Houzz Tours
My Houzz: 1940s Glamour in 21st-Century Melbourne
A pair of Australian empty-nesters give their Edwardian home a personality-filled makeover
It also gave Dianne the perfect opportunity to let her love of quirky, vintage style run free.
The house was immaculate when they moved in and didn’t require any structural changes. This allowed Dianne to focus her attention on a decorative transformation — something the fashion and design aficionado was more than equipped for.
“Some say I’m eclectic; others say I’m crazy,” she says. “My style is ever-changing and so is my home, much to my husband’s dismay. He says, ‘Sit long enough and you will get moved too!’ Furniture does not stay in one spot very long in my home. I am always moving, adding or replacing something.”
The house was immaculate when they moved in and didn’t require any structural changes. This allowed Dianne to focus her attention on a decorative transformation — something the fashion and design aficionado was more than equipped for.
“Some say I’m eclectic; others say I’m crazy,” she says. “My style is ever-changing and so is my home, much to my husband’s dismay. He says, ‘Sit long enough and you will get moved too!’ Furniture does not stay in one spot very long in my home. I am always moving, adding or replacing something.”
With its curved lines, huge, double-hung windows and dramatic printed wallpaper, the sitting room is Dianne’s favorite spot in the house. “I love this room because it is multipurpose,” she says. “Dennis uses it as a study, while I like to curl up here and read or watch a movie. I adore the wallpaper, flowery chairs and my peacock.”
Pieces like the taxidermy bird characterize Dianne’s current style. “I find them quirky and beautiful,” she says.
Swallows wallpaper: Sanderson; peacock: South Pacific Taxidermy
Pieces like the taxidermy bird characterize Dianne’s current style. “I find them quirky and beautiful,” she says.
Swallows wallpaper: Sanderson; peacock: South Pacific Taxidermy
Lighting is Dianne’s other current craze, and there are eye-catching fixtures dotted throughout the house. “I am besotted with antique lamps that have a little touch of something special about them, whether it’s crystals, Asian dragons or pretty parasols. To me, they are features within themselves.”
Dianne sources them from a range of places, including antiques complex Tyabb Packing House on the Mornington Peninsula and auction houses and antiques shops in country towns such as Maldon and Castlemaine in Victoria state and Richmond in Tasmania.
Dianne sources them from a range of places, including antiques complex Tyabb Packing House on the Mornington Peninsula and auction houses and antiques shops in country towns such as Maldon and Castlemaine in Victoria state and Richmond in Tasmania.
“Our home is more than 100 years old and has beautiful, traditional features, including fireplaces with original tiling, ceiling roses and gorgeous ornate air vents, stained glass and floorboards,” Dianne says. “Many of these features have inspired my style in the home. Birds and butterflies appear in the stained glass and air vents, and so I have carried them through in decor and art.”
Another of Dianne’s favorite spaces is her dressing room. Originally an underused spare bedroom, it’s now a showcase for her glorious assortment of vintage clothes, hats and shoes.
“I had an island cabinet custom-made to sit in the middle of the dressing room, which I designed with display drawers so I could see my accessories and jewelry,” Dianne says. “The handles feature Swarovski crystals and they ‘bling’ whenever I turn the light on. They’re a favorite of mine.”
When it comes to decorating, Dianne looks to the style of old English homes for inspiration. She also gets ideas by watching period movies and television shows such as Miss Marple. “In the cinema, I’m that person looking at the sets and costumes rather than the actors,” she says.
Dianne travels the world each year to her favorite vintage-fashion haunts in search of new treasures — New York and Paris for high-glamour pieces and corsetry and places such as Nashville for vintage rockabilly items, which she’ll don as casual wear.
“One of the perks of being old is that you no longer have to look after your children’s needs, so you have some extra cash to splash,” she says with a laugh.
Dianne travels the world each year to her favorite vintage-fashion haunts in search of new treasures — New York and Paris for high-glamour pieces and corsetry and places such as Nashville for vintage rockabilly items, which she’ll don as casual wear.
“One of the perks of being old is that you no longer have to look after your children’s needs, so you have some extra cash to splash,” she says with a laugh.
“I love to shop and do all my own styling,” Dianne says. “My best design tip is ‘If you love it, buy it.’ ”
Known as Lippy to many of her friends and family, Dianne never leaves the house without her signature red lipstick and pin-curled hair.
Dianne enlisted the services of bathroom company Perini to transform the property’s two bathrooms into havens of old-school glamour, replete with luxurious finishes, twinkling lighting and freestanding bathroom furniture.
“It wasn’t so much a collaboration, more a case of ‘Here is what I want,’ and they were wonderful about meeting my eclectic needs,” Dianne says. “I love the result. My only regret is putting in the long shower grates, as they require too much cleaning.”
“It wasn’t so much a collaboration, more a case of ‘Here is what I want,’ and they were wonderful about meeting my eclectic needs,” Dianne says. “I love the result. My only regret is putting in the long shower grates, as they require too much cleaning.”
The Art Deco-inspired Carrara marble and copper-plated vanity in the main bathroom, which Perini had specially shipped over from Italy, was Dianne’s biggest bathroom splurge. And she couldn’t be more delighted with it: “I love how it has the dual purpose as a vanity and a dressing table,” she says.
The bathtub is what Dianne would affectionately call her office. In the past, she would make phone calls in a tub full of bubbles, with the echo of the room and the splashes of water giving away her location to friends and family on the other end of the line.
Dianne had great fun decorating the home’s two guest rooms for her visiting grandchildren, imbuing them with her trademark whimsy.
Granddaughter Mimi’s room has a boudoir style, featuring hand-painted cherubs on the wall that Dianne created herself. When it came to furniture and accessories, she decked the room out with character pieces found at antiques stores.
“I love the challenge and satisfaction of finding that perfect item,” Dianne says. “The Italian marriage blanket on Mimi’s bed was a recent addition that came from a local vintage collector.”
Granddaughter Mimi’s room has a boudoir style, featuring hand-painted cherubs on the wall that Dianne created herself. When it came to furniture and accessories, she decked the room out with character pieces found at antiques stores.
“I love the challenge and satisfaction of finding that perfect item,” Dianne says. “The Italian marriage blanket on Mimi’s bed was a recent addition that came from a local vintage collector.”
Grandson Max’s room has a sweet circus theme, with black-and-white harlequin diamonds painted on a cabinet and a metal marquee light propped against the wall.
“The lounge is our warmest room in the house,” Dianne says. “The gas log fire, along with the leather chesterfield and soft rug, make it feel cozy. With its wide countertops, oodles of wall space and general quirkiness, I enjoy decorating this room. And my husband loves nothing more than sitting watching telly with a stuffed bird in his line of sight —I’m being sarcastic, of course!”
The built-in cabinetry was painted white when the couple moved in, but Dianne freshened it up with a coat of Dulux’s White Swan. Black walls painted in Squid Ink from Porter’s Paints make for a striking contrast, and serve to give a modern tilt to Dianne’s collection of antiques.
“I felt an all-white look would be too stark here,” she says. “Plus, being open-plan, I felt the space could take the dramatic black.”
The built-in cabinetry was painted white when the couple moved in, but Dianne freshened it up with a coat of Dulux’s White Swan. Black walls painted in Squid Ink from Porter’s Paints make for a striking contrast, and serve to give a modern tilt to Dianne’s collection of antiques.
“I felt an all-white look would be too stark here,” she says. “Plus, being open-plan, I felt the space could take the dramatic black.”
The only collaboration Dianne had in the design of the home was in the lounge, and it still irks her every time she sets eyes on it. “It was with my husband,” she explains. “We installed a new air-conditioning system and had to elect a place for the main unit. We ‘collaborated’ and unfortunately he won, and it was placed right in the middle of my feature wall.”
The couple’s son-in-law, Tom, is a printer and softened the look by printing an adhesive tree design for the wall. “I have chosen not to collaborate with anyone anymore,” Dianne says.
The couple’s son-in-law, Tom, is a printer and softened the look by printing an adhesive tree design for the wall. “I have chosen not to collaborate with anyone anymore,” Dianne says.
“The kitchen and dining room are the heart of our house,” Dianne says. “We are always coming and going from this space. It’s functional and multipurpose — a place where we cook, eat, read the paper, craft and communicate.”
The decorative flowers on the dining room wall are made from blotting paper. Dianne picked them up eight years ago from a local parfumerie, where they’d been used for display.
Dianne and Dennis worked with The Kitchen Place in Hawthorn to update the tired existing kitchen. They changed the cabinetry, backsplash and appliances. “The Kitchen Place was great to deal with, especially when it came to installing the extremely heavy overhead cupboards,” Dianne says.
The best lesson she learned while renovating the house? To get out of the way and let the tradespeople get on with their jobs. “They will call you if they need you,” she says.
The best lesson she learned while renovating the house? To get out of the way and let the tradespeople get on with their jobs. “They will call you if they need you,” she says.
Dianne’s latest craze is pedestals. “As you can see, I can’t get enough of them. They feature heavily in my hallway, sitting room and lounge room,” she says. And they’re surprisingly practical. “They’re the perfect new place for me to display my quirky finds.”
Dianne ripped up the existing front-yard landscaping herself and planted a traditional parterre garden in its place. She’s delighted with the result, which fits with the home’s elegant lines and gives a perfect welcome to visitors.
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Who lives here: Dianne and Dennis Klanjscek
Where: Hawthorn neighborhood of Melbourne, Australia
Size: Four bedrooms, two bathrooms
After finding themselves rambling around their huge family home in the suburbs, empty-nesters Dianne and Dennis Klanjscek decided in 2008 that the time was right to move to a smaller and more manageable abode. They chose an elegant Edwardian-stye house in urban Hawthorn, surrounded by an abundance of lifestyle amenities for added appeal. “With its shops, restaurants, public transport and entertainment [500 feet] from our doorstep, this was the ideal place to retire,” Dianne says.