350 square feet turns into 20 different rooms


Hong Kong’s most in demand commodity is space. It is not uncommon for families sharing an apartment of 350 square feet or smaller, often with a tenant occupying one of the rooms too. But living in area’s that small call for creative solutions. Hong Kong based designer Gary Chang decided to transform his tiny flat in a stylish studio that has room for a library, a walk in wardrobe, a kitchen, a guest bed, a bathroom with tub, and much more. Making use of sliding walls, he can transform the place into 20 different rooms.

Katie Price´s pad on the market


Vixen bombshell Katie Price, aka Jordan, has put her Surrey Mansion on the market. Her house is like her body. Over the top, tacky, plenty of fake, once pretty on the outside but hideous on the inside. Oh, and without so much as a hint of class. I am very sorry but I think Jordan is the mother of all that has no taste nor brain and she should be banned from the public eye.

The house is yours for £2,950,000.

Jordan´s house. Worked on too many times and still looks crap, just like her.

Picture book collages by Dieuwertje


In a garden studio in the Northern part of the Dutch Capitol Amsterdam, Dutch designer Dieuwertje van de Moosdijk finds inspiration for her art. The word designer might not be covering her metier completely. Dieuwertje could easily be considered a stylist, illustrator, decorator and creator as her work fits so many purposes it´s hard to stick a label on it. Oh, and she writes too!

Dieuwertje's garden studio

The outside world nature in particular, but urban scenes too, inspire her the most. Clouds, sheep, flowers, fields; they are often part of her work. Yet occasionally a small French car, an interior or even a caravan play a cameo in the images. And every item is hand-made. Candy wrappers, wallpaper samples, bits of fabric, photographs, drawings and even bits of her mother’s wedding dress find their ways to the collages. “I like to see the ruggedness in my products. All my work is done by hand rather than by computer. Long live scissors and the glue gun!”.

Houd de conversatie gaande, Dieuwertjemaakt.nl

We gaan naar Frankrijk, Dieuwertjemaakt.nl

Her work finds it’s way as illustrations in magazines, books or the web, or by mail to notify lucky recipients of births, weddings and parties.

Leftover Dinner Party, Dieuwertjemaakt.nl

Dieuwertje is currently working on a series of recipe cards and on a illustrations for the guide ‘What (not) to eat by @talkinfood.

Books: Lost Russia: Photographing the Ruins of Russian Architecture By William CraftBrumfield


In the Homevoyeurs.com webshop; an amazing book about history, architecture and forgotten monuments in Russia

Lost Russia: Photographing the Ruins of Russian Architecture

The twentieth century in Russia has been a cataclysm of rare proportions, as war, revolution, famine, and massive political terror tested the limits of human endurance. The results of this assault on Russian culture are particularly evident in ruined architectural monuments, some of which are little known even within Russia itself.

Over the past two decades William Craft Brumfield, noted historian and photographer of Russian architecture, has traveled throughout Russia and photographed many of these neglected, lost buildings, poignant and haunting in their ruin. Lost Russiaprovides a unique view of Brumfield’s acclaimed work, which illuminates Russian culture as reflected in these remnants of its distinctive architectural traditions.

Capturing the quiet, ineffable beauty that graces these buildings, these photographs are accompanied by a text that provides not only a brief historical background for Russian architecture, but also Brumfield’s personal impressions, thoughts, and insights on the structures he views. Churches and monasteries from the fifteenth to the twentieth century as well as abandoned, ruined manor houses are shown—ravaged by time, willful neglect, and cultural vandalism. Brumfield also illustrates examples of recent local initiatives to preserve cultural landmarks from steady decline and destruction.

Concluding with photographs of the remarkable log architecture found in Russia’s far north, Lost Russia is a book for all those concerned with the nation’s cultural legacy, history, and architecture, and with historic and cultural preservation generally. It will also interest those who appreciate the fine art of exceptional photography.

The book, 144 pages in paperback,  is available through the Homevoyeurs.com webshop and on sale for $28.59. In some countries your order will be eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping

William Craft Brumfield