Modern Country
ARCHITECT NOMA* • BUILDER Buckingham Re-Development Co • INTERIOR DESIGNER Malvina Stone • PHOTOGRAPHY Jody D’Arcy • WORDS Elizabeth Clarke
For Perth interior designer Malvina Stone, transforming the barest of bones into inspiring, warm spaces is an obsession. “I simply can’t be in a room that isn’t done right,” she tells Havenist. “I have to fiddle with it and imagine what it could be. I can always see the potential.”
Malvina grew up Sutherland Shire in southern Sydney, right next to the National Park and across the road from the hardware store and library. “Every few years I was allowed to choose a new bedroom wallpaper, so I would spend days in the library flicking through books and studying the works of famous artists,” she recalls. “Afterwards, I would head to the hardware store and standing on a stool, select my new wallpaper. I loved flowers too and Mrs Appleby the florist was just around the corner. She inspired the bouquets I made from our garden. It was a wondrous childhood.”
After studying home economics at East Sydney Technical College, Malvina and her family moved to Perth. Whilst working in a retail position in Claremont, she met interiors maven Judith Barrett-Lennard who helmed iconic design business Puritan Man at the time. “Meeting her saw me literally stumble into interior design,” Malvina laughs. “She took me under her wing. She must have seen some potential in my aesthetic.”
Working on projects with Judith’s team, that included top designer Christian Lyon, Stone collaborated on high end residential and commercial projects. “I was like a sponge,” she recalls. “I worked hard from the ground up and Judith taught me the beauty of custom made, which Christian and I still do today. We are not shoppers – we are creators. It’s a very old school approach to interior design.”
When Malvina started her own business, she was quickly in-demand, working on residential projects as well as contributing to publications like Vogue Living, Belle, The Sunday Times and Inside Out. It was these experiences, she says, that inform her projects today.
“I am very inspired by French interiors and tend to have very eclectic taste rather than a set look,” she says. “I believe a house tells you what it needs so it’s important to be adaptable. I hunt, gather, and fossick for the different and unusual. I adore imperfections. It’s what makes a space look effortless.”
For Malvina, this old horse stud in the Swan Valley has been her dream job. “Collaborating with a client who has a great aesthetic makes it a fantastic experience,” she says. “The location is gorgeous too. It’s not far from Perth and surrounded by horses and lush green paddocks. It’s divine.”
Malvina joined the project after Noma Architects had completed the groundwork and together with the client, got to work paring back the home and “filling it with details.” “I usually have a vision for projects very quickly and can create the concepts swiftly before pulling the key elements together,” she says.
Approximately 500-square-metres with an additional wing containing two bedrooms and guest house gave her much to work with. Reusing the barn vernacular but with simplistic sensibility, Malvina applied a palette of restrained elegance and crisp tones alongside wide European oak floorboards.
In the open plan living space that includes a living room, two dining areas and a cavernous kitchen, an old mezzanine was removed to reveal stunning shingles Malvina painted white. An original stone fireplace provides a stunning focal point and separates the informal eating area and dining room that accesses an outdoor terrace. “In the kitchen, we simply reoiled the timber tops, repaired the cabinetry and added neutrals,” she says. “The windows frame the view and provide the space a beautiful backdrop.”
Bathed in the northern sun, the home’s vast original verandas allow the interior spaces abundant light and breezes. Outside, a couple of original horse carriages greet visitors, whilst at the back, an enviable outdoor entertaining area includes large pool, 10-metre outdoor kitchen and barbeque, and chic grey topped pool table. “With family and guests coming and going, I wanted the home to look and feel comfortable, but with a level of sophistication,” she explains.
Devil is in the detail and for Malvina, the old and interesting provide true integrity to a room. “I don’t like anything shiny or perfect,” she admits. “I like history and imperfections.” The client’s garage filled with treasures was a delight for Stone, who found everything she needed, including an old butcher’s block she reimagined as a bedside table. “I loved rummaging through the family’s antiques, bric-a-brac and collectables,” she says. “We recovered old furniture in beautiful new textiles and found objects we thought could work. By setting them against a simple backdrop, they look current and fresh again.”
The horse stud continues to be a work in progress for Malvina, as she prepares for new projects in the coming months. “I have jobs in the southwest and western suburbs, a couple with Phillipa Mowbray Architects, a boutique hotel, and I am design consultant for Government House!” she gasps. “I’m always itching to try different things. It’s my job to look outside the box and take it next level. It’s frantic, but I love it”