Pittella holiday closure: 18th December re-opening 11th January 2021. All online orders will be dispatched following our re-opening date.

Q&A with interior designers Hecker Guthrie

Q&A with interior designers Hecker Guthrie

We spoke to Hamish Guthrie and Paul Hecker from Melbourne-based studio Hecker Guthrie who reimagined the Pittella headquarters in Melbourne and also collaborate with us on residential projects around the country.
WHAT INFLUENCES YOU WHEN YOU DESIGN A SPACE?
The studio believes in working with the client to develop a brief and an overarching concept  which drives a project and becomes a shared journey. Whatever the scale of the project we always start from a big, underpinning idea which informs materiality, light, comfort, texture and sets up filters early on for everyone involved in the project.
“One mentor from whom I learned to trust my own judgement and who’s advice I hold dear to this day, taught me to look at everything, to see the potential in everything, the joy (the lack thereof) and learn to make your own decisions around good and bad and find exciting ways to challenge the norm.”
– Paul Hecker
HOW DO YOU DESCRIBE YOUR DESIGN ETHOS?
The aim of the studio is to create spaces that are endearing and beautiful, where the feeling speaks louder than the furnishings and the levels of charm and comfort outweigh the instant gratification of the merely new.
Our muse has always been an idea of authenticity, in all its forms, existing in each of our projects. Design embodies this in the most truthful way, with an honesty that is becoming a rare currency. It’s not so much about creating an aesthetic, but more about conjuring an experience, creating stories and letting a narrative take its own form. In such a unique and unparalleled way, it’s a discovery-through-process, through making, through reacting to materiality in such an intimate way, that then has the potential to advance our own stories, and ultimately our experiences with our spaces.
See Hecker Guthrie here

La Pesca & L’Ala, a joinery handle collection inspired by the natural form.

La Pesca & L’Ala, a joinery handle collection inspired by the natural form.

THE STORY BEHIND MY INSPIRATION FOR THE DESIGN OF THE ALA & PESCA
The Parco Sempione in Milan is a place I often visit when I’m in Milan. It’s not only picturesque but it’s the perfect setting to develop new ideas. Ideas could come from seeing a certain plant, a winding path, or even from touching one of the established tree trunks. The palm fronds were also in my gaze. I see this park as Milan’s ‘green lung’, right in the heart of the city.
The inspiration for the Pesca and the Ala came to be by nature, the majestic green leaves of the Parco Sempione their symmetry and curvature spoke volumes. I  created a symmetrical joinery pull, oversized like nature itself and not subject to just one application but designed for multiple uses.
Given how successful the design appetite was for simple integrated joinery handles which appeared to float from the fixing plane and without the need for complex internal working mechanisms,  I developed the Pesca and Ala based on this philosophy.
With this integration in mind the Ala & Pesca could easilly be used on integrated fridge doors,  singularly on joinery and entryway doors or back to back for both applications.
Designers