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Written by Hawaiian Style Magazine
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July 18, 2008 |
Just because a home building and design company’s name evokes the Old West, there’s no reason why that firm can’t open a flourishing branch in Maui—even though its headquarters happens to be located in Utah.
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Written by Marcus Webb
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July 18, 2008 |
What has music got to do with good interior design for high-end Hawaiian residences? Everything, according to Richard Krajchir, founder and CEO of Pacific Orient Traders in Honolulu. Speaking with pride of his Gentry Design Center staff of 10...and of the dozens of craftsmen who create custom furnishings at his Mainland China workshop...Krajchir employs a musical metaphor.
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Written by Linda Hayes
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April 01, 2008 |
“It was a labor of love,” says Shane Jackson, director of environmental projects for Towne Development of Hawai‘i Inc a subsidiary of Zilber Ltd. He’s talking about the environmentally sensitive, custom home the company designed and built in Koa at Kehalani on Maui. “Everything from the initial research through the design and construction to our on-site recycling operation was carefully planned and thought out,” Jackson adds. |
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Written by Hawaiian Style Magazine
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April 01, 2008 |
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“I’ve always had a strong passion for architecture,” says Breck Dangler, who grew up in the Islands and traveled the world before launching his own successful building firm on Maui in the late 1970s. Over the next several years, he installed hundreds of kitchens. When the time came to add design services to his portfolio, he found it a natural progression. “That practical knowledge of all aspects of construction comes into play when design has to integrate into the actual project,” Dangler says. |
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Written by Mark E. Ward
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April 01, 2008 |
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It’s not easy being green, as Kermit the Frog famously sang many years ago. But in the Hawaiian Islands, leading luxury resorts and cutting-edge home builders and suppliers are proving that you can be environmentally friendly without sacrificing style and comfort. In the Islands, as elsewhere around the world, more and more architects and designers are striving to be, -- and be seen as -- green. Interest in pro-conservation products and policies is shared by building professionals as well as governments, businesses, resorts, and homeowners, many of whom clamor for the latest green goods.
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Written by Marcus Webb
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April 01, 2008 |
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“You dream it, we weave it,” is this rug specialist’s motto; all-natural Hawaiian Rugs are still woven on traditional looms.
People in love with each other are said to walk on air. People in love with their Hawaiian Rugs walk on art…literally.
The Indich Collection provides beautiful Hawaiian Rugs ® that consist exclusively of 100% all-natural materials: silk, cotton, wool, and hemp. These “floor tapestries” are hand-dyed and hand-woven on traditional looms.
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Written by Joshua Tompkins
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April 01, 2008 |
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In the language of geology, a tuff cone is a wide, low-rimmed accumulation of debris around a volcanic vent. The debris, or tuff (from tofus, a Latin word meaning soft, light, porous rock), is igneous rock that forms wherever airborne volcanic pumice falls back to earth, piling up like a sooty snowdrift. The cliffs around Portlock, a residential community on the slope of Koko Head, the lodestone of O‘ahu’s craggy southeastern coast, are made of tuff from the same eruption that formed the crater now known as Hanauma Bay. In the pellucid waters of the bay, a protected marine life conservation area, moray eels slink around Pocillopora coral formations.
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Written by Linda Hayes
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April 01, 2008 |
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For interior designer Karl D. Gottling, ASID Industry Partner, designing the interiors of a Kihei beachfront villa for Maui architect George Rixey came with an atypical challenge. “Normally, my clients say \'do what you like,\'” Gottling explains. “But the villa was a very important project for George, and he was very specific about what he wanted to see inside.”
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Written by Mark E. Ward
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April 01, 2008 |
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“Being an architect is a truly unique opportunity to shape a community and to influence the lives of people for the better.” So says Matt Gilbertson, AIA, NCARB. As a career architect (and principal with RIM Architects –Hawai‘i), he takes that community-shaping opportunity seriously…and he’s ever mindful of an architect’s responsibility to help preserve and protect Hawai‘i’s environment through eco-friendly design and building practices.
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Written by Marcus Webb
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December 27, 2007 |
When successful custom home contractor Jim Byxbee came to Hawai‘i from Connecticut 13 years ago, he brought a trunkful of practical Yankee virtues and building disciplines with him. Byxbee likes to think that his Honolulu-based company, Homeworks Construction, has helped raise the standards of residential building in the Aloha State. |
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Written by Marcus Webb
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December 27, 2007 |
Some people have the gift of instant intimacy—or, at the very least, "rapid rapport." Carla Flood, ASID, is one of them. A woman of charm, culture, and accomplishment, she is also a down-to-earth lady with an easy laugh. But her friendly, casual manner belongs to a true world citizen who has traveled the globe to learn about art and culture, and who—in her fifth decade of design—is a tiger ...
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Written by Marcus Webb
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October 03, 2007 |
Enthusiasm and expertise are the stock in trade for Cutting Edge Studio, the Maui-based design, manufacturing, and installation experts who provide cabinetry and design for luxury Island homes as well as some Mainland residences. “We specialize in kitchens, bathrooms, closets, studies, and entertainment centers – virtually any area of the home that requires cabinetry,” says owner Ron Andreassen. |
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Written by Marcus Webb
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October 03, 2007 |
“Here in Hawaii, designers have the opportunity to work on gorgeous, fabulous, dream-project homes, and choosing a favorite project is like trying to decide which of your kids you like best,” laughs Gina Willman of W Interiors. Located in Kamuela on the Big Island, she and partner Toni Knudson specialize in private luxury residences on the Islands, often featuring an elegant contemporary take on classical Hawaiian, Asian, and European elements. |
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Written by Claire Morris Dobie
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October 03, 2007 |
Children’s fairytales have spoken for generations of an “enchanted wood.” As it happens, there actually is such a wood. It’s called koa, and it grows in Hawai‘i. Each September, thousands of art lovers flock to the Hawaii Wood Show (Na La‘au o Hawaii ) on O‘ahu, sponsored by the Hawaii Forest Industry Association. While other endemic, indigenous and introduced Hawaiian woods are also featured, the spotlight inevitably focuses on fine furnishings and spectacular craftworks made of Acacia Koa, an enchanting material known worldwide for its extraordinary variety of grain figuring. |
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Written by Marcus Webb
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August 30, 2007 |
Quick, try a mental experiment. Close your eyes and discover how easily you can conjure up two of the Islands’ most beloved images…
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