the plants you choose do well in your local climate. Also check if the plant prefers sun or shade. • Group plants into three or five, rather than planting them singly. • Take into consideration the shape of the plant and leaves when deciding what to plant where. For example, red-hot pokers with long, straight leaves contrast beautifully with pelargoniums with softer, rounder leaves. • The texture and colour of the foliage is just as important as the bloom. • Group plants in shades of blue, purple and pink together or create contrast with a brightly coloured aloe next to a blue agapanthus. • Plant bulbs and annuals between groups of shrubs and perennials; this keeps the bed interesting during the various seasons.
By Marié Esterhuyse Source Waterwise Gardening in South Africa and Namibia by Ernst van Jaarsveld CONTACT Pietman Diener pieterdiener@gmail.com
Helichrysum petiolare
Gazania rigens
Plectranthus
Fields of
flowers
Sophia van Heerden is passionate about cultivating beautiful blooms. By Marié Esterhuyse Photographs Francois Oberholster
Sophia walks between rows of dahlias. At first, she only cultivated roses, but as her business expanded, she started growing different types of cut flowers on order for florists and brides. Other than roses, she has about 2 500 dahlias, numerous kinds of sunflowers, a variety of zinnias and hundreds of cosmos. She also has about 1 500 daffodil bulbs, 10 000 ranunculi and more than 3 000 anemones, all of which bloom in spring.
floriculture
gardens
WHO LIVES HERE? Jaco and Sophia van Heerden with their children, Sebastian (9) and Jeanette (7) WHERE Murraysburg, Western Cape SIZE 3 800 m² (roses) and 3 780 m² (roses and cut flowers) TYPE OF SOIL Loam
August 2020
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ophia van Heerden of Murraysburg isn’t afraid of hard work. As a testament to her tenacious spirit, she managed – in just under three years – to cultivate more than 10 000 rose bushes and row upon row of annuals on barren soil in a notoriously hot Karoo town. “It was an uphill battle,” she concedes. “In the beginning I had to do everything myself: plant the rose bushes, fertilise them, spray them, pick the blooms and make up bunches to sell. There were many nights when I worked till the wee hours as the days were just too short to get everything done. Thankfully, when my business expanded I was able to hire assistants.”
Sophia and Jaco have lived in the Murraysburg district since 2009. The couple initially lived on a farm outside town and it was here that Sophia planted her first rose, ‘Just Joey’, beneath her bedroom window. “Jaco wanted to plant a tree but the ground was so hard he had to use a jack-hammer to make a hole. And when he filled the hole with water, it took two days for the water to seep away,” recalls Sophia. “Before I could even consider planting roses, Jaco had to bring in loads of good quality soil and dig it in. But eventually my farm garden had more than 500 rose bushes. “I adored farm life and when we moved to town in March 2017 I was bereft! We bought a dilapidated house on a large property full of building rubble, dead trees and weeds. At that stage it was the only available house in town. I knew I would have to find something to keep me busy, and growing roses was the first thing that came to mind. That’s when my floriculture business took root.”
Fortunately, Murraysburg has an abundance of water; I mostly use leiwater to irrigate my roses and flowers. – Sophia 106 home August 2020
floriculture
gardens
Laying the groundwork Sophia calculated that she would need about 5 000 rose bushes to fill the erf. Jaco helped her buy the first 1 000 roses, on condition that those flowers would eventually pay for themselves. “I realised I couldn’t just grow the roses I loved, so I started researching roses that would last long in the vase, with long stalks ideal for picking. “Before I could start planting though, we had to clear the area with a tractor and an excavator to get rid of all the debris and dead trees and shrubs. We even unearthed pieces of corrugated iron, glass and old gutters. Then we sprayed the weeds and prepared the soil with horse manure, compost and plenty of bone meal. In February 2018, I sold my first bunch of roses.” Initially, Sophia only provided flowers to local customers. After a while, she started getting orders from surrounding towns such as Graaff-Reinet, Beaufort West and De Aar. She planted another 8 000 roses on a second erf in town as well as on a farm that Jaco leases, and also started growing cut flowers: zinnias, cosmos, dahlias, sweet peas, sunflowers and snapdragons. Today, Sophia supplies blooms to florists and brides nationwide and to shops and guesthouses in the area. >>
gardens
floriculture
[ SOWING THE SEEDS OF SUCCESS ] Sophia offers advice on how to ensure your cut flower garden produces the best results: Sowing and planting time Sow summer-flowering annuals such as zinnias, cosmos, cornflowers and sunflowers from October to January. From March to May, sow poppies, delphiniums, sweet peas, foxgloves and snapdragons; Sophia also plants spring bulbs during this period. Soil preparation Loosen the soil well and deeply with a garden fork and incorporate plenty of compost and bone meal. The soil must also drain well. Wet it thoroughly once or twice before sowing. If the water takes too long to soak in, the soil’s drainage is poor. If clay soil is the problem, remove as much of it as possible and incorporate plenty of compost into the bed. Sowing and planting Sophia says most seeds can be sown directly in the bed (in situ); it is not necessary to first sow them in seed trays and transplant later. Many people make the mistake of sowing and planting seeds and bulbs too shallow or too deep. A good guideline is to look at the size of the seed, then sow it twice as deep as its size. Sow fine seeds like poppies and foxgloves on top of the loosened soil and rake them in lightly. Soak sweet pea seeds in water the night before you plan to sow them; this softens the seed coat. Sow flowers that grow taller, such as zinnias, at the back of the bed and those that grow lower, such as cornflowers, in the middle or front. The height of the mature plant is indicated on the back of the seed packet. For bulbs, check on the packet to see how deep they should be planted. Food and water Keep the bed moist. Once the seedlings are well established you can start watering less. Sophia gives her plants a foliar feed like Seagro or Nitrosol once a month. “I also use Neutrog and Atlantic Fertilizer in the beds and alternate the two regularly. If your plants need to be sprayed, preferably use an organic spray.”
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Sophia initially purchased seed but these days she harvests her own. “I have harvested so much seed from my flowers this past season that I’m planning to launch my own seed range soon,” she says. “I store the seed in feed bags as they have good ventilation and then hang them on beams in the storeroom so that the mice don’t eat it! I make a note of each bag’s contents: the type of flower and its colour.” Sophia says seeds must be completely dry before storing them or they’ll get mouldy and cannot be used. “Harvest your seed at the end of the flowering season. Most annuals are easy to harvest – cut off the flower heads as soon as they are dead and store them in a paper bag in a dry place for sowing again next season.”
‘Hyde Park’ roses
Willem Steyn, Simba Maisiri and Hezron Thembo (not in the picture) provide invaluable assistance in Sophia’s flower business; Shaun Delport (far right) helps with the deliveries.
[ ROSES IN THE KAROO ]
Dahlia
Cosmos
Even though it is arid, roses do well in the Karoo. If you take good care of them, you can have cut roses from October to May. Follow Sophia’s tips: • Plant roses in autumn (March to April) or spring (September to October). I find that roses planted in autumn grow well; it is still warm enough to establish a good root system, but cool enough for them not to scorch. Plant rose bushes in a 50 x 50cm hole filled with compost-rich soil, bone meal and superphosphate. Give the bush a good drenching straight away. Cover the soil with a 10cm mulch to keep it cool and to retain moisture. “I use chaff as a mulch,” she says. • The water in the Karoo has a high lime and hard-mineral content that scorches the leaves and forms an impermeable layer on the foliage, so Sophia never waters her roses from above. Drip irrigation at soil level is best. Roses thrive if watered deeply two to
three times a week in summer, and once a week in winter. This may vary depending on your soil type. • Because the Karoo gets frost late in the year, we don’t prune before 25 July and no later than the last week in August. Immediately after pruning we spray the roses with lime sulphur and repeat this a week later. However, don’t spray the plants if they already have leaves. • Keep a lookout for pests and diseases. “I spray with a fungicide once a week in the growing season and only use insecticides if I see that there is an infestation.” Sophia also recommends using bee-friendly organic insecticides as far as possible. • Roses boast a flush of new blooms almost every 38 days. If you’d like to have gorgeous roses for a specific occasion at a later date, trim off the rosebuds to encourage the formation of new buds.
Buckets of red ‘Belle Rouge’, ‘Savlu’, ‘Cora Marie’ and ‘Avon’ roses; ‘White O’Hara’ and pale yellow ‘St Dunstan’s Centenary’ roses, as well as bunches of purple and lilac Statice ready to be delivered.
CONTACT Sophia’s Roses facebook.com/rosevansophia/
Roll out the
dough!
Make life easy by using store-bought pastry to whip up these impressive dishes. By JohanÊ Neilson • Photographs Francois Oberholster
pastry
food
Flower garden flat bread Flat breads decorated with toppings that replicate a flower garden are trending on social media and they’re such fun to bake! Use this recipe as inspiration for your own work of art. Just remember to keep the flavours cohesive so that it tastes as good as it looks. Makes 1 flat bread • Preparation time: 15 minutes, plus rising time Baking time: 30 minutes • Oven temperature: 200°C
• 1kg ready-made bread dough • about 45ml olive oil • 1 small red onion, cut into 5mm rings • about 15 black olives, pitted • 1 red chilli, thinly sliced • 1 green chilli, thinly sliced • 12 cherry tomatoes, cut into wedges • 2 spring onions, cut into long, thin slices • a few sprigs flat-leaf parsley • sea salt flakes and freshly ground black pepper • olive oil and balsamic vinegar, to serve
2 Knock down the ready-made dough to eliminate the air. Grease a baking tray (35 x 40cm) generously with olive oil and flatten the dough in it into an even layer, about 1.5cm thick (it will rise again slightly). Preheat the oven. 3 Transfer your topping design to the flat bread, then leave to rise until it doubles in volume. 4 Bake the flat bread until cooked and risen (depending on the thickness, about 30 minutes). Allow to cool on a wire rack. Season the bread with salt and pepper and serve with olive oil and balsamic vinegar for dipping.
1 First arrange all the topping ingredients in a floral design on a chopping board – use the tomato wedges to create red-hot pokers on long stems; the olives, chilli and parsley to make daisies and so on, until your design is more or less how you want it.
Ready-made bread dough
Remember, if you start with cold dough it will take longer to rise than dough at room temperature.
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food
pastry
Camembert and mushroom wreath A delicious party platter! Makes 1 decadent wreath • Preparation time: 30 minutes Baking time: 45 minutes • Oven temperature: 200°C • knob of butter • 15ml olive oil • about 21 button mushrooms, whole • 2 leeks, white portions finely chopped
• 1 fennel bulb, finely chopped • 2 cloves garlic, finely chopped • 1 roll (400g) frozen puff pastry, thawed • 1 egg, beaten • 1 Camembert
1 Melt the butter and oil and brown the mushrooms. Remove, reserving the oil in the pan. Season the mushrooms to taste with salt and pepper and your favourite spices – keep it simple or try a sprinkling of lemon zest, a pinch of paprika or ground cumin. 2 Fry the leeks, fennel and garlic until soft and fragrant. Season to taste with salt and pepper. You can add some of the fennel’s delicate leaves at the end for fresh flavour. 3 Preheat the oven. Open out the roll of puff pastry and, using a 7cm circular cookie cutter, make 21 dough circles; brush beaten egg around the edges. Place a teaspoon of the leek mixture on each circle, topped with a mushroom. Pinch the dough closed on each side of the mushroom to form a ‘shell’ and arrange the shells in the form of a wreath on a sheet of baking paper on a baking tray (see photo). Leave a gap in the middle for the Camembert. 4 Brush the wreath again with egg and bake for 30 minutes. Remove from the oven and place the Camembert in the centre. Bake for a further 15–20 minutes or until the pastry is cooked and the cheese is softened and warmed through. Cut a cross in the centre of the hot cheese so everyone can dip their pastry bites. Tip Use any leftover leek mixture on a toasted ham and cheese sandwich or with a tin of tomatoes in a pasta sauce. >>
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Wooden knives by Deon de Goede (084 589 5026, deon@diydeon.co.za)
SAVOURY TARTLETS
Recipe on page 120.
food
pastry
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Braided beef curry pies If you aren’t keen to make a braided pie because you only have one roll of puff pastry, you can make one large pie in a pie dish topped with a crust. Makes 4 beef curry pies Preparation time: 1 hour Cooking time (filling): 2 hours Baking time (pies): 35–40 minutes Oven temperature: 200°C • 1.3kg beef short rib, cubed • 2 onions, chopped • 30ml flour • 3 garlic cloves, chopped • 2cm fresh ginger, grated • 1 red chilli, chopped • 30ml mild curry powder (or to taste)
• a few curry leaves, if you have • 250ml stock • 250ml beer • 4 sheets puff pastry (28 x 28cm) • beaten egg for glazing
1 Fry the meat in batches in a heavy-bottomed pot until brown all over. I try to use the meat’s own fat for frying, but you can add oil if you feel it’s necessary. 2 Spoon out the meat and sauté the onions in the same pot until glossy. Stir in the flour, garlic, ginger, chilli and curry and fry for another minute. Stir in the stock and beer and return all the meat to the pot. Put the lid on and bake in the oven at 160°C for 2 hours or until the meat is tender. Debone and flake the meat and put it back in the sauce; season to taste with salt and pepper and allow the filling to cool completely. 3 Work with one square of dough at a time. Mark a cross in the dough without cutting through it, then remove the top left quarter. Cut 1cm strips in the top right and bottom left quarters (see photo). 4 Spoon a generous portion of the filling onto the uncut square on the bottom right. Now fold the strips over the filling to form the braid. Press the ends together and brush the entire pie with egg. Repeat with the rest of the dough and filling to make four pies. 5 Preheat the oven to 200°C. Bake the pies for about 20 minutes; reduce the heat to 180°C and bake for another 20 minutes or until crisp and cooked. Tip Make small pies with the four remaining dough squares and any leftover filling, or freeze the dough for another day.
food
pastry
Pork Wellington
A showstopper pie best served in generous slices! Serves 4 Preparation time: 20 minutes Cooking time: 40 minutes Oven temperature: 200°C • • • • • • • •
6 slices Black Forest ham 8 sage leaves 750g pork fillet 10ml wholegrain mustard 12 fried mushrooms, stalks removed 12 blocks feta 1 roll puff pastry beaten egg
1 Arrange the 6 slices of ham close together on a clean cutting board, with the sage leaves on top. Trim the sinew off the pork fillet and place it on top of the ham. Cut a slit along the length of the meat and spread the mustard inside. Put a block of feta in the cavity of each mushroom and arrange them in a row inside the fillet. Fold the meat over the mushrooms, then wrap the ham around the fillet to form a neat roll. Sear the meat roll quickly in a pan over high heat until sealed all over and nicely browned. Allow to cool slightly. 2 Open out the roll of puff pastry on a clean work surface, then roll the dough slightly thinner. Place the seared fillet on the dough, then wrap the dough tightly around the meat so that the ends overlap just enough to seal it. Trim off any excess dough, pinch the ends closed and place the roll with the seam side down on a greased baking tray. Brush all over with egg. Decorate with the leftover dough; also brush this with egg and place the pie in the fridge while the oven is preheating. 3 Preheat the oven. Bake the pie for 35–40 minutes or until the dough is golden-brown and the meat is cooked through. Rest for about 10 minutes before slicing. Variation Swap the mustard in the filling with onion marmalade for a sweeter flavour profile or smear a spoonful over the seared meat before it is wrapped. Don’t be too generous or it could make the pastry soggy. >>
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Fried mushrooms and feta blocks
Sage leaves
Look out for a pre-made pork armadillo at your local supermarket – it’s a pork fillet stuffed with cheese sausage, wrapped in bacon.
Black Forest ham
pastry
August 2020
food
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pastry
food
Apple tipsy tart With or without the brandy-soaked raisins, this filling is a winner. While searching pinterest.com, I spotted a lovely spinach and feta pie made with this folding technique that ends up looking like a sunflower and decided to make a sweet version. Makes 1 x 25cm tart • Preparation time: 25 minutes Baking time: 30 minutes • Oven temperature: 180°C • 1 roll (400g) frozen shortcrust pastry, thawed • a little beaten egg for glazing FILLING • 60ml raisins • 30ml brandy or whiskey • 2 large green apples
• 60ml butter • 125ml sugar • 125ml pecan nuts, coarsely chopped • 15ml lemon juice • a pinch of salt • 60ml icing sugar, sifted
Make the filling Cook the raisins in the brandy for a few minutes on high in the microwave. Peel the apples, core them and dice. Place the apple, butter and sugar in a pan and heat until the butter has melted and the sugar has dissolved; stir-fry until the apple is soft and caramelised. Stir in the raisins, pecans, lemon juice and salt, remove the filling from the heat and cool. Assemble the tart 1 Preheat the oven. Carefully open out the roll of dough on a clean work surface and divide it into two equal pieces. Cut a 25cm circle from the first piece of dough and place on a sheet of baking paper. Spoon a heap of the apple filling in the centre of the circle. Spoon the rest of the filling in a wide strip around the edges of the circle, leaving a 2cm gap in-between (see photo). 2 Cut a 25cm circle from the second piece of dough, roll it slightly larger and place it carefully over the filling on the first circle. Press down the filling in the centre of the tart, using an inverted pudding bowl. 3 Cut off any excess dough and pinch the tart closed by pressing down around the outer edge with a fork. 4 Make cuts every 3cm all around the outer ring of the tart (without cutting through the centre of the tart). 5 Turn each of these cut-through pieces 90° to the right so that the filling is facing up. 6 Using the baking paper, slide the tart onto a baking tray. Brush a little beaten egg over the tart to glaze it and bake for 30 minutes or until golden-brown and cooked. Allow to cool slightly. Mix the icing sugar with just enough water to make a runny glaze and drizzle over the lukewarm tart.
Serve the tart with a jug of fresh cream or a naughty rosette of Clover Whipped Cream with each portion for a bit of fun. August 2020
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food
pastry
Pizza rolls Makes 12 rolls • Cooking time: 10 minutes, plus resting time Baking time: 25 minutes Oven temperature: 200°C • 400g ready-made bread dough • 60ml sundried tomato pesto • 250ml shredded cooked chicken, well-seasoned • 250ml grated mozzarella • 15ml milk • 5ml sesame seeds or dukkah 1 Roll the bread dough into a 1cm-thick rectangle and cut into 12 equal squares. 2 Spread a small spoonful of pesto on each square, followed by a little chicken and cheese. Wrap the squares one by one around the filling, pinch the edge closed and arrange them with the seam side down in a greased ovenproof dish. Let the rolls rise in a warm spot (as the dough is so thin, the bread doesn’t fully double in volume, but it will definitely puff up a bit). 3 Preheat the oven. Brush the rolls with a little milk, sprinkle the sesame seeds or dukkah on top and bake for about 25 minutes or until the rolls are goldenbrown and cooked through.
What could be better than sinking your teeth into hot, melty cheese in the middle of a bun – just be careful not to burn your tongue! – Johané Savoury tartlets My friend Maréza Cronjé introduced me to these treats. You can leave out the herbs and bacon or substitute with cooked cubed chicken and peppadews, or chopped ham... The possibilities are endless. Makes 12 tartlets • Preparation time: 25 minutes Baking time: 35 minutes • Oven temperature: 180°C • • • • • • •
1 tub (230g) medium-fat cream cheese, softened 2 extra-large eggs 250g bacon, chopped and fried until crispy 5ml chopped chives 1 cup (250ml) grated cheese 1 roll (400g) frozen shortcrust pastry, thawed a generous sprinkling of cayenne pepper
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1 Preheat the oven. Spray the cavities of a shallow muffin pan with non-stick cooking spray. Mix the cream cheese and eggs until smooth, then stir in the bacon, chives and cheese. I don’t add extra salt; decide for yourself if you want to add more seasoning. 2 Carefully open out the roll of pastry on a clean work surface. There’s no need to roll it thinner, but do fix any cracks in the dough. Using a 10cm round cookie cutter, make 12 circles; roll each circle a little thinner and bigger, then line the prepared cavities with them. Prick each pastry shell with a fork a few times. 3 Divide the filling between the pastry shells, sprinkle with cayenne pepper and bake for about 35 minutes or until golden-brown and puffed up. The filling will shrink as it cools. These tartlets are delicious served hot or at room temperature.
quick food
By Johané Neilson Photographs Francois Oberholster
We’ve got supper sorted! Quick and easy fuss-free meals.
The thickness of your meat will determine the cooking time. Use your judgment and keep the meat in the oven for a few more minutes if you’re worried that it’s still too pink.
Pork chops with apple and fennel Under R120 • Serves 4 Preparation time: 20 minutes • Cooking time: 25 minutes
Pasta with bacon, garlic and Parmesan
Under R70 • Serves 4 Preparation time: 5 minutes • Cooking time: 8 minutes • • • • •
300g spaghetti 250g diced bacon 100g butter 30ml olive oil 3 cloves garlic, chopped
• 125ml grated Parmesan or pecorino • freshly ground black pepper • a pinch of dried chilli (optional)
1 Bring a pot of salted water to the boil and cook the spaghetti until al dente (usually about 8 minutes). 2 Meanwhile, fry the bacon in the butter and olive oil in a large pan until crispy. Stir in the garlic and turn off the heat. The garlic must cook without burning or discolouring, otherwise it becomes bitter. 3 Pour the cooked, still moist spaghetti into the pan mixture and stir through so that the butter coats the pasta. Season to taste with black pepper (the bacon and butter are already salty) and half of the cheese. Serve with the rest of the cheese and a pinch of dried chilli if desired.
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• 5ml each fennel seeds, Maldon salt and black pepper • 4 large pork loin chops (T-bones) • 30ml olive oil
• • • • •
2 apples, cored and quartered 2 fennel bulbs, thinly sliced 50g butter a pinch of sugar boiled baby potatoes
1 Preheat the oven. Crush the fennel seeds, salt and pepper with a pestle and mortar and rub the chops all over with the spices and oil. Make sure the meat is at room temperature, not ice-cold. 2 Arrange the apples and fennel in an ovenproof dish, dot with the butter, sprinkle the sugar over and pour in about 80ml water; bake for 20 minutes. 3 Heat a griddle pan until hot. Hold the chops upright, side by side, with a pair of tongs and fry the fat side first until well browned. Turn the chops over and fry them on the flat bone side until well browned. Now fry the chops for about 2–3 minutes on each side until you get lovely char lines. 4 Remove the apple mixture from the oven, add the meat and drizzle with the pan juices. Bake for a further 5 minutes or until the meat is cooked through. Remember to let the meat rest for 5 minutes before serving. Serve with boiled baby potatoes. >>
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scape to an exotic tropical island where sunbathing on the beach and listening to the sound of the waves crashing are the order of the day. Few things come close to that holiday feeling, but Tropika gives you a taste of the smoooth life with an explosion of flavour. Unwind while you savour the mellow, soothing taste of island life and good times to come. Sit back, slow down and transport your senses with the smoooth, refreshing taste of Tropika. WHAT’S YOUR FLAVOUR? Choose from Mango Peach, Cool Red, Orange, Pineapple, Peach, Tropical and for the ultimate island feel – the new Pina Colada. Enjoy this invigorating drink as is or whenever the mood takes you. Add Tropika to boost your breakfast or transform your cocktails.
August 2020
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quick food
Chicken and cashew stir-fry Under R130 • Serves 4 Preparation time: 15 minutes • Cooking time: 15 minutes • 4 chicken breasts, cubed • 30ml oil • 250g button mushrooms, chopped • 1 red chilli, chopped • 100g cashew nuts
• 125ml tinned pineapple pieces and about 60ml of the syrup • a sprinkling of micro basil and coriander • 250ml jasmine rice, steamed • soy sauce to taste
1 Mix the oil with the chicken and season to taste with salt and pepper. Heat a pan until hot and fry the chicken pieces until golden-brown. Don’t stir too soon; the chicken needs time to caramelise and the more you fiddle, the more the pan loses heat and the meat steams instead of frying. 2 Stir the mushrooms and chilli into the pan and fry for another 5 minutes or until the mushrooms also start to brown. Stir in the cashew nuts, pineapple and pineapple syrup and fry until the sauce is sticky. 3 Sprinkle the herbs over the chicken and serve with the rice and a dash of soy sauce to taste. Tip This stir-fry has an uncomplicated, sweet flavour profile. Feel free to give it more oomph with garlic, freshly grated ginger and extra chilli if desired.
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Red pesto chicken with vegetables Under R150 • Serves 4 • Preparation time: 10 minutes Cooking time: 45 minutes • Oven temperature: 200°C • 4 chicken drumsticks • 4 chicken thighs • 30ml sundried tomato pesto • 30ml olive oil
• 400g fresh mixed vegetables (we used broccoli and cauliflower florets, carrot sticks and green beans) • 250ml couscous • a pinch of turmeric • 15ml lemon juice
1 Preheat the oven. Make three deep incisions in each piece of chicken and rub the pesto and half of the oil over the meat. Place in an ovenproof dish and bake, skin side up, for 30 minutes. 2 Add the vegetables and half a cup of boiling water to the dish, put the lid on and bake for another 15 minutes or until the chicken and vegetables are cooked. 3 In a bowl with a tight-fitting lid, mix the couscous and turmeric, salt and pepper and pour 1 cup of boiling water over. Close the bowl and steam for 10 minutes. Loosen the grains with a fork, mix the rest of the oil and the lemon juice with the couscous; spoon this into the ovenproof dish with the chicken to absorb all the fragrant pan juices, or serve separately.
food & drinks Keep warm with fine wine and culinary delights! By Johané Neilson • Photographs supplied
TABLE TALK We spotted these bespoke pure flaxseed linen napkins (44 x 44cm; from R220 each) by local artist Emzi Ficaroni at E Gallery in Stellenbosch. Mix and match her feminine designs or combine these beauties with plain napkins to create an interesting tablescape. Call 082 909 1446 or see more @emzigallery on Instagram.
SWEETEN YOUR DAY
GD chocolates are made from natural ingredients and sweetened with raw unadulterated honey. Free of dairy, preservatives, refined sugars and high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS), these bars are the perfect guilt-free chocolate treat. Visit gdchocolate.com.
CREATURE COMFORTS Tori Stowe creates bold, original paintings depicting natural beauty – her Porcupine, Tortoise, Guineafowl and Bushbaby mugs (R59.95 each) in the SA Designer collection from Woolworths are charming! Go to woolworths.co.za.
Serve in style
Round marble board R199, poetrystores.co.za
Stock up
If your cellar needs refreshing, try these two delicious reds... Tokara Cabernet Sauvignon 2017 (R125, tokara.com) boasts dried cranberry, red currant and subtle cassis aromas with whiffs of tobacco spice on the nose. Expect a mouthful of sweet berries interwoven with spice and light toasty notes imparted during barrel maturation. Middelvlei Rooster Merlot 2019 (R90, middelvlei.co.za) is an elegant, juicy wine with soft tannins. Expect concentrated flavours of plums, cherries and dark chocolate with mild oak spice and a soft smooth finish.
THINK BIG! The new Instant Pot 8L Duo (R2 499 at @home and online at takealot.com and hirschs.co.za) is the same 7-in-1 smart multi-cooker that makes meals in minutes rather than hours, just bigger. Go to instantpot.co.za.
Woodworks Wooden pastry knives cut bread dough and pastry cleanly without damaging work surfaces. Our own DIY Deon handmade these beauties from kiaat, oak, garapa and pink beech wood. For more information or to order, email diydeon@gmail.com.
WARM UP For keeps
Paying homage to more than 300 years of wine history and the distinctive blue-grey granite that gave the farm its original name, Blaauwklippen has released a classic Bordeaux blend in its range of premium red wines – De Blaauwe Klip 2017 (R195, blaauwklippen.com). This classic five-way blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Malbec and Petit Verdot will age beautifully for up to 20 years.
The new Roodeberg Reserve 2017 (R160, kwvemporium.co.za) is a blend of the finest barrels in the cellar and it’s the perfect companion for meaty casseroles, roasts and game dishes. A true South African original that has stood the test of time for more than 70 years, Roodeberg is the heart and soul of memorable get-togethers and is best enjoyed in the company of good friends – even if it’s a virtual toast!
Double up
The Kitchen Inspire dualsided spoon and spatula (R99, yuppiechef.com) can do it all – mix, scoop and spread!
Have a heart We baked the heart-shaped tarts on page 113 in this versatile 12-cup Heart Tray (R599, lecreuset.co.za).
JUICY GOODNESS Krush Carrot & Orange is a delicious 100% real fruit and vegetable juice blend, available in fresh or long-life fruit juice packs. Get the benefit of vitamins A, C and E for the whole family. Visit clover.co.za. August 2020
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Sifting and
sorting with joy Friend Jan phones to ask if I’d like to buy his grandmother’s old pump organ. He is scaling down big time, he explains, moving house one last time. Actually, he corrects himself, it’s the penultimate move, the last one being the ABF (absolute bloody final), which is strictly speaking not a move, it’s more of an exit – into eternity. For now, he’s moving to a cosy little place in a retirement village. It can house only a small selection of his books but the baby grand, the ancient organ, the bulky Cape antiques and his extensive collection of mechanical tools (for building cars, his hobby) have to go. He is stripping away his earthly chattels in order to enter the metaphorical eye of the needle. Ah, I say, (ever pedantic), you’re busy with döständning. It’s Swedish for death and cleaning. There’s a book about it. There’s no time for reading now, man, he retorts sharply. And I’m certainly not dead yet! Even so, I think afterwards, in these times of Covid&Co, perhaps we could all do with a book like that. The Swedish believe you should rid your house of excess junk way before your final departure and not leave this joyless task to your next of kin. I’m reminded of an aunt who had the largest collection of teaspoons ever. There were really a lot of spoons. At least one from every town, city, province or country – from Trompsburg to Timbuktu, all lovingly displayed throughout her and the oom’s house – even in the bathroom. You’d unwittingly open a drawer and a tacky little spoon bearing the crest of De Aar would jump out at you. On her passing, the whole caboodle was unlovingly carted off to the rubbish dump. I cast an eagle eye over the array of my own displays of potential rubbish. Skatties, I say to them, I still love you, I do. But I’m afraid when the time comes for me to enter the pearly gates, you guys won’t be coming with me. Even the most precious among you, I’m sad to say. Like the old cake tin containing wisps and scatterings of my best childhood
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memories – like the first, tentative little love letter from a 10-yearold, blue-eyed boy called Jimmy. Or a small silver bracelet, the clasp broken. It was a gift from my late father on my ninth birthday. The tin smells of crayons and dried flower petals. Every time I open the lid, an entire rural childhood spills out. And who’d care for my small patch of a Soweto backyard? It’s genuine enough, I’ll have you know, stamped and sealed with the revered Mandela name on it. Granted, it’s hardly a teaspoonful and comes in a tiny glass bottle, labelled with the famed address of Ma Winnie and Madiba on Vilikazi Street. It used to be sold as a souvenir at the museum. There are countless worthless treasures like these in my house. Take the thimble-sized meerkat figurine I keep on my desk. It could be a mere knick-knack to you, but to me it’s a powerful token of blood, sweat and tears for it was given to me by my publisher, along with the first printed copy of Homeland, my novel which plays out in the Kalahari. So, ok, say the Swedes, you still relish your memorabilia. But the least you can do is keep it in a box clearly marked for the dumpster. As for the rest? If you know it won’t make someone else happy after you’ve gone, it has to go already. I remember a retired pastor and his wife from my childhood days, who had marked all their possessions with the names of their heirs. For the next 20 years, they lived like timid tenants under their own roof. All in vain, of course. Hand out your finer things to willing takers, the Swedish advise. Create more space to enjoy what remains. Shall I throw away the tarnished old earring, a single survivor from the first time I was kissed by a boy? Of course not! I may have forgotten his name, but the memory still has me aquiver. And it will do so again, every time I sift and sort, lingering happily on the old pathways of my life, looking forward to much more to come. There’s life in this old horse, yet. That I know for sure.
Illustrations Paula Dubois • Translation Hettie Scholtz
Most people move a few times in their lives. But there comes a time, like now, when you start thinking about the Last Great Trek, says Karin Brynard.