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The south island lifestyle magazine<br />

I’m YOURS | <strong>August</strong> <strong>2022</strong><br />

the People. The PLACES. ThE TRENDS.<br />

CHRISTCHURCH-BASED SUSTAINABLE CLOTHING BRAND UNTOUCHED WORLD’S WOOL DOMINATION | DUNEDIN’S OLDEST<br />

MUSIC STORE, DISK DEN, ON 45 YEARS IN THE BIZ | RETURN OF THE CHATEAU: PETER BEAVEN’S CELEBRATED HOTEL REOPENS<br />

TO THE PUBLIC | RENOWNED WRITER, POET, ARTIST & CURATOR GREGORY O’BRIEN ON HIS LOVE FOR REGIONAL NEW ZEALAND<br />

KIWI QUEEN OF PICKLES & PRESERVES KYLEE NEWTON’S DELICIOUSLY EASY RECIPES | THE CANTABRIAN ENTREPRENEUR<br />

TAKING ON THE GLOBAL MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS | WĀNAKA TRAVEL WRITER WAYNE MARTIN FALLS FOR OMARAMA


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Scan the QR code to learn more.<br />

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A note to you<br />

PUBLISHER<br />

Charlotte Smith-Smulders<br />

Allied Press Magazines<br />

Level 1, 359 Lincoln Road, Christchurch 8024<br />

03 379 7100<br />

EDITOR<br />

Josie Steenhart<br />

josie@alliedpressmagazines.co.nz<br />

DESIGNER<br />

Emma Rogers<br />

PROOFREADER<br />

Síana Clifford<br />

EDITORIAL ASSISTANT<br />

Hannah Brown<br />

SALES MANAGER<br />

Vivienne Montgomerie<br />

021 914 428<br />

viv@alliedpressmagazines.co.nz<br />

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE<br />

Janine Oldfield<br />

027 654 5367<br />

janine@alliedpressmagazines.co.nz<br />

CONTRIBUTORS<br />

Bruce Munro, Deanna Copland, Gregory O’Brien,<br />

Hannah Powell, Helen Templeton, Juliette Capaldi, Kylee Newton,<br />

Linda Robertson, Meredith Earle,<br />

Neville Templeton, Sophia Bayly, Wayne Martin<br />

Every month, <strong>Style</strong> (ISSN 2624-4314) shares the latest in<br />

local and international home, lifestyle and fashion with its discerning readers.<br />

Enjoy <strong>Style</strong> online (ISSN 2624-4918) at stylemagazine.co.nz<br />

As both a journalist and magazine editor, I love nothing more<br />

than hearing about and sharing local success stories, and<br />

this issue has some absolute doozies – starting with our suitably<br />

stylish cover feature (page 22), where I had the opportunity to<br />

speak with Untouched World’s Peri Drysdale about the joys<br />

and challenges of running a genuinely sustainable international<br />

fashion brand from Christchurch.<br />

Staying in the Garden City, the wonderful work of emerging<br />

tech entrepreneur (and young mum of two) Hannah Hardy-<br />

Jones, helping beat the global mental health crisis one app at a<br />

time, is also worth celebrating – and we aren’t the only ones to<br />

think so, as she recently won a sought-after Jaguar ‘She Sets the<br />

Pace’ community grant of $10,000. Read more on page 36.<br />

We also raise a toast (in print form) to star mixologist<br />

Meredith Earle of High Street speakeasy Austin Club, who,<br />

along with my fellow gin-loving judges, I recently had the<br />

pleasure of awarding top place to at the South Island final<br />

of Roots Marlborough Dry Gin’s ‘Show Us Your Roots’<br />

cocktail competition. Meredith shares the recipe for her<br />

deliciously captivating winning entry Rōhi and the inspiration<br />

behind it, on page 61.<br />

Here’s cheers to all three!<br />

Allied Press Magazines, a division of Allied Press Ltd, is not responsible for any actions taken<br />

on the information in these articles. The information and views expressed in this publication<br />

are not necessarily the opinion of Allied Press Ltd or its editorial contributors.<br />

Every effort is made to ensure the accuracy of the information within this magazine, however,<br />

Allied Press Ltd can accept no liability for the accuracy of all the information.<br />

Josie Steenhart<br />

EDITOR<br />

WANT STYLE DELIVERED STRAIGHT TO YOUR LETTERBOX?<br />

CONTACT: viv@alliedpressmagazines.co.nz<br />

stylemagazine.co.nz | @<strong>Style</strong>MagazineNZ


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*Terms and conditions apply. The standard Scheduled 5 Year Servicing is included. Speak to your retailer for more details or visit www.jaguar.co.nz.


CONTENTS<br />

In this issue<br />

Cover Feature<br />

22 WOOL DOMINATION<br />

Untouched World founder<br />

Peri Drysdale on more than<br />

25 years in trade<br />

Health & Beauty<br />

36 GETTING APPY<br />

The Christchurch tech<br />

entrepreneur tackling the<br />

mental health crisis<br />

38 NATURAL GLOW<br />

Sort your winter skin<br />

40 ABOUT FACE<br />

The best new beauty<br />

Fashion<br />

34 WINTER GLAMOUR<br />

Don’t let a little cold<br />

dampen your sparkle<br />

Home & Interiors<br />

32 MOST WANTED<br />

What the <strong>Style</strong> team are<br />

coveting this month<br />

32<br />

22<br />

62<br />

RESENE<br />

GUMBOOT<br />

COLOURS OF<br />

THE MONTH<br />

THE BEST OF HOME, LIFE & FASHION<br />

<strong>Style</strong> is something unique to each of us. Each month, <strong>Style</strong> encapsulates what’s remarkable, exciting or<br />

emerging across the South Island and beyond. Be assured, the best of lifestyle, home, fashion, food and<br />

culture will always be in <strong>Style</strong>.<br />

<strong>2022</strong><br />

and Sculpture Exhibition<br />

Opening night: Friday 2 September, 7pm<br />

Purchase your tickets: trybooking.co.nz/KNC<br />

Public Exhibition: Free Admission<br />

Saturday 3 September, 9am – 4pm<br />

Sunday 4 September, 10am – 2pm<br />

St Margaret’s College Gymnasium


36<br />

34<br />

RESENE<br />

TARAWERA<br />

RESENE<br />

ESSENTIAL CREAM<br />

Food & Drink<br />

61 STYLE SIPS<br />

An award-winning cocktail to try<br />

62 THE MODERN PRESERVER<br />

Pickle queen Kylee Newton’s<br />

deliciously easy recipes<br />

64 MIX & MINGLE<br />

Delicious beverages tested<br />

by the <strong>Style</strong> team<br />

Arts & Culture<br />

28 MUSICAL HERITAGE<br />

Dunedin’s oldest music store still<br />

rocking after 45 years<br />

66 ODE TO THE SOUTH<br />

Poet and artist Gregory O’Brien<br />

pays tribute to regional NZ<br />

72 THE READING ROOM<br />

Our picks of the new book pack<br />

Travel<br />

52 CLIFFHANGER<br />

Falling for Omarama’s Clay Cliffs<br />

54 CHATEAU ON THE PARK<br />

The one-of-a-kind Christchurch<br />

hotel reopens to the public<br />

Regulars<br />

12 NEWSFEED<br />

What’s hot and happening in your<br />

neighbourhood<br />

50 MARKETPLACE<br />

Gorgeous wares from local spots<br />

74 WIN<br />

Luxe pillows, flotation therapy,<br />

tickets to Matilda: The Musical<br />

and a very innovative mouse<br />

Our cover<br />

Untouched World designer Moira Te Whata<br />

working on a garment at the clothing<br />

company’s Christchurch HQ.<br />

View us online<br />

Fisherman’s Wharf Restaurant<br />

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AN AUSTRALIAN MEDICAL ORCHESTRA<br />

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12 <strong>Style</strong> | Newsfeed<br />

NEWSFEED<br />

Party-worthy prints<br />

Dunedin-based designer Tanya<br />

Carlson has plenty to celebrate,<br />

with her eponymous label turning<br />

25 this year. The autumn/winter<br />

collection is suitably party-ready,<br />

and includes fabulous exclusive<br />

prints created in collaboration<br />

with textile designer Julie Maclean,<br />

as well as vivid hues of buttercup<br />

yellow, watermelon, crème de<br />

menthe, ruby red and Moroccan<br />

blue. tanyacarlson.com<br />

Ballet is back<br />

Spectacular new RNZB ballet Cinderella<br />

will be performed in Christchurch<br />

<strong>August</strong> 25-28 and Dunedin September<br />

3 as part of the company’s first national<br />

tour in more than a year. Feisty, funny<br />

and fabulous, Cinderella is the brainchild<br />

of award-winning master storyteller<br />

Loughlan Prior, with a magical new score<br />

by Claire Cowan and fashion-forward<br />

designs by San Francisco-based Australian<br />

designer Emma Kingsbury.<br />

rnzb.org.nz<br />

On patrol<br />

Sit tight and buckle up,<br />

as iconic Kiwi rockers<br />

Fur Patrol take their 21st<br />

birthday on the road this<br />

month. A tour dedicated<br />

to their debut record<br />

Pet, Julia Deans, Simon<br />

Braxton and Andrew Bain<br />

are excited to be playing<br />

it live once again. Catch<br />

the start of their tour in<br />

Nelson (<strong>August</strong> 11), before<br />

Dunedin (<strong>August</strong> 12), and<br />

Christchurch (<strong>August</strong> 13).<br />

undertheradar.co.nz<br />

Think pink<br />

If you’re needing new hot hair tools, now’s the perfect time<br />

to invest, with the launch of ghd’s latest limited-edition Pink<br />

collection. This year’s selection of hot pink tools includes the<br />

Helios professional hairdryer, award-winning Platinum+ styler,<br />

the Gold styler, and, for the first time ever, the Glide hot brush<br />

– with $20 from every Pink ghd purchased going to Breast<br />

Cancer Foundation New Zealand. ghdhair.com


SIMPLY<br />

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The look and feel of timber flooring<br />

from Quickstep - Europe’s leader<br />

in hybrid timber laminate flooring.<br />

Quickstep is also easy care, durable and water<br />

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of styles and colourways.<br />

03 348 0939 FLOORPRIDE.COM<br />

MANDEVILLE STREET, CHRISTCHURCH<br />

For more information, visit our store or online.


14 <strong>Style</strong> | Newsfeed<br />

In stitches<br />

Celebrating 20 years in <strong>2022</strong>, luxe Kiwi leatherware<br />

brand Saben’s latest collection, Soul Sisters, is a nod to<br />

the art of craft, with braided leather and a<br />

contrasting blanket stitch used on several key pieces,<br />

as well as a very special limited-edition capsule range<br />

adorned by embroidery artist Fleur Woods.<br />

saben.co.nz<br />

Foodie fun<br />

Sharpen up your culinary skills at The Christchurch<br />

Food Show, returning to the Garden City this <strong>August</strong><br />

19-21 at Christchurch Arena. Join MasterChef New<br />

Zealand judge Michael Dearth in the NEFF Cooking<br />

Theatre, where he’ll share the heritage of exceptional<br />

flavour and how to apply this to everyday cooking.<br />

A session not to be missed for all foodies! Purchase<br />

your tickets online and save. foodshow.co.nz<br />

Now relocated to a Sumner Studio!<br />

©Marc Bendall<br />

All Rights Reserved.<br />

A Marc Bendall design – uniquely yours.<br />

catherine@marcbendall.co.nz<br />

www.marcbendall.co.nz<br />

By appointment Mon-Fri 9am - 6pm<br />

Saturday 10am - 2pm, 03 38 5156 or 021 896 667


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16 <strong>Style</strong> | Newsfeed<br />

Grand opening<br />

Four years and $23 million in the making,<br />

Christchurch’s newest boutique luxury<br />

hotel The Mayfair has finally opened<br />

its very stylish doors. Set in a premium<br />

central location on the corner of Victoria<br />

and Dorset streets, it features 67 rooms<br />

over five floors including spacious<br />

suites such as the ‘top of house’ rooms<br />

with panoramic views through 3.3m<br />

floor-to-ceiling windows, taking in<br />

Hagley Park and the Southern Alps. “The<br />

Mayfair is a fresh take on luxury, meaning<br />

that luxury no longer has to be about<br />

formality,” says general manager Rick<br />

Crannitch. “Instead, it’s relaxed, thoughtful<br />

and welcoming at every touchpoint:<br />

a beautiful space, complemented by<br />

attentive service.” mayfairluxuryhotels.com<br />

Spread the word<br />

From poetry slams, pop-ups<br />

and author events (Fiona<br />

Kidman, Kate De Goldi and<br />

Lloyd Jones to name just a<br />

few), to writing workshops,<br />

cabaret, haiku hikes, afterdark<br />

museum tours and a<br />

moving tribute to the late<br />

Keri Hulme, this year’s Word<br />

Christchurch is shaping<br />

up to be an unmissable<br />

festival celebrating all things<br />

words, held across five<br />

fabulous days in the city.<br />

<strong>August</strong> 31 to September 4.<br />

wordchristchurch.co.nz<br />

Nice undies<br />

Much-loved Kiwi period<br />

underwear brand AWWA<br />

recently achieved B Corp<br />

Certification, having saved 23<br />

million single-use period products<br />

from landfill and waterways to<br />

date. They also have a new head<br />

designer, ex-Lonely Lingerie’s Anya<br />

Bucher, who has begun with a<br />

bang via the launch of matching<br />

sets in covetable colourways of<br />

moss and periwinkle. The first ever<br />

organic cotton AWWA bralette<br />

features a flattering scooped<br />

neckline, wire-free comfort and<br />

detachable straps to cross over<br />

for racerback-style tops, while<br />

the briefs are available in both<br />

moderate and heavy absorbency.<br />

awwaperiodcare.com<br />

On the road again<br />

After having her summer touring<br />

plans scuppered by Covid, awardwinning<br />

songstress Reb Fountain is<br />

finally packing her bags and heading<br />

out on the road to showcase album<br />

IRIS. “After releasing IRIS in October<br />

2021, we were all set to tour the<br />

album and like so many of our<br />

musical peers, plans got curtailed<br />

then cancelled. These shows have<br />

been a long time coming and we’re<br />

grateful for your patience and<br />

perseverance, we promise to bring<br />

you everything we’ve got!” she says.<br />

Reb and band will be in Dunedin<br />

<strong>August</strong> 17 and Christchurch<br />

<strong>August</strong> 18. rebfountain.co.nz


<strong>Style</strong> | Promotion 17<br />

“Being you is so important”: A<br />

wellbeing approach to education<br />

Feeling part of a community with strong relationships has<br />

helped Christchurch teen Sadie Lee navigate her high<br />

school years.<br />

The Rangi Ruru Girls’ School Year 13 student says feeling<br />

comfortable connecting with specialist subject teachers, class<br />

tutors, deans and her peers creates an environment where she<br />

belongs and can be herself.<br />

“When I came in Year 7 – and I think when all new<br />

students come in any year – you just want to fit in. But we’re<br />

encouraged to be ourselves; having that at the back of your<br />

mind during a time when you’re really discovering who you are<br />

lets you explore your interests and allow those aspects of your<br />

life to flourish.<br />

“I have gone through so many different phases and had the<br />

opportunity to try so many things out that I have to come to a<br />

point where I am pretty content with who I am and who I am<br />

becoming,” she says.<br />

Wellbeing and digital engagement coordinator at the<br />

690-student Years 7 to 13 day and boarding school, Sally Fail, says<br />

creating such an environment at the school is very intentional.<br />

“We don’t have a wellbeing programme, we have a<br />

wellbeing approach. We incorporate wellbeing across<br />

everything we do because it’s fundamental to any success: no<br />

learning is going to happen if you’re not feeling comfortable<br />

and content with who you are and where you’re at.”<br />

Classes sized between 16 and 25 help teachers get to know<br />

each student and allow students to be more open-minded<br />

and understanding.<br />

Fail, who attended Rangi Ruru herself, is part of the school’s<br />

Care and Development Network which includes the deputy<br />

principal; two school psychologists; boarding staff and nurses,<br />

and the heads of Health, student development and leadership<br />

and the high-performance and learning support programmes.<br />

Tutor class teachers and deans move through the school<br />

within year groups and Rangi Ruru has New Zealand’s only<br />

in-school careers and pathways strategist from university<br />

admissions consultancy Crimson Education.<br />

Rangi Ruru is hosting open days in <strong>August</strong> <strong>2022</strong> and Term<br />

1, 2023. For further information please visit:<br />

www.rangiruru.school.nz<br />

ABOVE: Sally Fail and Sadie Lee.<br />

BE YOU.<br />

BELONG.


18 <strong>Style</strong> | Newsfeed<br />

Ride or dies<br />

Run, don’t walk. Deadly Ponies designer<br />

Liam Bowden has announced his newest<br />

addition to the luxury leather label…<br />

women’s boots. In two designs, Rider<br />

and Marengo, each pair boasts a supple<br />

lamb inner and calf leather exterior.<br />

Responsibly tanned and handcrafted<br />

in Europe, take your pick between<br />

classic black and macadamia python.<br />

deadlyponies.com<br />

Country music royalty<br />

Critically acclaimed musician Tami Neilson<br />

takes her stunning new album Kingmaker on<br />

the road this month, with South Island stops<br />

in Nelson (<strong>August</strong> 17), Dunedin (<strong>August</strong><br />

18) and with the Christchurch Symphony<br />

Orchestra on <strong>August</strong> 20. With her serious<br />

vocal power, strikingly personal approach<br />

to country, rockabilly and soul and growing<br />

collection of awards, a Tami Neilson gig is not<br />

to be missed. tamineilson.com<br />

Photo: Sophia Bayly<br />

Southern talent<br />

Hospice Southland fundraiser and fabulous annual event Of Course<br />

You Can Do It! returns for <strong>2022</strong> with an unmissable afternoon of<br />

fun, goody bags and of course bubbles, with presentations by some<br />

very talented local folk, from a young chef with Michelin Star<br />

credentials to fashion and jewellery designers and a top makeup<br />

artist. <strong>August</strong> 28, Ascot Park Hotel. hospicesouthland.org.nz<br />

NEW DATES<br />

19 - 21<br />

<strong>August</strong><br />

Christchurch<br />

Arena<br />

Take your taste buds on a trip around the world<br />

without leaving Christchurch!<br />

Buy your tickets at foodshow.co.nz<br />

Proudly sponsored by:


A Word On<br />

Waiting<br />

Have you ever gone past a line<br />

of people and wondered what<br />

exactly they were waiting for,<br />

especially when the conditions<br />

for waiting were uncomfortable?<br />

It was either unbearably hot or<br />

inclement, yet the line continued to<br />

grow, confirming the belief that some<br />

things are worth waiting for.<br />

There’s a psychology to waiting and<br />

it’s been studied as part of business<br />

management and client services, with<br />

some of the most significant findings<br />

coming from Harvard Business School<br />

professor David Maister.<br />

I’m interested in his studies because<br />

one of the most common statements<br />

I’m hearing in the current market<br />

is “we’re waiting” … for the right<br />

home, right time, right price, the<br />

right circumstances. Everything has<br />

to be perfect and yet the chances of<br />

perfection, I’ve learnt from experience,<br />

are rare and that wait can become an<br />

infinite one.<br />

Waiting is one of the most dominant of<br />

human frustrations, so it makes sense<br />

to identify what makes the wait more<br />

acceptable.<br />

Here are some of his findings:<br />

1) The more valuable the service, the<br />

longer you’ll wait.<br />

An easy example of this is that people<br />

will wait longer for a doctor to attend<br />

to them than they would a shop<br />

assistant, perceiving the doctor’s<br />

service to be more valuable and<br />

deeply integral to their wellbeing.<br />

Equally, in real estate clients will wait<br />

for the right consultant to manage<br />

their property needs in the knowledge<br />

that this could give them an advantage<br />

by reaching more buyers, having their<br />

price expectations upheld through<br />

superior negotiation skills and giving<br />

their properties a better profile.<br />

There’s literally a ‘waiting list’ of clients<br />

for consultants of this calibre, and<br />

it makes sense to want to work with<br />

them.<br />

Some factors make waiting feel even<br />

longer and this realization gives the<br />

service industries – and real estate is<br />

one of these – a chance to rectify this<br />

inconvenience.<br />

2) Uncertain waits are longer than<br />

quantified ones.<br />

Someone who knows that their wish<br />

list home is coming to the market<br />

in approximately one month’s<br />

time is more likely to wait knowing<br />

this is definitely happening versus<br />

never having an actual timeframe<br />

communicated to them. The lesson<br />

here is consistent communication by<br />

an agent to keep in touch with their<br />

clients around timeframes – and for<br />

those clients wanting to be notified to<br />

show loyalty and commitment to that<br />

consultant. It’s a two-way street with<br />

significant benefits to both parties.<br />

Here’s a final ‘waiting’ scenario that<br />

also gets played out regularly and<br />

affects most of us:<br />

3) Unfair waits are longer, much<br />

longer than equitable ones. Here’s the<br />

scenario. You’re waiting to be attended<br />

to and the service you receive (or hope<br />

to receive) is interrupted by someone’s<br />

phone call. The sense of unfairness<br />

this engenders can make the wait<br />

intolerable and I wonder how much<br />

business is lost chasing the call over<br />

helping the actual person standing in<br />

front of you. I personally struggle with<br />

this the most and will usually move on<br />

if I find myself in this situation.<br />

So, what are you waiting for? What<br />

lines are you physically or figuratively<br />

standing in? I’m currently waiting<br />

for spring; I’m waiting for a full office<br />

without the burden of excessive<br />

illness. I’m not waiting for the market<br />

to change greatly for some time, but I<br />

am working with the awareness that it<br />

will, as they always do. So you’re aware<br />

of the most recent market statistics, I<br />

can tell you that 491 properties sold in<br />

June, averaging 33 days on the market<br />

and for an average price of $700,000.<br />

If you’re waiting for that right time,<br />

place or home, know that it’s out there<br />

and the right person will guide you to<br />

it.<br />

Lynette McFadden<br />

Harcourts gold Business Owner<br />

027 432 0447<br />

lynette.mcfadden@harcourtsgold.co.nz<br />

PAPANUI 352 6166 | INTERNATIONAL DIVISION (+64) 3 662 9811 | REDWOOD 352 0352<br />

PARKLANDS 383 0406 | NEW BRIGHTON 382 0043 | GOLD PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 352 6454<br />

GOLD REAL ESTATE GROUP LTD LICENSED AGENT REAA 2008 A MEMBER OF THE HARCOURTS GROUP<br />

www.harcourtsgold.co.nz


20 <strong>Style</strong> | Newsfeed<br />

Grape news<br />

New Zealand’s largest wine tasting event, Winetopia, arrives at the<br />

brand-new Te Pae Convention Centre this <strong>August</strong> 26-27 featuring<br />

46 wineries from Northland to Central Otago, tasty bites from<br />

South Island producers and the Te Pae kitchens and a solid line-up<br />

of talks and tastings led by some big personalities.<br />

winetopia.co.nz<br />

Dine Dunedin<br />

Dine Dunedin is back for another delicious year<br />

from <strong>August</strong> 5-21, and the menu is jammed<br />

with special experiences including degustations,<br />

lunches and tastings. Burger lovers listen up – hot<br />

spots all over town have come up with creative<br />

entries for the Emerson’s Burger Challenge, from<br />

Starfish Cafe’s Dirty Bird (a fried chicken and mac<br />

n’ cheese burger, pictured) to Blueskin Nurseries<br />

Cafe’s ultimate southern cheese roll and beef<br />

burger hybrid. Try as many burgers as you dare,<br />

then vote for your favourite and you could win<br />

a $200 voucher to visit Emerson’s Taproom.<br />

dinedunedin.co.nz<br />

Spice up your life<br />

The best way to warm up this winter?<br />

Get involved in Christchurch’s Turn Up<br />

the Heat festival. Dubbed “a month of<br />

spicy sounds, sights and bites”, expect<br />

a programme full of comedy, cabaret,<br />

family events, musical theatre and yep –<br />

a whole lot of fiery food and beverages<br />

(pictured: Rascal Bar’s Sriracha<br />

Margarita). Suitable for anyone with an<br />

adventurous spirit for sizzling sensory<br />

experiences, it runs throughout <strong>August</strong><br />

in the central city. turnuptheheat.nz<br />

Saturday – 7:30pm<br />

20.08.<strong>2022</strong><br />

Christchurch Town Hall<br />

CSO Presents<br />

Tami Neilson<br />

Kingmaker<br />

Tickets start from $28<br />

Student/child pricing available.<br />

Book now at cso.co.nz<br />

or 03 943 7791 Service fees may apply.<br />

David Kay<br />

Conductor<br />

PRINCIPAL PARTNERS<br />

Tami Neilson<br />

Soloist<br />

CORE FUNDERS


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www.polisheddiamonds.co.nz


22 <strong>Style</strong> | Feature<br />

Wool domination<br />

Celebrating more than 25 years in trade, Christchurch-based clothing company<br />

Untouched World’s success comes from finding balance between<br />

innovation and staying true to its roots.<br />

Interview Josie Steenhart<br />

Launched in 1995 as a pioneer of the sustainable fashion industry, Christchurch-based clothing<br />

brand Untouched World continues to lead the way in innovation, ethics and environmental<br />

friendliness, all without compromising on quality or its impeccable signature design aesthetic.<br />

<strong>Style</strong> caught up with founder Peri Drysdale for a chat about growing up on a sheep farm,<br />

blazing international trails, staying New Zealand-made, signature fabrics, outdoor pursuits and<br />

a memorable pair of shiny red shoes.<br />

ABOVE: Untouched World founder Peri Drysdale.


<strong>Style</strong> | Feature 23<br />

“The love, skill and care being poured into our garments is phenomenal,<br />

and for us, it’s important to know that the people making<br />

our clothes are well looked after.”<br />

You grew up on a South Island farm, when/where did your<br />

interest in fashion/clothing come from?<br />

I grew up on a sheep farm at the base of the Southern Alps,<br />

up the Rakaia Gorge.<br />

I was always interested in wool, I learnt to spin and knit<br />

– pretty badly – from an early age.<br />

All our sweaters were beautiful homespun wool garments<br />

my mother made. I made all my own clothes from about 12<br />

years old and started my first business at that age making and<br />

dressing soft toy animal families!<br />

You’ve been in the garment industry since 1981, tell us<br />

about those beginnings…<br />

I had a very exciting and fulfilling career in echocardiography<br />

when it was brand new in the world, but had to leave it<br />

behind to have my two children. There was no such thing as<br />

part-time or maternity leave in those days.<br />

I was fairly busy with two little people in my life, but there<br />

was a growing question in my head – what will I do with the<br />

fragments of available time that were opening up? I couldn’t<br />

go back to echocardiography. What else could I do?<br />

I reflected back to the days growing up on our farm, we<br />

had a big kitchen with a coal range in it. It was always warm<br />

in there, so we all used to linger around the kitchen table<br />

after meals, along with any farm workers and visitors we<br />

had. Something that came up in conversation often was the<br />

concern that the New Zealand economy at the time was<br />

reliant on exporting primary products with no added value.<br />

Raw wool was sent overseas in bales, whole meat carcasses<br />

shipped offshore – there was no marketing innovation or<br />

development, as both of those categories were dealt with<br />

through single desk commodity marketing.<br />

Around the age of six, at that same kitchen table, I learnt<br />

about the power of a country’s brand. My mother was<br />

emptying our three-times-weekly mail bag, when a little box<br />

covered in brown paper tumbled out. Inside was a pair of<br />

shiny red shoes she’d bought for me to wear to a wedding.<br />

My mother took one shoe out, turned it over and there were<br />

three words stamped in the leather sole.<br />

“Made in England,” she said, “that means they’ll be good<br />

quality”. For some reason that concept of a ‘country’s brand’<br />

stuck with me.<br />

I decided I would do something about the lack of value add<br />

in our economy. I would make some cute natural wool items<br />

for infants, wrap our New Zealand brand values of ‘clean,<br />

green environment’ and ‘warm friendly people’ around them,<br />

and offer them to people in overseas markets who dreamt of<br />

living in pristine, laid-back New Zealand.<br />

I asked a neighbour to teach me how to knit properly<br />

so I could write knitting patterns, and started with just 10<br />

outworkers. That quickly grew to 500 in just four years. In<br />

the first six months, I moved from infant and toddler styles<br />

into childrenswear, then onto adult handknits and finally adult<br />

domestic machine knits. Selling garments only for infants and<br />

toddlers wasn’t going to meet the yarn spinner’s minimum<br />

run, so we had to go bigger right from the get-go.<br />

Four years in, we moved to computerised knitting – not<br />

something I had planned or particularly wanted to do – but I<br />

couldn’t scale fast enough and consistently get the premium<br />

quality we required using outworkers.<br />

Within eight years, I was travelling and exporting to Europe,<br />

Canada, USA, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Australia. Our season<br />

here was very short, so this was a way I could keep our team<br />

in work through the offseason.<br />

How did Untouched World come about?<br />

With all the travel I was doing, visiting most markets<br />

once a year, it became obvious to me the planet was<br />

in trouble. I could see more evidence of environmental<br />

degradation from visit to visit. The various newspapers<br />

I picked up on my travels only ever talked about GDP<br />

and business revenue. There was absolutely no<br />

conversation or thought at the time given to what was<br />

happening to the environment.<br />

I, on the other hand, fretted about it. Here I was, one<br />

lone observer from the other side of the world, in a small<br />

company and a woman to boot – what could I possibly do?<br />

That’s when the idea was born for Untouched World to<br />

be a sustainable lifestyle brand. Until then it was a certified<br />

organic undyed knitwear story under our then parent<br />

brand, Snowy Peak Ltd.<br />

I wanted to model running a sustainable business and<br />

producing sustainable products, and engage people and<br />

leaders with more power than me to help along the way.<br />

I would challenge the status quo, get people thinking and<br />

asking questions, and most importantly, get people to start<br />

taking positive action. This was back before social media<br />

existed, so there was no influencer market to work with.


24 <strong>Style</strong> | Feature<br />

ABOVE: Top: Canterbury’s Glenthorne Station is a ZQRX (regenerative wool) certified farm that supplies 18.5 micron wool to Untouched World for<br />

use in its clothing; Bottom: Untouched World is 96 per cent New Zealand-made, with the majority coming out of the Christchurch workroom.


<strong>Style</strong> | Feature 25<br />

What was the first garment Untouched World produced?<br />

The first Untouched World garments were BioGro-certified<br />

undyed wool sweaters. The expansion into a whole lifestyle<br />

wardrobe came later.<br />

Can you describe Untouched World’s core ethics/values/<br />

mission?<br />

Our mission is to make a positive impact in the world, so<br />

everything we do comes back to that, whether it’s deciding on<br />

what fabric to use or what suppliers to partner with.<br />

We strongly believe each and every one of us can make<br />

a difference, and that the little things combined can make<br />

a big difference.<br />

We are constantly working on how to be better, and rather<br />

than following fads and trends that can often turn out to be<br />

a bad case of greenwashing, we put a lot of time and energy<br />

into researching the best solutions with the most minimal<br />

impact, and share our findings with our community, so they<br />

can benefit from the knowledge we gain along the way.<br />

We constantly work on our own sustainable innovations.<br />

Untouched World has always been a social and<br />

environmental enterprise, even in the 90s when we were<br />

thinking about such things far less – tell us a bit about that<br />

side of things, and the challenges related to that you’ve met<br />

along the way…<br />

Actually, even in the 80s – we were naturally a social and<br />

environmental enterprise long before I had ever heard the<br />

term sustainability being used. It just made good sense to<br />

me to treat our team and suppliers well. If they did well, we<br />

would do well.<br />

In the late 90s, we decided for the planet’s sake we<br />

needed to increase the conversation around sustainability.<br />

To do that we needed to expand our presence in the market,<br />

so we talked to a PR person who said, “Aren’t you a bit<br />

before your time?” My response was, “Yes we are, but if<br />

someone isn’t, then there won’t be a time”.<br />

Way back then, it was a real challenge finding materials<br />

that met the sustainability credentials we demanded, while<br />

also offering comfort, durability and style. Of course, we have<br />

always believed so strongly in wool, and other natural animal<br />

fibres – but coming up with amazing summer fabrics that look<br />

great and last took longer.<br />

On that note, congratulations on becoming a Certified<br />

B Corporation earlier this year! What does that mean<br />

exactly and why is it a big deal?<br />

In a nutshell, it means we’re in business to do good.<br />

It’s a certification that is only awarded after rigorous<br />

investigation and assessment to ensure we’re the real<br />

deal, so that only makes achieving Certified B Corporation<br />

status sweeter.<br />

It’s also a commitment to constant improvement.<br />

We’re reassessed every three years to ensure we’re taking<br />

steps to make a positive impact on our environment and in<br />

our community. It ensures we stay on track with achieving<br />

our goals and keep striving to be better at what we do<br />

and how we do it.<br />

What are some of the ways Untouched World is currently<br />

working with/helping people/communities?<br />

We educate and inspire our rangatahi to champion the<br />

way towards a more sustainable future through our<br />

UN-recognised Leadership for Sustainability Programmes, so<br />

they can lead the way for future generations.<br />

Through our Untouched World Foundation, we are helping<br />

students realise their passions and potential, while also<br />

equipping them with the knowledge they need to make more<br />

informed and sustainable choices.<br />

We also work with B1G1 to give back to communities<br />

in need. When someone purchases a garment from our<br />

CoolTree range, or buys a coffee in our café, we donate on<br />

their behalf to provide access to clean drinking water for<br />

families living in poverty.<br />

Our Project U Collection is made by women who were<br />

once trapped by poverty and prostitution, and have been<br />

taught new skills to help them on the road to freedom.<br />

What are some of Untouched World’s signature fabrics<br />

and why are they special?<br />

Where do I start? A personal favourite is Kapua, our blend<br />

of cashmere, possum and mulberry silk. It is honestly hard to<br />

beat the combination of comfort, softness and style it offers<br />

and the fact it’s so warm yet lightweight but also utterly pill<br />

resistant. Perfect at this time of year, when the days can swing<br />

between warm and freezing!<br />

Our fine, machine-washable Mountainsilk is another<br />

crowd-pleaser. Made from 100 per cent merino, [it’s]<br />

sourced from Glenthorne Station, a ZQRX-certified station<br />

situated at the foot of the Southern Alps (about 110km<br />

from our workrooms), where they are leading the way in<br />

regenerative farming practices. This merino is grown to<br />

the highest standards of animal, social and environmental<br />

welfare, and is the perfect year-round layer with so many<br />

benefits for the wearer.<br />

Untouched World is 96 per cent New Zealand-made, with<br />

the majority coming out of the Christchurch workroom,<br />

tell us a bit about that…<br />

The workrooms at Untouched World (based at our head<br />

office on Roydvale Ave!) are like a home away from home.<br />

The staff are like family and we have regular gatherings to<br />

celebrate birthdays, small wins and acknowledge milestones<br />

for our team. Some staff have worked for UW for 30 years!<br />

Everyone that works here is very hands-on and we take<br />

a collaborative approach to designing and producing the<br />

garments. There is something quite special about our designers<br />

being able to work directly with the staff producing the<br />

garments and discuss every little detail about the garment face<br />

to face to make sure the quality is always second to none.


26 <strong>Style</strong> | Feature<br />

The love, skill and care being poured into our garments<br />

is phenomenal, and for us, it’s important to know that the<br />

people making our clothes are well looked after. It’s also so<br />

nice to keep those wonderful skills alive.<br />

What do you love about living in Christchurch, and<br />

running a business from here also?<br />

I love the ease of getting about and our proximity to nature.<br />

You can be at the beach one minute and the ski field an<br />

hour later. Nature is such an important muse for us, so it’s<br />

lovely to have so much on our doorstep. With the city’s<br />

rebuild we’re now also spoiled for choice with so many great<br />

restaurants, cafés and bars, so that’s always a bonus.<br />

On the flipside, what are the challenges of the same?<br />

We’re a long way from international markets and shows,<br />

spinning mills and fabric houses, so being ‘down under’<br />

definitely presents its own challenges when you’re trying<br />

to source new yarns or fabrics, particularly in a Covid<br />

environment, dealing with various lockdowns and freight<br />

delays. It forces us to think outside the box a lot though,<br />

which is always a good thing!<br />

How has being a woman in business changed over the years?<br />

When I started out, there certainly weren’t many women in<br />

the boardroom, and there still aren’t many in the manufacturing<br />

industry today, but I’m pleased to say there is a lot more<br />

support out there for women in business nowadays.<br />

Great organisations like Co.OfWomen provide an excellent<br />

platform for mentorship and relevant support from people<br />

who can share from their own experiences.<br />

How would you describe your personal style, and does<br />

that influence the brand?<br />

Modern, understated and timeless.<br />

My personal philosophy of ‘less is more’ definitely flows<br />

through to our collections, which are designed so each<br />

piece will multi-task and dress up or down for travel,<br />

work or play.<br />

I love a wardrobe that can facilitate my busy lifestyle<br />

and take me from the boardroom to the outdoors and<br />

on to dinner after, morphing quite comfortably into<br />

each new environment without compromising on comfort<br />

or style.<br />

What are some of your other passions/pursuits outside of<br />

the business (if you have time for any!)?<br />

I am a keen swimmer, and I used to be away off skiing at<br />

every opportunity that I could through the winter months,<br />

but these days I enjoy a walk somewhere in nature with<br />

my husband, often accompanied by my daughter’s dog and<br />

sometimes my daughter and grandchildren! Other than that,<br />

it’s pretty much head down, tail up working in the business,<br />

but I love it, it doesn’t feel at all like work.<br />

What’s coming up for you and the business?<br />

We’ve been working on a brand refresh, so we’re excited to<br />

be rolling that out over the next wee while, and we’re also<br />

working hard on making our digital experience world class.<br />

Our stunning new summer collection launches in-store<br />

and online next month, with some beautiful new yarns<br />

and fabrics.<br />

ABOVE: Campaign images from Untouched World’s current collection.


a team<br />

on your<br />

side<br />

With this experienced<br />

leadership team on<br />

your side, you’re winning<br />

right from the start.<br />

The people you choose to work with can make all the<br />

difference. Our leadership team, with over 215 years’ collective<br />

experience, can help you reach your full potential.<br />

Whether you are new to the real estate industry or you are<br />

an experienced agent seeking to elevate your career, the<br />

Holmwood team are here to support you.<br />

For a private discussion on how this could be the right<br />

move for you, please contact:<br />

Tony Jenkins 0274 322 896 Janelle Pritchard 0275 217 156<br />

CEO<br />

General Manager - Operations<br />

Attend to one of our next Careers Evening -<br />

Tuesday 16 <strong>August</strong>, 6pm<br />

Tuesday 13 September, 6pm<br />

Register at: holmwood.co.nz/careers<br />

ILAM 2 03 351 3002<br />

ilam2@harcourts.co.nz<br />

ILAM 03 351 6556<br />

ilam@harcourts.co.nz<br />

MERIVALE 03 355 6677<br />

merivale@harcourts.co.nz<br />

ST ALBANS 03 377 0377<br />

stalbans@harcourts.co.nz<br />

COMMERCIAL<br />

03 377 0377<br />

holmwood.commercial@harcourts.co.nz<br />

Licensed Agent REAA 2008<br />

FENDALTON 03 355 6116<br />

fendalton@harcourts.co.nz<br />

PROPERTY MANAGEMENT<br />

03 351 5534 ipm@harcourts.co.nz<br />

holmwood.co.nz


28 <strong>Style</strong> | Feature<br />

Record sales<br />

Having bought the business the year Elvis Presley died, owners of Dunedin’s longest<br />

surviving music retailer Disk Den reflect on 45 years in the music store game.<br />

Words Bruce Munro Photos Linda Robertson<br />

Hing Chin stands next to a display of vinyl album covers<br />

spanning diverse centuries, continents and musical<br />

tastes. Behind him is a wall bearing hundreds of brand new,<br />

decades-old cassette tapes.<br />

Wearing blue jeans, a grey jersey and a quiet smile, Hing<br />

glances through to the other half of the large store where<br />

a solitary customer browses shelves of compact discs (CDs).<br />

‘‘Record buyers are probably the best customers you could<br />

hope to get,’’ Hing says.<br />

He recalls one guy, in the early 1990s, who came into Disk<br />

Den and bought a double album. A couple of days later, the<br />

man returned with the records buckled. He said he had been<br />

sold ‘‘a dud album’’ and wanted his money back.<br />

Hing was baffled and asked the customer if he might have<br />

left the album near a heater or in the back of a car<br />

– anywhere it might have been exposed to heat. No, the<br />

man replied.<br />

‘‘He was adamant and he was quite a big guy and I didn’t<br />

feel like arguing with him. So, I just refunded his money.’’<br />

Three years ago, for the first time in more than a quarter of<br />

a century, the same customer walked back through the same<br />

Princes St doors.<br />

‘‘He came in and said, ‘I owe you an apology’.’’<br />

There had been a situation that could have caused the<br />

records to buckle. It had played on his mind through the years<br />

and he wanted to make amends.<br />

A double LP back then would have cost between $9.95 and<br />

$16.95. Hing told the man he could give him $10.<br />

‘‘He said, ‘No, I also owe you the interest on that’. He<br />

insisted that I accept $50.’’


<strong>Style</strong> | Feature 29<br />

Disk Den, 118 Princes Street. The music store with a<br />

vintage double window frontage displaying Adele posters, Roy<br />

Orbison albums and Led Zeppelin t-shirts has long been a<br />

walk-in time capsule. But it is also a more than six decade long,<br />

living thread in the warp and weft of Dunedin’s music fabric.<br />

Owned by Hing and Noni Chin for the past 45 years, Disk<br />

Den was, at one time, at the forefront of record retailing in<br />

New Zealand. It also gained an international reputation as the<br />

go-to store for Dunedin Sound music.<br />

Today, as the eldest of this generation of Chins prepares to<br />

retire, their store at the quiet, homely end of town is a changeless<br />

monument to a lost era. But it remains a much-remembered,<br />

deeply significant institution in the lives and memories of<br />

music-lovers throughout the country and around the globe.<br />

It was 1977. Hing was 26 and preparing for his OE, his first<br />

overseas trip since arriving in New Zealand from Guangzhou,<br />

China, as a 3-year-old, in 1953.<br />

‘‘My father noticed the business was for sale,’’ Hing recalls<br />

of what was then called Russell Oaten’s Disk Den, in Rattray<br />

Street. He said, ‘You should go and have a look’. So I had<br />

a look, and there we go.’’<br />

Hing says he planned to run the music store, which had<br />

been started by Russell Oaten 18 years previous, for a couple<br />

of years ‘‘and then flick it off’’.<br />

The first year, Hing increased the profit.<br />

‘‘So we stayed for another year. And next year, we<br />

exceeded the previous year.’’<br />

They kept doing that – even while shifting from Rattray<br />

Street to the City Hotel building on the southeast corner of<br />

Princes Street and Moray Place, in 1983, and then, in 1986, to<br />

the present site, which they bought – until well into the 1990s.<br />

In the meantime, the store’s sales had swung from 75 per<br />

cent vinyl to 50 per cent cassette and then, from the<br />

late-1980s, to almost entirely CD. It was a busy period, as<br />

people swapped their vinyl collections for polycarbonate plastic.<br />

‘‘When CDs first became popular, they’d be buying up to<br />

five at a time,’’ Hing’s wife Noni says.<br />

Disk Den was the first in the country to become a Top of<br />

the Pops album discount store.<br />

‘‘We were $2 cheaper than The Warehouse,’’ Hing says.<br />

‘‘Their Top 40 CDs were $26.95 and ours were $24.95. So,<br />

we basically captured a large proportion of the market.’’<br />

The mid-1990s was the peak. Disk Den – a single<br />

independent music store in a city of 120,000 – had about one<br />

per cent of the country’s music market.<br />

‘‘There was about 100 million [dollars] New Zealand,<br />

wholesale, [per year] of total music CD sales. We did just over<br />

a million dollars worth.’’<br />

Business plateaued and, early in the new millennium, the<br />

Chins thought of retiring.<br />

Then they noticed a resurging interest in New Zealand<br />

music – especially Dunedin music – particularly from<br />

overseas visitors.<br />

‘‘Our daughter was living in London at the time,’’ Noni says.<br />

‘‘She rang one day and said, ‘Did you know Disk Den is in<br />

Lonely Planet [travel guide]?’<br />

‘‘We had wondered why all these tourists were coming<br />

in to buy New Zealand music. It was mostly Dunedin Sound<br />

bands they were interested in – The Chills, The Bats, Tall<br />

Dwarfs, 3Ds, The Verlaines…’’<br />

The growth of music streaming platforms has changed<br />

everything. It is now ‘‘a lot quieter’’.<br />

Hing is a member of Dunedin’s Chin dynasty. Chin Fooi<br />

emigrated to New Zealand from China in the early 1900s,<br />

setting up laundries in inner-city Dunedin.<br />

His son, Eddie Chin, Hing’s father, opened various businesses<br />

including the Sunset Strip and Tai Pei cabarets, in Dunedin’s<br />

Exchange area.<br />

Eddie married in China, in 1949. Hing and his mother came<br />

to New Zealand four years later. His five younger siblings<br />

include Sam, who owned Sammy’s Cabaret, and Jones, who<br />

owns the Crown Hotel.<br />

Hing’s musical influences began early when his grandmother<br />

gave him a crystal radio set. The loudest radio station was<br />

4XD, fostering his affection for country music, particularly Kris<br />

Kristofferson, and the music of the 1960s – ‘‘Roy Orbison, the<br />

early Rolling Stones, just about all of The Beatles’’.<br />

Hing was also the happy recipient of free concert tickets<br />

given to his father, who was too busy to attend.<br />

‘‘So as a 13-, 14-, 15-year-old, I went to Louis Armstrong<br />

at the Town Hall here, in 1963, Marty Robbins, in ’64, and the<br />

Rolling Stones, in ’65.’’<br />

Noni’s musical tastes are more contemporary – The Cure,<br />

The Smiths, Fat Freddy’s Drop, L.A.B. – but the couple have<br />

enjoyed many concerts together, sometimes courtesy of a<br />

grateful record company.<br />

‘‘We go for the vibe, for the music, for everything,’’ Noni<br />

says. ‘‘Leonard Cohen was probably our favourite.’’<br />

Noni grew up in Christchurch. She and Hing married in<br />

1973. They had three children; Lisa, Nathan and Lawrence.<br />

Inevitably, the store and music were foundation stones in<br />

the children’s lives.<br />

‘‘When Lisa was about two she already knew all the Neil<br />

Diamond songs,’’ Noni says.<br />

Lisa adds that she was vacuuming and serving behind the<br />

counter while still at primary school.<br />

Dunedin bands became her passion, fuelled by access to<br />

her uncle’s music venues. Her first concert was a matinee<br />

performance by Netherworld Dancing Toys.<br />

‘‘I would go and do the coat check when I wasn’t old enough<br />

to work behind the bar. So, I got to see all of those bands. My<br />

favourites were Straitjacket Fits, The 3Ds and The Chills.’’<br />

Hing and Noni’s children, however, had no interest in<br />

continuing the family business.<br />

‘‘It’s a sunset industry,’’ Hing agrees.<br />

Music and commerce, divergent arts, have been deeply<br />

entwined in Hing and Noni’s lives, expressing themselves as a<br />

single entity, Disk Den.<br />

The key to running a successful music store is stocking what<br />

your customers want rather than catering to your own tastes,<br />

Hing says. ‘‘Because music is fashionable, the hardest thing is to<br />

gauge what the coming trends are.’’


30 <strong>Style</strong> | Feature<br />

During the ’80s and ’90s, when Dunedin had up to a dozen<br />

different stores selling music in varying quantities, the<br />

South Island had about eight record company sales<br />

representatives who would drop in with equal quantities of<br />

wares and opinions.<br />

‘‘You quickly learn which ones are the ones to trust and which<br />

ones would inflate their numbers.’’<br />

Hing heard about a rep who told staff at Woolworths, in<br />

Andersons Bay, Dunedin, that a new Carpenters record was<br />

going to be a hit.<br />

‘‘He sold the Andy Bay store 150 copies of that Carpenter’s<br />

LP. And I think they sold about 10 or so. The manager<br />

of Woolworths banned the rep from ever coming into the<br />

store again.’’<br />

Hing got good at making those calls, based on an alchemical<br />

mix of experience, gut instinct and keeping up to date on<br />

overseas trends.<br />

Disk Den’s album sales record makes that clear. Bestsellers<br />

– that is, records selling more than 2000 copies – included<br />

Alanis Morisette’s Jagged Little Pill and Bruce Springsteen’s<br />

Born in the USA. The store also sold more than 1000 copies each<br />

of albums by the Cranberries, Oasis, Ace of Bass and<br />

The Corrs.<br />

‘‘Considering 7500 copies sold makes it a gold record,<br />

1000 or 2000 copies is a lot for Dunedin, for one little<br />

independent store,’’ Hing says with quiet pride.<br />

Despite their success, Hing and Noni never aspired to own<br />

a chain of Disk Den stores.<br />

‘‘No, no, no,’’ Hing says. ‘‘Because once you open more than<br />

one store you’re not a record shop owner, you’re a manager,<br />

you’re a personnel manager. And that just never appealed to me.<br />

We’re basically just a small family operator.’’<br />

What has made it satisfying, the couple say, is their customers.<br />

‘‘Record buyers are… knowledgeable as to what they want. And<br />

just pleasant to deal with,’’ Hing says. ‘‘I can honestly say that I’ve<br />

never had a ratbag customer in 45 years.’’<br />

For Noni, a favourite part of the job was helping customers<br />

find the right piece of music for a special occasion such as a<br />

wedding, a funeral or a 21st birthday.<br />

‘‘Once, I had this beautiful young lady come in, and she had<br />

cancer,’’ Noni says.<br />

The woman needed to have an MRI scan but was terrified of<br />

the medical machine’s confined space. She asked Noni to help her<br />

choose music to listen to during the procedure, to help her relax.<br />

‘‘We listened to a whole lot of CDs. And we chose Norah<br />

Jones’ Come Away With Me. That was really special. I always<br />

wondered what became of her.’’<br />

A number of celebrities have also passed through the store.<br />

Billy Connolly kept his back to customers until he could buy<br />

a couple of country music cassettes.<br />

Jonah Lomu had his bodyguard check out the store before he<br />

came in and ‘‘bought half my shop out’’.<br />

Jack Johnson gave them concert tickets in gratitude for<br />

putting his poster up in the store window ahead of a show<br />

with Ben Harper.<br />

As digital started to replace physical albums, Disk Den<br />

diversified. For the past few years, it has eked out an existence<br />

selling mostly T-shirts, posters, LPs and CDs, in that order, plus<br />

a few knick-knacks.<br />

Hing walks the Disk Den aisles, casting an eye over the walls<br />

of cassettes and CDs and the rows of vinyl records.<br />

At one time, he says, not only did he know where everything<br />

was, he also knew half the songs on each album.<br />

‘‘Somebody would ask for a song and I would know exactly<br />

which album it was off. But I’d struggle to do that nowadays.’’<br />

It has been ‘‘a very pleasant’’ 45 years. But with both of them<br />

now in their 70s, it is time to retire. They want to travel a bit,<br />

spend more time with their children and their grandchildren. The<br />

business will be wound up and the doors closed.<br />

‘‘I would envisage, towards the end of the year or next year.<br />

There are no firm plans as yet.’’<br />

Hing is thinking back to where it all began, and where it will end.<br />

In <strong>August</strong> of 1977, the year they bought Disk Den, Elvis<br />

Presley died – and immediately became their biggest selling artist<br />

for the year.<br />

‘‘The whole of my Elvis Presley stock vanished in one or<br />

two days.’’ By Christmas of that year, three other albums were<br />

top sellers – Rod Stewart’s Atlantic Crossing, Fleetwood Mac’s<br />

Rumours and The Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd.<br />

‘‘Rumours still sells and Dark Side of The Moon still sells. Atlantic<br />

Crossing, not so much,’’ Hing says with a chuckle.<br />

‘‘As Meatloaf said, ‘Two out three ain’t bad’.”


Penelope Chilvers Tassel Boots<br />

available exclusively from Rangiora Equestrian Supplies<br />

623 Lineside Road | 03 313 1674 | www.theridershop.nz


32 <strong>Style</strong> | Wishlist<br />

<strong>Style</strong>’s most wanted<br />

From sunshine-hued cosy coats, dazzling opal and diamond earrings and<br />

snug-chic wool totes to clever French candles, captivating fragrances and beautifully<br />

woven blankets, here’s what we’re coveting this month.<br />

2<br />

3<br />

4<br />

1<br />

9<br />

6<br />

10<br />

5<br />

8<br />

7<br />

RESENE<br />

TULIP TREE<br />

1. Gloria Modern Times wool coat in Maximum Yellow, $780; 2. Dehei limited-edition Stansborough wool blanket, $396;<br />

3. Honest Wolf The Tote wool bag in Forest Green, $399; 4. La Tribe Aria Braided leather clogs, $290;<br />

5. An Organised Life x The Curve finance & investment planner, $51; 6. Città Trace dining chair in Walnut, $640;<br />

7. Michael Hill opal, diamonds and 10kt gold stud earrings, $399; 8. Diptyque La Droguerie odour-removing candle, $103 at Mecca<br />

9. Brent Forbes ‘Untitled’ mixed media on canvas, $890 at Little River Gallery;<br />

10. Jo Malone London Crystal Campion cologne 30ml, $122


sale<br />

now on<br />

Briarwood Christchurch<br />

4 Normans Road, Strowan<br />

Telephone 03 420 2923<br />

christchurch@briarwood.co.nz<br />

briarwood.co.nz


34 <strong>Style</strong> | Fashion<br />

Winter glamour<br />

Just because it’s cold and moody doesn’t mean you can’t tap into a little glamour<br />

this winter. Look for luxe long-sleeve dresses, sleek suits and silky sets or play with sheer/opaque/<br />

textured tops (sparkly if possible) and tights to add a little extra protection against the chill.<br />

Finish with decadent accessories and a glass or two of fancy fizz.<br />

1<br />

3<br />

4<br />

2<br />

5<br />

6<br />

11<br />

7<br />

13<br />

10<br />

12<br />

8<br />

9<br />

1. Moochi Meander dress, $430; 2. Caitlin Crisp Sonny shirt, $375, and Enamoured skirt in Liquorice Floral, $325; 3. Liam Omnia Longsleeve dress, $369;<br />

4. Kate Sylvester X Par Ici Pearl Drop Chain sterling silver necklace, $149; 5. Moochi Mesh Skin top in Black Sparkle, $190;<br />

6. Deadly Ponies Ripple Mini bag in Steel Python, $629; 7. Helen Cherry Manhattan wool-blend jacket in Dark Navy, $769, and High Waist<br />

Cigarette wool-blend pants in Ink, $439; 8. Vivienne Westwood Marella necklace, $369 at Ballantynes; 9. Kathryn Wilson Sydney boots, $349;<br />

10. Juliette Hogan Portia dress in Blueberry, $929; 11. Mi Piaci Myah boots in Black Croc, $540;<br />

12. Meadowlark Rose gold-plated studs, $445; 13. Caitlin Crisp Heartlines top in Navy, $295


Wrap up in Mother Nature’s finest. Shop our Kapua Collection in-store and online.<br />

Christchurch | Wanaka | Wellington | untouchedworld.com


36 <strong>Style</strong> | Wellbeing<br />

The pursuit of appiness<br />

Courageous Cantabrian Hannah Hardy-Jones is helping beat the global<br />

mental health crisis, one app at a time.<br />

Words Josie Steenhart<br />

With a passion for mental health advocacy, a penchant<br />

for pretty prints and the constant juggle of mum-life,<br />

Christchurch mother-of-two Hannah Hardy-Jones might<br />

not sit within the stereotypical idea of a successful global<br />

tech entrepreneur – but that’s exactly what she is.<br />

“My weeks are a juggle of school drop-offs and<br />

pick-ups and then working in town. I try to get up at<br />

6am to have a coffee before the kids get up but often<br />

that doesn’t happen! I often have 8pm meetings with<br />

UK clients and then try to get an early night,” says<br />

Hannah, who launched her app-based start-up The<br />

Kite Program in 2018, not with the goal, like many tech<br />

entrepreneurs, of making millions, but instead in order<br />

to help others.


<strong>Style</strong> | Wellbeing 37<br />

“It might seem counter-intuitive as technology can have<br />

a negative impact on people, but an app is also a very accessible<br />

and private way to work on your wellbeing.”<br />

“After the birth of my first baby in 2013, I had a very scary<br />

time with my mental health and was eventually diagnosed<br />

with bipolar disorder as a result of childbirth,” she says.<br />

“It was a long recovery and I didn’t feel like I could ever<br />

get my life back or go back to my career. What really struck<br />

me was the lack of support for mums with their mental<br />

health, especially anything tailored to my situation.”<br />

A diagnosis meant Hannah could start on the road to<br />

recovery and learn how to best manage her own mental<br />

health. And rather than returning to her former life climbing<br />

the corporate ladder in HR, Hannah turned her hand to<br />

building Kite, a mental health app platform that publishes<br />

tailored apps for groups of people, organisations or causes.<br />

The first app off the Kite ranks was Kite For Mums –<br />

the world’s first personal development app for mothers<br />

– designed to be a supportive journey for mums of all<br />

stages by giving them the tools to cope with all aspects of<br />

motherhood, acting as both a professional development tool<br />

and a wellbeing resource.<br />

“It might seem counter-intuitive, as technology can have<br />

a negative impact on people, but an app is also a very<br />

accessible and private way to work on your wellbeing,”<br />

she explains.<br />

“Kite has a beautiful design, more like a coffee table book,<br />

and each activity takes no more than five minutes, so people<br />

don’t need to spend a long time on their phone.”<br />

Hannah says that launching a start-up in the tech space<br />

was far from easy – not least because the gender imbalance<br />

in the tech industry makes it a struggle to navigate.<br />

“Women in tech are hugely under-represented (and<br />

women founders in general) and of the top 150 Silicon<br />

Valley companies only four per cent are run by women,”<br />

she explains.<br />

“When I first started Kite I lacked confidence in my skills<br />

because of the perception that you needed to be a male in<br />

his 20s to make it big in the tech world.<br />

“I was also very aware that I was a mum and that I had to<br />

juggle my family life whereas so many founders don’t have<br />

to consider this. It was almost a feeling of embarrassment<br />

and that it would count against me.<br />

“At first it was so isolating – I was just a mum of two<br />

young kids sitting at the kitchen table!” says Hannah.<br />

“I still struggle sometimes as I have to run Kite alongside<br />

being a busy mum, whereas many tech start-ups have young<br />

founders who work long hours and can commit more time.<br />

“I also had a tough start as I partnered with an overseas<br />

app development firm, which cost me a lot of money and<br />

time, and have since had to bring the technology back to<br />

Christchurch (which has been amazing).”<br />

Being accepted into Christchurch-based start-up and<br />

innovation community Ministry of Awesome’s Founder<br />

Catalyst programme gave Hannah the opportunity to<br />

connect with other start-ups and founders, which she says<br />

made a huge difference.<br />

A second boost came earlier this year, when Hannah<br />

became the deserved first recipient of Jaguar’s She Sets the<br />

Pace community grant.<br />

She says the $10,000 grant will go toward looking at<br />

solutions to support women on their breast cancer journey,<br />

including those with the breast cancer gene.<br />

“There are many niche groups in this space that would<br />

benefit from a tailored Kite app.<br />

“We also have plans for an app to support the IVF<br />

journey, to support parents in NICU and some more<br />

specific maternal mental health options, and are<br />

expanding more into the USA and looking at apps to<br />

support women in leadership programmes with the<br />

larger universities.”<br />

An additional perk of the grant sees Hannah given the<br />

keys to an all-electric Jaguar I-PACE SUV for three months.<br />

“It’s really so beautiful – I absolutely love driving it!” she<br />

says. “It’s great as I’ve never driven an electric car before<br />

– it’s so quiet and easy to drive. It will be hard to give back<br />

at the end of the three months!”<br />

As well as utilising Kite, Hannah’s personal formula for<br />

health/wellbeing includes sleep, medication, loud music and<br />

reducing sugar, as well as making time to get outdoors.<br />

“I take medication to manage my bipolar and this is a key<br />

part of staying well for me – something I will continue to do<br />

for the rest of my life. Sleep is key as well and I always write<br />

a list for the next day before I go to sleep. I listen to music<br />

in the car (very loud), which helps switch my brain off! And<br />

I always notice that when I reduce sugar my mood improves<br />

too,” she says.<br />

“Weekends are usually spent either exploring in our<br />

caravan (Okains Bay is our favourite place to go) or finding<br />

new walks to go on. Living in Christchurch, I love the fact<br />

you can easily go skiing in the winter and the beaches are<br />

wonderful in the summer. Hagley Park is one of my favourite<br />

places to go for a walk.”


38 <strong>Style</strong> | Wellbeing<br />

Get a winter glow<br />

Dunedin naturopath Deanna Copland shares some tips – and one very delicious<br />

recipe – to help with winter skin and wellness woes.<br />

Cold air, dry indoor heat, low humidity levels, and harsh winds can all wreak<br />

havoc on our skin, leaving our largest organ feeling dull and dry. These<br />

factors make it harder for the skin to maintain its natural protective oils, which<br />

act as a barrier against environmental influences. As a result, moisture gets<br />

pulled from the skin, leading it to look and feel dry and cracked.<br />

DRINK UP<br />

What can we do to keep skin happy and hydrated? In cooler weather, we<br />

often tend to drink less liquid and what we put into our body will impact on<br />

the hydration levels and the general health of our skin.<br />

Ensure that you drink plenty of liquids, such as room temperature water,<br />

herbal teas, broths and soups. An estimate of how much we should be aiming<br />

for is 25ml per kg body weight on rest days and 35ml per kg on exercise days.<br />

There are some really pleasant herbal teas available – ginger and lemon is a<br />

very warming one in winter, as opposed to peppermint, which is energetically<br />

cooling so best in warmer weather. If you work from home, you can get<br />

several cups of tea from one tea bag by continually refilling your cup, and<br />

warm drinks are definitely more appealing when it’s cold outdoors.<br />

YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT<br />

Try to increase the amount of good fats you have in your diet by regularly<br />

having raw mixed nuts and seeds, avocado and oily fish such as sardines,<br />

salmon and mackerel. Avocados are back in season so these are great to<br />

incorporate in your diet. Even if you’re not fussed on avocado, I challenge you<br />

to try the chocolate mousse recipe. Once it has been refrigerated for around<br />

an hour, it loses all avocado taste.<br />

Rough, dry skin on the backs of arms can be a sign of vitamin A and<br />

beta-carotene deficiency, which can appear as rough, raised bumps on the<br />

backs of the arms. Liver and cod liver oil are the best sources of vitamin A,<br />

but egg yolks and leafy green vegetables are other options.<br />

Orange vegetables such as pumpkin, kūmara, yams and carrots, are also<br />

good sources of beta-carotene. A tasty snack idea is to roast carrots with<br />

a little coconut oil until soft then add to homemade hummus. Hummus is so<br />

easy to make – put chickpeas, including the brine from the can, garlic cloves,<br />

olive oil and cumin seeds into a food processor and pulse until smooth. Add<br />

the roasted carrots. Have this tasty dip with veggie sticks and rice crackers or<br />

in place of butter.<br />

SO TOPICAL<br />

Remember to exfoliate skin about once a week during winter. You can make<br />

your own scrub using coconut oil and raw sugar and use it in the shower with<br />

loofah mitts. The warmth from the shower will soften the coconut oil and<br />

leave your skin glowing.<br />

Try to limit your time in the shower, though, and avoid having it too hot as<br />

this can strip extra moisture from the skin.<br />

You may need to change a gel face cleanser to a cream one and tweak your<br />

skincare regime to suit the seasons.<br />

Some find humidifiers useful for adding moisture back into the air in your<br />

home, so these can be really worthwhile for very dry skin conditions such<br />

as eczema.<br />

Heavenly raw<br />

chocolate mousse<br />

SERVES 3<br />

INGREDIENTS<br />

• 2 ripe but not brown avocados<br />

• ¼ cup cacao powder<br />

• ¼ cup maple syrup (check it’s not<br />

maple-flavoured syrup)<br />

• 2 teaspoons vanilla extract<br />

• ¼ cup coconut milk<br />

• 2 tablespoons coconut oil,<br />

softened<br />

• Pinch of mineral salt<br />

METHOD<br />

Mix all the ingredients in a food<br />

processor until smooth and velvety.<br />

Pour into Martini glasses or ramekins,<br />

refrigerate for at least an hour. Top with<br />

nuts, fresh berries or coconut flakes<br />

before serving if desired.


Taking care of a loved one<br />

with terminal cancer<br />

Ada Beaumont feels grateful that she<br />

was able to celebrate her husband Gary’s<br />

80th birthday before he passed away<br />

from a stage 4 brain tumour in late 2021.<br />

The celebration was a high point in what<br />

had been a tough four and a half years for<br />

the Redcliff couple. Gary was diagnosed<br />

and treated for a cancerous growth in his<br />

neck. Two years later, they were told that<br />

Gary had a fast-growing, stage four brain<br />

tumour.<br />

Radiation therapy, chemotherapy and<br />

finally hospital-level care followed as his<br />

condition deteriorated and he lost his<br />

mobility, sight, and speech.<br />

“It was tough going. Before he went into<br />

hospital care, he was falling at home and<br />

it began to be too hard for me to look<br />

after him,” says Ada.<br />

During Gary’s last six months, Ada was<br />

advised by health professionals to<br />

take care of her health and wellbeing.<br />

However, her focus was on visiting her<br />

husband every day to spend quality time<br />

together.<br />

Supporting them through this journey<br />

were their family GP, hospital specialists,<br />

and the Cancer Society who supported<br />

them with counselling and ‘check-in’<br />

calls.<br />

The physical and emotional pain of<br />

caring for someone with terminal cancer<br />

and loosing a life-long partner took its<br />

toll on Ada, especially when he died<br />

just months before their 50th wedding<br />

anniversary.<br />

“After Gary passed away, I was not<br />

coping. I could not sleep or eat and found<br />

it hard to do anything. I knew I needed<br />

help,” she says.<br />

Ada went and visited her GP for<br />

medication and advice, and months later<br />

she says she is doing better.<br />

“I am slowly adjusting to being on my<br />

own. My daughter lives in Sydney but<br />

my son lives in Christchurch, however<br />

I do not want to put too much on them.<br />

Sometimes having someone to talk<br />

with who understand the journey I went<br />

through is great; I have really valued the<br />

phone calls from Jenny who works at the<br />

Cancer Society,” Ada says.<br />

She says if she had a piece of advice for<br />

those supporting a loved one through a<br />

cancer journey would be to ask a lot of<br />

questions.<br />

“It feels good to be able to understand<br />

what is likely to happen. Try to take care<br />

of yourself and access counselling or<br />

healthcare for yourself to make sure you<br />

are in the best position to care for other,”<br />

says Ada.<br />

HEALTH AND<br />

WELLBEING THROUGH<br />

THE CANCER JOURNEY<br />

Your GP is often the best place<br />

to access health and wellbeing<br />

services. Support from Pegasus<br />

Health GPs includes:<br />

Free GP visits for people with a<br />

terminal illness in the last three<br />

to six months of life, including<br />

home visits and after hours<br />

visits.<br />

Mental health services<br />

including Brief Intervention<br />

Talking Therapy and<br />

consultations with Health<br />

Improvement Practitioners or<br />

Health Coaches.<br />

The Cancer Society provides a<br />

helpline (0800 CANCER) where you<br />

can talk to cancer nurses, as well as<br />

one-on-one support, counselling,<br />

and support groups.<br />

There are also support<br />

organisations for particular<br />

cancers such as the Breast Cancer<br />

Foundation, Prostate Cancer<br />

Foundation and the Bowel Cancer<br />

Foundation.<br />

pegasus.health.nz


40 <strong>Style</strong> | Beauty<br />

About face<br />

Brow down<br />

New from affordable cult beauty favourites<br />

The Ordinary is its Multi-Peptide Lash<br />

& Brow Serum, ($33), a concentrated,<br />

lightweight serum utilising four separate<br />

peptide technologies a well as tea tree, red<br />

clover and larch wood extracts, caffeine and<br />

actives designed to promote the look of<br />

thicker, fuller and healthier lashes and brows.<br />

After cleansing and drying the application<br />

area, apply a thin layer along the lash line<br />

and eyebrows morning and night.<br />

Winter warmer<br />

Elevate your shower experience with Soap & Glory’s Perfect<br />

Zen Warming Body Scrub ($20 at Mecca). Applied to wet<br />

skin, this innovative, pampering polisher scented with lavender<br />

and tonka bean creates a unique warming sensation while<br />

scrubbing away dead skin cells, dirt and impurities to leave<br />

skin looking radiant and feeling superbly smooth.<br />

Make a splash<br />

Hit dry skin with a splash of<br />

Clinique’s juicy new Moisture<br />

Surge Hydro-Infused Lotion<br />

($72), containing an exclusive<br />

aloe vera bio-ferment and<br />

hyaluronic acid complex for<br />

fast-acting and long-lasting<br />

hydration and skin-smoothing.<br />

Use twice daily after cleansing and<br />

before serums and moisturisers, or,<br />

for an immediate hydrating hit,<br />

soak a cotton pad then leave on<br />

the dry area for 3-5 minutes.<br />

Lashing out<br />

A gentle and refreshing way to cleanse<br />

lashes, brows and eyelids, RevitaLash’s<br />

newly formulated Micellar Water Lash<br />

Wash ($54) utilises aloe, chamomile,<br />

anti-ageing botanicals and natural<br />

humectant panthenol to draw out<br />

impurities, removing makeup, dirt and<br />

oil without drying the skin. The oil-free<br />

formula is suitable for sensitive eyes, lash<br />

extensions and contact lens wearers.<br />

Plum power<br />

The latest Vitamin C power<br />

product from Antipodes,<br />

Gospel Vitamin C Skin-<br />

Glow Gel Cleanser ($44)<br />

promises healthier-looking,<br />

brighter skin via its unique<br />

combination of Kakadu<br />

plum (which contains up<br />

to 100 times the Vitamin C<br />

of oranges) and the brand’s<br />

signature antioxidant-rich<br />

Vinanza Grape & Kiwi<br />

compound. Massage onto<br />

damp skin in the morning<br />

before rinsing with water, for<br />

a delicious fresh clean.<br />

Natural healing<br />

Protect coloured hair and the<br />

environment at the same time with<br />

Kiwi brand Holistic Hair’s new Quinoa<br />

Pro NPNF Colour Protect range<br />

($37 each). Made in New Zealand<br />

in 100 per cent recycled plastic<br />

bottles, the plant-based shampoo and<br />

conditioner are formulated to slow<br />

hair colour wash-out for improved<br />

colour retention and contains natural<br />

goodies such as murumuru and mango<br />

butter, New Zealand harakeke flax<br />

leaf extract and marshmallow root to<br />

support hydration for softer, stronger,<br />

glossier, easier-to-style hair.


CHRISTCHURCH<br />

100% New Zealand<br />

owned and operated.<br />

Expecting a<br />

baby in Spring?<br />

Book your capsule hire<br />

now and get 20 % off.<br />

CHRISTCHURCH NORTH 03 960 9752<br />

515 Wairakei Road, Burnside. Email north.christchurch@babyonthemove.co.nz<br />

Monday to Friday, 9.30am-5.00pm. Saturday, 9.30am-2.30pm.<br />

CHRISTCHURCH CENTRAL 03 421 3243<br />

87a Gasson Street, Sydenham. Email central.christchurch@babyonthemove.co.nz<br />

Monday to Friday, 9.30am-5.00pm. Saturday, 10.00am- 2.00pm.<br />

www.babyonthemove.co.nz<br />

Subject to availability. Valid for hire<br />

bookings commencing in Sept/Oct.<br />

Not available on hire of new capsules.


Where did that new wrinkle come from?<br />

And that age spot? Or the sagging in my left cheek?<br />

Reality hits: We are ageing, and our skin is too.<br />

as a skin therapist at Lovoir day spa Christchurch, i’ve heard<br />

it all! sentiments from customers about the desire to look<br />

young forever, the urge to edit a not-so-flattering photo, the<br />

insecurities and fear of judgement. it happens to the best of<br />

us – you, me, and a customer who i met recently, stephanie.<br />

Before coming into our salon, stephanie considered herself<br />

blessed with flawless skin throughout her 20s. apart from<br />

the occasional pimple after an all-nighter, she had relatively<br />

problem-free skin and naively assumed it would be this way<br />

throughout her life. However, once she hit her mid 30s, she<br />

started noticing early signs of skin ageing.<br />

it was easy to spot a few wrinkles across her forehead, fine<br />

lines around her eyes, and sun spots on her cheeks. nothing<br />

too alarming, but something she knew was preventing her<br />

from looking her best. Unavoidably, a lot of her skin issues<br />

were caused by her daily sun exposure from walking to work<br />

on weekdays and enjoying the beach on weekends. still,<br />

it was an insight into an inevitable truth – she was getting<br />

older and her skin wasn’t recovering the way it used to.<br />

“i’ve tried so many skincare products and online tips!”<br />

stephanie told me in frustration. while they did help her<br />

skin, the improvements were only surface-level and never<br />

lasted for more than a week. But still, she persisted, because<br />

she understood that beauty came with patience, and so she<br />

settled for what she could get. Unfortunately, that meant<br />

spending a chunk of her time and money to maintain a daily<br />

beauty routine that achieved only mediocre results.<br />

Book today for Better skin tomorrow<br />

03 423 1166 christchurchcentral@lovoirbeauty.com Shop 109, 166 Cashel Street,<br />

Level 1, The Crossing, Christchurch Central City


we’ve heard this common misconception countless times in our day<br />

spa. many of our customers invested in general store products, believing<br />

their promises and hoping for the best. and more often than not, their<br />

stories are the same: they would experience some change in their skin<br />

almost immediately, then suddenly hit a plateau (or worse, a breakout!)<br />

after a few weeks of using them. this is often the case with mainstream<br />

skincare products that contain low-quality ingredients, or simply do not<br />

have enough active ingredients to significantly improve the skin.<br />

while we understand the allure of beautifully packaged skincare products<br />

or celebrity endorsements, not many people know this truth – and<br />

stephanie was one of them. she felt like she had no better option –<br />

that is, until she tried a beauty product that left her skin worse than<br />

before. Her skin went from the occasional wrinkle here and there to a<br />

full-on skin breakout – acne, blackheads, dry skin, redness, the whole<br />

shebang. naturally, her self-esteem dropped and her insecurities were<br />

inconsolable. But in hindsight, she said that experience was exactly what<br />

she needed to come to this realisation:<br />

Before<br />

When it comes to something as personal and<br />

delicate as your skin, it is best to trust the<br />

professionals to give it the best kind<br />

of care and attention.<br />

Contrary to what we are made to believe, we don’t need to settle for<br />

expensive products that barely do the job, or think we can experiment<br />

on skincare without any risks or consequences! Because the truth is,<br />

everyone’s skin is unique - some may have wrinkles in their 30s, while<br />

others may breeze through life without skin problems until the wrong<br />

product comes along. so when it comes to addressing our skin issues,<br />

there is no one-size-fits-all solution, no matter what general storebought<br />

products say in their packaging!<br />

after<br />

SCAN To<br />

go direcTly<br />

To our<br />

websiTe<br />

that day we met stephanie, she stepped into our day spa having<br />

tried everything to no avail. and, much to her surprise, she left with a<br />

treatment plan and homecare regime that worked so much better (and<br />

faster!) than her multiple skincare products combined. she now comes in<br />

for monthly anti-aging facials and continues to enjoy smoother, clearer –<br />

and best of all, pain-free – skin that improves with every session.<br />

if you’re dealing with a similar skin concern or at least felt the same<br />

frustrations as stephanie, our team at Lovoir would love to help you<br />

out! whatever it is you’re dealing with, our job as skin therapists is to<br />

recommend a customised treatment plan for anyone dealing with any<br />

skin issue. whether it’s ageing, acne, rosacea, or just simple pampering,<br />

we aim to make you look and feel your best – all while removing the<br />

guesswork of trying over-hyped products and risky at-home tips!<br />

you can start by visiting our website to learn more about our treatments.<br />

you’ll see that we offer everything from gentle, holistic facials to<br />

advanced treatments like iPL and microneedling to relaxing services like<br />

massages and mani-pedis. when you’re ready to start your skin journey,<br />

book your appointment or give us a call at the salon. we can’t wait to<br />

meet you!<br />

Before<br />

after<br />

www.lovoirbeauty.com


44 <strong>Style</strong> | Promotion<br />

Getting real (estate)<br />

Tall Poppy’s Cheryl Etheridge on shifting roles to real estate, top tips for selling<br />

homes, and why living in Christchurch has something for everyone.<br />

You were previously an international student director at<br />

a local school, what drew you to real estate?<br />

I’ve always liked change! People and their stories are a passion<br />

of mine. In the past I have been a nanny, a counsellor, a swim<br />

teacher and I spent 10 years working with both exchange<br />

and international students. Moving to another country to<br />

study is a lot like buying or selling a house in that it can be<br />

a challenging undertaking.<br />

Helping people navigate their journey, whatever it may be,<br />

brings me a lot of joy and satisfaction. I also get to meet some<br />

fantastic people along the way. Real estate is all about change,<br />

people and their stories. So it was a perfect fit for me!<br />

Why did you choose Tall Poppy?<br />

I really admire the values-based culture of the company and<br />

its drive to challenge the way real estate is being done. Not<br />

just in a business sense, but also the way it treats its people.<br />

The company values at Tall Poppy set the standard for building<br />

trusting and supportive relationships within our sales team and<br />

with our clients and buyers alike.<br />

Tall Poppy has also made selling your home an accessible and<br />

easy-to-understand process. It sounds corny, but values like these<br />

mean a great deal to me personally. I believe business needs to be<br />

good for humans! Tall Poppy is showing me this is possible.<br />

What made you decide to join Debi Pratt’s team?<br />

As soon as I met with Debi to talk about joining her team, I was<br />

struck by her honest, open and authentic approach to life and<br />

her business. Her reputation and vast knowledge of the real<br />

estate industry along with her approachability made me feel<br />

I had found a mentor I could trust. I learn something new about<br />

real estate from Debi every time we talk.<br />

Debi creates a team environment that’s second to none and<br />

great fun. She shares her knowledge willingly and you know that<br />

she truly wants the best for you and your clients.<br />

What are some tips/advice you always try to share with clients?<br />

The first piece of advice I give potential clients is to choose<br />

a sales consultant and company you like and trust to help you<br />

sell your home.<br />

The next tip will often be about presentation. Do looks really<br />

matter? Yes! When it comes to homes they do. The old clichés<br />

of getting rid of the clutter, tidying up the garden, finishing repairs<br />

and clean, clean, clean really do work! First impressions count.<br />

Make your home look as appealing on the outside as possible. Pull<br />

out the weeds, clean down the paths and paint the front fence<br />

if it needs doing. Doors that don’t shut property, holes in walls,<br />

peeling wallpaper and leaking taps are just some of the things that<br />

can turn off buyers and are relatively easy to fix.<br />

What do you love about living and working in and around<br />

Christchurch?<br />

The people! Seriously, I have met some fantastic people since<br />

moving here. Ōtautahi has proved to be a resilient and caring<br />

community over the 13 years I’ve lived here. Three years ago,<br />

my family and I moved onto a lifestyle property just outside<br />

Christchurch, in the Selwyn district. Before that we lived in<br />

Halswell for 10 years.<br />

Our daughter is horse mad, so we moved to get more space<br />

to house the horses. It’s amazing being able to live rurally but be<br />

in the city in 20 minutes!<br />

I also love the opportunities to be outside and walk with my<br />

dogs while taking in the breathtaking scenery we have around<br />

Christchurch. I love the changing of the seasons here and the<br />

blossom trees in the Botanic Gardens take my breath away<br />

every year.<br />

It is such a special place to live, and my husband and I feel so<br />

lucky to be raising our daughter here.<br />

cheryl.etheridge@tallpoppy.co.nz<br />

Photo: Etta Images by Juliette Capaldi


AUCKLAND | WELLINGTON | CHRISTCHURCH<br />

BOCONCEPT.COM


Brighter days ahead<br />

Muted tones remain in vogue today, but Resene’s colour forecast<br />

shows things are about to get much more vibrant.<br />

A<br />

fter a couple of bumpy years fraught with uncertainty, the world is slowly<br />

opening up again – and with that comes the triumphant return of fashion<br />

weeks, major design shows and plenty of exciting new product launches. With<br />

so many of these events having been cancelled in recent years, colour and trend<br />

forecasting has been tricky.<br />

Here’s a taste of some of the new trends to help you get inspired for your next<br />

decorating project:<br />

The sky’s the limit<br />

The world’s all-time favourite colour,<br />

blue, is always relevant. Evocative of<br />

the sea and sky, no hue is said to be<br />

more relaxing or restful. Blue stands for<br />

integrity, power, tranquillity and health,<br />

and is considered as beneficial to the<br />

mind and body. Plus, our natural light<br />

and relatively temperate climate make<br />

blue an appropriate and evergreen<br />

choice for any room.<br />

Whether on your walls, floor, ceiling,<br />

furniture or accessories, there’s simply<br />

nowhere blue won’t do. And given<br />

Resene’s wide-ranging and diverse options,<br />

it’s a hue that makes it easy for us to keep<br />

finding fresh and exciting alternatives to the<br />

shades of previous seasons.<br />

Cool, greyed and classic coastal blues<br />

such as Resene Nepal, Resene Frozen,<br />

Resene Blue Moon and Resene Midnight<br />

Express remain popular picks for interior<br />

decorating. But just like many of today’s<br />

popular hues, there’s plenty of indication<br />

that warmer varieties are set to make<br />

a big splash.<br />

RESENE<br />

NEPAL<br />

RESENE<br />

MIDNIGHT EXPRESS


RESENE<br />

WILD WEST<br />

Down to earth<br />

The decade-long obsession with motifs, colours, materials<br />

and silhouettes popular in the 80s has waned and made<br />

way for 1970s influences. This is playing out through<br />

colours but also with textures through earthy, handmade<br />

artisanal elements such as pottery, macramé and dried<br />

floral arrangements.<br />

Given the natural beauty inherent to wood grain, it’s no<br />

wonder that timber walls, ceilings, flooring and joinery are<br />

all trending.<br />

When it comes to colours, look to browns from suede<br />

to espresso such as Resene Dusty Road and Resene Felix,<br />

rich adobe terracotta such as Resene Sante Fe and Resene<br />

Tuscany, avocado greens such as Resene Avocado and<br />

Resene Lichen, and biscuit beiges such as Resene Double<br />

Biscotti and Resene Half Akaroa to bring today’s tones to<br />

your walls, flooring and furniture.<br />

The word terracotta is borrowed from Italian and<br />

translates to ‘baked earth’, so it doesn’t get much toastier<br />

or earthier than these clay-coloured hues. It’s the<br />

oxidisation of the iron rich soils used to create the porous<br />

pottery that shares the moniker that you can thank for<br />

the colour, which is undeniably warming when used in<br />

quantities both large and small.<br />

Channel the warmth of the Mediterranean with a subtly<br />

mottled paint effect in earthy hues. Wall and large vase in<br />

Resene Wild West with Resene FX Paint Effects medium<br />

mixed with Resene Sante Fe, floor in Resene Blank<br />

Canvas, table and daybed base in Resene Korma, arch in<br />

Resene Wild West, plant pot in Resene Sand, pendant<br />

lamp in Resene Alabaster, artwork in Resene Nero. Rug,<br />

cushions and glass from Città, bag from Blackbird Goods.<br />

Bring a touch of elegance to warm paint colours by<br />

pairing them with brass or gold metallics, white marble<br />

finishes and rich fabrics like leather, velvet or raw silk. Wall<br />

and floor in Resene Half Scotch Mist, vases (from left)<br />

in Resene Half Scotch Mist, Resene Leather and Resene<br />

Lemon Twist. Table and daybed from Contempa.<br />

Timeless and classic<br />

There is a good reason classic designs are called timeless. These<br />

colours and shapes evade the normal waxing and waning of<br />

trends because they quite simply always look good, no matter<br />

what year or season it is. However, it doesn’t mean that classic<br />

designs don’t continue to evolve.<br />

Today, traditional colour palettes and motifs are being blended<br />

with more pared-down, contemporary forms rather than overly<br />

fussy or shapely furnishings, resulting in a hybrid style.<br />

Perennially popular hues like dusty blues, greys and whites<br />

such as Resene Duck Egg Blue, Resene Forecast, Resene Regent<br />

Grey and Resene Sea Fog continue to endure in these settings,<br />

with carefully curated pops of hues in red, periwinkle or navy,<br />

such as Resene Fahrenheit, Resene Ship Cove and Resene Blue<br />

Night, being used to add extra style points and interest.<br />

Added dimension<br />

Adding more texture to a space is<br />

a sure-fire way to up the interest<br />

in a room, and tongue-and-groove<br />

panelling and battens are highly<br />

fashionable ways to add literal<br />

dimension to your walls and ceilings.<br />

However, decorators are coming<br />

up with more creative methods<br />

to incorporate them, moving past<br />

more predictable grids or dado rails<br />

in favour of designs with a clever<br />

twist or a more free-form attitude,<br />

upcycling old picture frames to<br />

create a unique look.<br />

For more ideas and inspiration visit your Resene ColorShop, resene.co.nz/colorshops


EXTERNAL AFFAIRS<br />

with Tim Goom<br />

Goom Group<br />

goes for Gold!<br />

It is the winter season but it is also awards season for the Goom<br />

Group! We have recently entered four projects for awards and are<br />

awaiting the results with anticipation. I’m very proud of our team<br />

and delighted to give you a taster of our entries.<br />

Registered Master Landscapers Landscapes of Distinction<br />

Awards <strong>2022</strong><br />

Goom Landscapes entered two projects across 3 categories: Design,<br />

Construction and Horticulture. Senior Landscape Architect, Emma<br />

Johnston, designed both- which are dramatically different and showcase<br />

the scope of her talent.<br />

SPASA Awards of Excellence <strong>2022</strong><br />

by Goom<br />

Compass Pools Christchurch, part of the Goom Group, entered two<br />

stunning projects in the upcoming SPASA Awards. The Landscaping was<br />

completed by Goom Landscapes simultaneously with installation, which<br />

lead to a finished result with thrilled clients.<br />

Hillside Oasis<br />

Our client asked us to install a pool on a hillside below their house<br />

with views to the pool from the house and against the backdrop<br />

of the nearby hills with an outlook over the city. This included an<br />

entertainment space within the pool enclosure with built-in heating and<br />

seating. We exceeded the client’s expectations by remaining on budget<br />

and within the timeframes specified.<br />

Secluded Gem<br />

After holidaying in Bali but not being able to holiday overseas since<br />

(due to Covid) our client wanted to ‘bring the holiday home’. It was<br />

vital to the client that the Balinese aesthetic flowed from inside to<br />

outside. Creating a tropical oasis in the cooler Canterbury climate was a<br />

challenge as was incorporating the existing pool into the design with its<br />

unique shape and proximity to the house. The results are outstanding.<br />

Huntsbury Haven<br />

This project was on a very difficult access site into which we needed<br />

to lift significant materials using a crane. We had to drill large piles into<br />

bedrock to create the stabilisation for the ring foundation and platform.<br />

From the impossible, our team made the vision of the client possible,<br />

through careful planning and design. In doing so, we created a haven for<br />

the family to enhance the enjoyment of their outdoor space and extend<br />

their living into the outdoors.<br />

Watch this space!<br />

Renaissance Revival<br />

Renaissance Revival is located in Merivale on a corner site. The house is<br />

grand so therefore the landscape needed to cater to this. The client had<br />

sourced some wonderful features from overseas which we incorporated<br />

into the formal landscape. Our design focussed on leading views to the<br />

pergola and swing seat which are stand-out features. The vistas passed<br />

through a central water feature to bring the landscape to a central point.<br />

The symmetry of this garden has a ‘secret garden’ air which is striking.<br />

The champions of<br />

landscape design & build.<br />

10 AWARDS - 2021<br />

DESIGN | MANAGE | CONSTRUCT<br />

Create a Lifespace with us. | goom.nz<br />

IDEATION-GOM0155


Your World of Bespoke Living<br />

322 Manchester Street, Christchurch<br />

frobisher.co.nz


50 <strong>Style</strong> | Promotion<br />

Marketplace<br />

A CAREFULLY CURATED SHOWCASE OF LOCAL BUSINESSES AND THEIR GORGEOUS WARES.<br />

JULIETTE HOGAN<br />

Proudly made in New Zealand<br />

from a beautifully weighty<br />

wool/cashmere blend, the<br />

Juliette Hogan Mayfair coat<br />

in Marshmallow ($1099) is a<br />

delicious way to banish winter<br />

chills in style. Perfectly tailored<br />

with a collarless neckline and<br />

classic cut, the timeless design<br />

is elevated out of the ordinary<br />

by its captivating pale pink hue.<br />

juliettehogan.com<br />

ANY EXCUSE<br />

<strong>Style</strong> is what you make it, in life and at home. Create style<br />

in any space with these gorgeous new season cushions<br />

from Any Excuse. Made from natural cotton with feather<br />

inners, they are available in five chic colourways. 50 x<br />

50cm, $99.99 each. Available in store and online.<br />

anyexcuse.co.nz<br />

MI PIACI<br />

From vivid shades of violet<br />

and hot pink to some very<br />

sassy prints, Mi Piaci’s lineup of<br />

new releases are set to make<br />

a statement this season. With<br />

a (stable) stiletto heel, slick<br />

pointed toe and power zebra<br />

print, the Marco mule ($280)<br />

embodies refined confidence<br />

and will add instant impact to<br />

any outfit, from jeans and a<br />

blazer to eveningwear.<br />

mipiaci.co.nz<br />

LITTLE RIVER GALLERY<br />

A familiar local scene realised in Harriet Millar’s distinctive<br />

fluid style, ‘Godley Head’ features lush texture, visible<br />

brushstrokes and unexpected pops of colour that<br />

combine in unison to create a work of interest and<br />

originality. Acrylic on canvas, 30.5 x 30.5 x 3.5cm, $650.<br />

littlerivergallery.com<br />

SASSYS MERIVALE<br />

Available at Sassys, Loobies<br />

Story is a collection of feel-good,<br />

uplifting and feminine garments<br />

that take the wearer from day<br />

to night with a simple change of<br />

accessories. A merging of urban<br />

essentials with a hint of exotic.<br />

It’s a story about a love for life<br />

and a life well lived.<br />

sassys.co.nz


Adventure<br />

Anywhere<br />

ECCO EXOSTRIKE<br />

#MovesLikeYou<br />

eccoshoes.co.nz<br />

eccoshoesnz


52 <strong>Style</strong> | Travel<br />

Canterbury cliffhanger<br />

Wānaka writer Wayne Martin takes the time for a detour<br />

and ends up a little worse for wear.<br />

Words & photos Wayne Martin<br />

The approach to Omarama’s Clay Cliffs has an<br />

old-school Kiwi flavour: a rutted gravel road through<br />

grassy paddocks flanked by pivot irrigators, a farm gate to<br />

open and close behind you, a scattering of visitors, and an<br />

honesty-box charge pitched at the price of a cup of coffee.<br />

The cliffs grace the western skyline from State Highway<br />

8 as you near Omarama from the Lindis end; a sweep of<br />

vanilla scars gouged into the distant hills. I had driven past<br />

the turn-off on the Twizel side countless times over 30-odd<br />

years, intrigued, but was always too time-pressed to make<br />

the detour. Recently, I put that right.<br />

At the car park an interpretation panel corrects my<br />

notion that the cliffs were carved by 19th-century gold<br />

sluicing, like those of Bannockburn or St Bathans. The<br />

formations are the silt deposits of an ancient braided river,<br />

uplifted and tilted by the Ostler Fault that abuts the hills and<br />

eroded by wind and rain over millions of years.<br />

A wide, well-formed gravel path winds through bramble<br />

and wild rose hip bushes, rising gradually towards a great<br />

wall of fluted pillars, towering mesas and craggy ridges<br />

looming like a hilltop castle.<br />

The trail narrows, steepens and grows rougher as it<br />

approaches a 1.5m gap between two steepling walls of<br />

stone. It looks like something from a cowboy movie, the<br />

kind of gap where horseback riders thunder through in<br />

hot pursuit or desperate flight. Passing through, I enter<br />

a majestic amphitheatre of rock, its high ridge outlined like<br />

the crater rim of a dead volcano.<br />

The canyon’s life story is written in its slanted layers. A<br />

base of grey/white sandstone and claystone is topped by


<strong>Style</strong> | Travel 53<br />

bands of honey-coloured silt, capped in turn by a conglomerate of stony<br />

fragments embedded in a mesh of silica-rich cement.<br />

Ahead the track climbs steeper still and the ground is more rutted<br />

and rubbled. Skirting a cluster of pinnacles, I reach a narrow saddle that<br />

serves as a kind of a base camp. Surprised by the height gained, I soak up<br />

imperious views across the Ahuriri Valley. The sunlit flatness of the alluvial<br />

plain contrasts with the shadowed verticality of the canyon.<br />

Surrounded by the canyon walls it feels like another world. More<br />

Martian than moonscape, with echoes of Colorado’s Monument Valley.<br />

These are classic badlands – a geographic term for severely eroded<br />

wastelands rather than the Hollywood construct I always assumed.<br />

Leaving the safety of the saddle I round a rocky spur and gaze up to the<br />

head of the canyon, crowned by streaks of cloud radiating like a romantic<br />

painting of Calvary Hill. The heights are defended by raw geology; screestrewn<br />

slopes, rain-scoured ravines and a graveyard of jagged outcrops.<br />

There is no formed trail in evidence and of the five other visitors, none<br />

has ventured this far. With a weighty camera around my neck, I’ve had<br />

a few near-slips already. I don’t know if it’s the endorphins of the climb,<br />

the pull of the scenery or a sense of challenge that drives me on. My wife<br />

later suggests another explanation: stupidity.<br />

Going up is manageable, leaning into the slope, maintaining three points<br />

of contact, including a death-grip on any small tussocks within reach.<br />

Clambering on, footfall by faltering footfall, I reach the upper canyon’s<br />

stone-studded cliff-face of impossibility. I now share the sky with the<br />

circling hawks and the lofty spires of this roofless cathedral. But it’s time<br />

to turn back.<br />

Looking down, I’m suddenly nervous. Feeling like a cat who has climbed<br />

on to some high roof and needs rescuing by the fire brigade.<br />

The descent is a trial. In retrospect,<br />

I should have lowered myself backwards,<br />

keeping three points of contact. I inch<br />

further down, occasionally disconcerted<br />

by a slip here, a half-stumble there, each<br />

a vague foreshadowing, like a grumbling<br />

appendix or a pre-earthquake tremor.<br />

Still I have this pocket of the canyon to<br />

myself and its enveloping silence seems to<br />

amplify the sound of the trodden gravel<br />

and my quickening pulse.<br />

The first fall was a warning shot – not<br />

too far, camera still intact and nothing<br />

more serious than a bruised backside.<br />

Reversing down would make even more<br />

sense now, but I persevere with the<br />

front-forward technique.<br />

Five metres from base camp, a strange<br />

confidence comes over me. Complacency<br />

perhaps. Then it happens. Loose stones<br />

turn my shoes into sudden roller skates<br />

and I hit the ground as if a rug is pulled<br />

from under me.<br />

Pain stabs from multiple angles. A<br />

wrenched shoulder re-activates a 30-<br />

year dormant cricket injury. A fingernail<br />

snapped at the quick; the finger skin torn,<br />

bloody and accompanied by an intensity<br />

of pain I usually associate with a broken<br />

bone. The camera clatters against a rock.<br />

Gingerly I assess myself and the camera<br />

for permanent damage. Neither seems<br />

serious, though the finger, a strange<br />

combination of numbness and pain, is<br />

hard to assess.<br />

“Still in one piece?” a young man in<br />

a blue shirt asks, as I reach base camp.<br />

“Yep, all good,” I lie.<br />

I pick my way down the lower slopes,<br />

shaken but glad to be on better ground.<br />

On the pathway back I realise the lens<br />

cap is missing from the camera. Not<br />

a big deal, if that is the worst of it.<br />

Through the pain I manage to enjoy<br />

the last stretch of the trail, the sun, the<br />

stillness and the views to the Ahuriri<br />

River plain below.<br />

Soon there comes the sound of heavy,<br />

urgent footsteps behind me. Like the very<br />

hoofbeats I imagined thundering through<br />

the gap into the canyon. I spin around,<br />

and the man in the blue shirt skids to a<br />

halt. “Is this yours?” he asks, holding out<br />

a Canon lens cap. I accept it gratefully.<br />

We stop at Twizel for lunch, heading<br />

first to the chemist.<br />

“He had a fall,” my wife says, explaining<br />

to the pharmacist why we needed so<br />

many dressings.<br />

“I didn’t ‘have a fall’,” I say. “I fell. There’s<br />

a difference. Only old people ‘have falls’.”<br />

“I rest my case,” she says.


54 <strong>Style</strong> | Travel<br />

STYLE STAYS<br />

Chateau on the Park, Christchurch<br />

From stained-glass foxes in The Den Bar and ducks in the moat to<br />

warm cookies, celebrated 70s architecture and super comfy rooms,<br />

this unique South Island institution is ready to welcome guests once again.<br />

Words Josie Steenhart<br />

THE LOCATION<br />

Right across the street from the huge and lovely Hagley Park<br />

(home to Christchurch Botanic Gardens and Canterbury<br />

Museum) and just 3km from the city centre. For those sans<br />

car or if the weather’s not up to walking, there’s a free<br />

scheduled local shuttle.<br />

THE LOWDOWN<br />

With its distinctive turrets, internal moat (you heard me),<br />

park-like setting and unique design features by pre-eminent<br />

architect Peter Beaven, Chateau on the Park has been<br />

something of a local institution since it opened its<br />

castle-esque wooden doors in 1975.<br />

In 2016, the 192-room hotel got an $8 million<br />

refurbishment and rebranded to a DoubleTree by Hilton,<br />

somewhere early in Covid-times it was converted to an<br />

MIQ facility (one of the more sought-after I would imagine),<br />

and just last month was refreshed and reopened to the<br />

general public.<br />

THE EXPERIENCE<br />

Peter Beavan passed away a decade ago in 2012, and the<br />

neo Gothic-inspired/70s-influenced hotel remains one of his<br />

last standing buildings after several were sadly destroyed in<br />

the Christchurch earthquakes, so being able to have a solid<br />

nosey around is worth the stay on its own.<br />

But turns out it’s also a highly comfy experience,<br />

with elegant rooms overlooking the garden and warm,<br />

welcoming staff. You also get a piping hot cookie on arrival,<br />

which I very much appreciated with a cup of tea on the dark<br />

and chilly winter afternoon I checked in.<br />

Garden lovers will be in heaven whether admiring the roses<br />

from the comfort of their room, taking a stroll in the sunny<br />

gardens after breakfast or checking out the impressively large<br />

weeping willow sweeping across the internal yard.<br />

There’s also a heated outdoor pool and a fitness room<br />

should either urge take you.<br />

EAT/DRINK<br />

I can’t stress enough not to miss out on having a drink at<br />

The Den Bar, not least for the amazing decor (think<br />

Art Deco meets olde English pub meets late 70s meets<br />

something pretty unique), while the Garden Court Brasserie<br />

(or GCB as it’s apparently fondly known) has been offering<br />

relaxed al fresco dining since way back (another local<br />

institution I’m told).<br />

The buffet breakfast is also highly worth a visit in the<br />

morning, with a plethora of options to suit a variety of foodie<br />

foibles and preferences.<br />

THE NITTY-GRITTY<br />

Rooms start at $170 per night. hilton.com


Keep the cold out in our cosy Ecopossum knits, designed to take you wherever you want to go.<br />

Christchurch | Wanaka | Wellington | untouchedworld.com


Smile Creator…<br />

Now it’s your time to smile


A weekly meal plan<br />

for winter that makes<br />

shopping and cooking<br />

easy and affordable.<br />

Zero food waste and<br />

nutritionally balanced.<br />

TUES<br />

Fish chowder<br />

THURS<br />

Shepherd’s pie<br />

MON<br />

Sloppy joe<br />

WED<br />

Vietnamese-style omelette<br />

FRI<br />

Friday night sticky<br />

lemon chicken<br />

Shopping List<br />

Produce<br />

5 onions<br />

2 leeks<br />

9 carrots<br />

1 iceberg lettuce<br />

600g potatoes<br />

600g mushrooms<br />

2 lemons<br />

800g kūmara<br />

1 red onion<br />

1 apple<br />

1 broccoli<br />

Butchery<br />

800g beef mince<br />

400g skinless chicken breast<br />

Chilled<br />

1L milk<br />

<strong>Style</strong> | Promotion 57<br />

Grocery<br />

170g can tomato paste<br />

410g can whole corn kernels<br />

410g can creamed corn<br />

400g can baby corn<br />

425g can tuna in springwater<br />

1kg jasmine rice<br />

10-pack eggs<br />

6-pack hamburger buns<br />

Frozen<br />

1kg frozen peas<br />

1kg frozen green beans<br />

Pantry Staples *<br />

Garlic – fresh bulbs or crushed garlic<br />

Ginger – fresh or crushed ginger<br />

Paprika<br />

Worcestershire sauce<br />

Salt<br />

Pepper<br />

Flour, plain<br />

Dried mixed herbs<br />

Oil, for frying<br />

Sweet chilli sauce<br />

Butter<br />

Soy sauce<br />

Cornflour<br />

Honey<br />

Your favourite nuts, seeds, dried fruits<br />

Your favourite salad dressing<br />

Fish sauce (optional)<br />

*<br />

These items are usually found in your<br />

pantry and not included in the budget.<br />

For more meal plans to make<br />

shopping and cooking easy and<br />

affordable visit<br />

newworld.co.nz/value


58 <strong>Style</strong> | Promotion<br />

Winter meal plan<br />

The recipes in this meal planner are designed for winter as they use seasonal produce<br />

but can be made at any time of the year with seasonal substitutions.<br />

• We recommend cooking the sloppy joe before the<br />

shepherd’s pie as the mince mixture is shared between<br />

the two meals. Other than that you can cook the meals<br />

in any order you like.<br />

• If cooking the sloppy joe later, store the buns in the<br />

freezer to maintain freshness and move into the fridge<br />

the night before to begin defrosting.<br />

• Broccoli stalks can be eaten and are loaded with<br />

MEAL PLAN TIPS<br />

nutrients. We’ve used them in his week’s recipes – just<br />

be sure to peel off the outer layer, which can be tough<br />

and woody. If preferred, the broccoli stalk can be grated.<br />

• When freezing leftovers, label the container or storage<br />

bag with a date and the name of the item.<br />

• There will be some leftover frozen green beans and peas<br />

this week – you can add more into the recipes or use in<br />

other dishes.<br />

Sloppy joe<br />

A simple and budget friendly American-inspired take on<br />

classic mince on toast. Our deliciously hearty mince is<br />

packed with hidden veges for a nutritious meal suitable<br />

for the whole family.<br />

Prep time: 10 mins<br />

Cooking time: 35 mins<br />

Serves:<br />

4<br />

Skill level:<br />

Easy as<br />

Note<br />

The mince quantities here are doubled to use in the<br />

shepherd’s pie. If you’re not making the shepherd’s pie,<br />

halve the quantities for the mince mixture.<br />

Ingredients<br />

1 tablespoon oil<br />

2 large onions, finely diced<br />

6 garlic cloves, grated or finely chopped or 3 teaspoons crushed garlic<br />

1 tablespoon paprika<br />

170g can tomato paste<br />

800g beef mince<br />

1 leek, white and green parts thinly sliced and washed thoroughly<br />

2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce<br />

2 cups water<br />

410g can whole kernel corn, drained<br />

5 large carrots, grated<br />

600g (4 cups) frozen peas*<br />

Salt and pepper, to taste<br />

To serve<br />

½ head lettuce*, shredded<br />

4-6 hamburger buns, heated if desired<br />

Method<br />

1. Heat oil in a large frying pan or pot on the stove over mediumhigh<br />

heat. Sauté onions until softened, add garlic and paprika and<br />

stir-fry until fragrant. Add tomato paste, stir, and heat through.<br />

2. Turn heat to high and add beef mince and leek. Cook until the<br />

beef has browned, stirring occasionally. Add the Worcestershire<br />

sauce and carefully pour in the water, gently stir, and cover with a<br />

lid. Bring to a boil, remove the lid and simmer for 5-10 minutes or<br />

until the mixture has thickened slightly, stirring occasionally.<br />

3. Mix through corn, carrots, and frozen peas to heat through. Test<br />

taste, adding salt and pepper as desired.<br />

4. Set aside half of the mince mixture to use in the shepherd’s pie<br />

later in the week. Keep in a sealed container in the fridge.<br />

5. Serve sloppy joe with lettuce on the buns and topped with the<br />

mince, or with lettuce on the side.<br />

Cooking tip<br />

Add your favourite spices and herbs for extra flavour. If you like it<br />

spicy, add chilli powder or flakes for extra heat.<br />

*Some ingredients will be used across more than one meal in a week. These ingredients are all marked with a * so you know not to use all of the ingredient in one meal.


Ingredients<br />

2 teaspoons oil<br />

1 large onion<br />

3 garlic cloves, minced or grated or 1½ teaspoons crushed garlic<br />

1 leek, white and green parts thinly sliced and thoroughly washed<br />

2 large carrots, cut into small cubes<br />

1 teaspoon dried mixed herbs<br />

750ml (3 cups) water<br />

875ml (3½ cups) milk*<br />

600g potatoes, cut into 2cm chunks<br />

410g can creamed corn<br />

425g can tuna in spring water, drained and flaked<br />

225g (1½ cups) frozen peas*<br />

Salt and pepper, to taste<br />

3 tablespoons cornflour mixed with ¼ cup water<br />

Fish chowder<br />

Creamy and comforting, this fish chowder is perfect<br />

to feed the whānau on a cool winter evening. Using<br />

canned tuna and seasonal veges, this hearty and<br />

flavourful recipe is easy and affordable too!<br />

Prep time: 15 mins<br />

Cooking time: 30 mins<br />

Cooking tip<br />

If desired, replace the<br />

water for your choice<br />

of fish or chicken<br />

stock and reduce<br />

the salt added.<br />

Serves:<br />

4<br />

Skill level:<br />

Easy as<br />

Method<br />

1. Heat oil in a large pot on the stove over medium-high heat.<br />

Add onions and sauté for around 5 minutes or until softened.<br />

Add garlic and stir-fry for a minute or until fragrant. Add leek and<br />

carrots and cook for around 5 minutes, or until the leek<br />

has softened.<br />

2. Carefully pour in water and milk and mix. Turn heat to high,<br />

add potatoes and creamed corn, stir and cover with a lid.<br />

3. Bring to a boil while stirring occasionally to make sure it doesn’t<br />

catch at the bottom of the pot, reduce the heat to a simmer.<br />

Simmer for 10-15 minutes or until the carrots and potatoes<br />

are cooked, continuing to stir occasionally.<br />

4. Stir through tuna and frozen peas to heat through. Bring to<br />

a simmer, add salt and pepper to taste.<br />

5. Add cornflour and water mix into the pot while stirring,<br />

continuing to stir until the chowder has thickened.<br />

Ingredients<br />

300g jasmine rice*<br />

2 tablespoons oil, divided<br />

1 large onion, thinly sliced<br />

300g mushrooms, sliced<br />

300g frozen green beans*, defrosted<br />

400g can baby corn, drained<br />

9 large eggs*<br />

125ml (½ cup) milk*<br />

Salt and pepper, to taste<br />

Lemon chilli sauce<br />

Zest and juice of 1 lemon<br />

2 teaspoons sweet chilli sauce<br />

1 garlic clove, grated or ½ teaspoon crushed garlic<br />

1 teaspoon fish sauce (optional) or soy sauce<br />

Cooking tip<br />

This recipe is a<br />

great way to use up<br />

leftover vegetables<br />

or whatever is in<br />

your vege drawer.<br />

Vietnamese-style omelette<br />

This recipe is inspired by the Vietnamese bánh xèo, a<br />

savoury rice pancake stuffed with prawns and salad.<br />

Our vegetarian version is made with an egg crêpe, filled<br />

with stir-fried vegetables, served over rice and topped<br />

with a lemon chilli sauce.<br />

Prep time: 10 mins<br />

Cooking time: 25 mins<br />

Serves:<br />

4<br />

Skill level:<br />

Easy as<br />

Method<br />

1. Cook rice according to packet instructions. Combine the sauce<br />

ingredients in a bowl and set aside.<br />

2. Heat 1 tablespoon oil in a large frying pan on the stove over high<br />

heat. Stir-fry onion, mushrooms, green beans and baby corn until<br />

the vegetables are cooked to your liking. Set the vegetables aside.<br />

3. Return the empty frying pan to the stove, add a quarter of the<br />

remaining oil and turn heat to high.<br />

4. Beat eggs with milk and season with salt and pepper. Divide into<br />

four to six portions. Once the pan is hot pour in one portion of<br />

the egg and cook for 1-2 minutes or until it has set, then flip over<br />

to cook the other side. Transfer cooked egg onto a serving plate.<br />

Continue this process with the rest of it oil and egg mixture until<br />

all the egg is cooked.<br />

5. Fill each egg crêpe with the stir-fried vegetables, drizzle with the<br />

lemon sauce, fold over, and serve with rice.


60 <strong>Style</strong> | Promotion<br />

Ingredients<br />

800g kūmara, cut into 1cm chunks<br />

15g (1 tablespoon) butter<br />

Salt and pepper, to taste<br />

Oil, for greasing<br />

½ (or remaining) sloppy joe mince mix<br />

Side salad<br />

½ head lettuce*, shredded<br />

1 medium red onion, thinly sliced<br />

1 apple, thinly sliced<br />

1 cup of any combination of your favourite<br />

nuts, seeds, and dried fruits (optional)<br />

Your favourite salad dressing (optional)<br />

Cooking tip<br />

The pie can be<br />

cooked in a ceramic pie<br />

dish, oven proof pan, or<br />

casserole dish<br />

if you don’t have<br />

a baking dish.<br />

Shepherd’s pie<br />

A classic family favourite with a Kiwi-style twist, this<br />

super easy recipe is topped with a tasty kūmara mash<br />

instead of mashed potato. The nutritious mince filling<br />

is packed with hidden veges that even the fussiest of<br />

eaters will love.<br />

Prep time: 5 mins<br />

Cooking time: 45 mins<br />

Serves:<br />

4<br />

Skill level:<br />

Easy as<br />

Method<br />

1. Boil kūmara until softened, drain water. Add butter and season with<br />

salt and pepper, to taste. Mash until smooth. Add a splash of milk if<br />

you prefer a creamier mash.<br />

2. Heat oven to 200ºC bake or 180ºC fan bake.<br />

3. Grease a large baking dish with oil. Transfer the cooked mince mixture<br />

into the dish and spread out evenly. Top the mince mix with the<br />

kūmara mash using a spoon and spread out evenly. Bake for 30 minutes<br />

or until the filling is hot and the kūmara mash is slightly golden.<br />

4. As the pie bakes, combine the salad ingredients and toss with your<br />

favourite dressing. Set aside. Remove the pie from the oven and<br />

leave to sit for 5 minutes before serving with the side salad.<br />

Friday night sticky lemon chicken<br />

A quick and easy baked chicken dish inspired by Chinese takeaway-style<br />

lemon chicken. The tender chicken is coated in a deliciously finger-licking<br />

sticky lemon sauce and served with ginger stir-fried veges.<br />

Prep time: 10 mins<br />

Cooking time: 35 mins<br />

Serves:<br />

4<br />

Skill level:<br />

Easy as<br />

Ingredients<br />

300g jasmine rice*<br />

1 large egg*<br />

2 teaspoons soy sauce<br />

400g skinless chicken<br />

breast, cut into strips<br />

or chunks<br />

¼ cup cornflour<br />

Sticky lemon sauce<br />

Zest and juice of<br />

1 juicy lemon<br />

½ cup water<br />

2 teaspoons soy sauce<br />

2 tablespoons honey<br />

2 teaspoons oil<br />

3 garlic cloves, finely<br />

chopped or 1½<br />

teaspoons crushed garlic<br />

2 teaspoons cornflour<br />

mixed with 2 tablespoons<br />

water<br />

Ginger stir-fried veges<br />

1 tablespoon oil<br />

20g ginger, thinly sliced or<br />

grated or 1 tablespoon<br />

crushed ginger<br />

1 large onion, thinly sliced<br />

300g frozen green<br />

beans*, defrosted<br />

2 large carrots,<br />

thinly sliced<br />

1 broccoli, florets and<br />

stalks roughly chopped<br />

300g mushrooms, sliced<br />

Method<br />

1. Cook rice according to packet instructions. Beat egg and soy sauce<br />

together in a large bowl, add chicken, gently mix to coat. Cover and<br />

set aside to marinate.<br />

2. Heat oven to 200ºC bake or 180ºC fan bake and prepare a baking<br />

tray by greasing it with oil.<br />

3. Once the oven is hot, dip and coat chicken pieces in cornflour, shake<br />

off any excess flour and place on the baking tray in a single layer. Bake<br />

for 10-15 minutes or until cooked through and slightly browned.<br />

Sticky lemon sauce<br />

4. Combine the lemon juice, water, soy sauce and honey in a bowl.<br />

Heat oil in a saucepan on the stove over medium-high heat, add<br />

garlic and fry for a few seconds until golden. Carefully pour the<br />

lemon mixture into the saucepan and bring to a gentle simmer. Test<br />

taste, adding more seasoning ingredients if needed. While stirring,<br />

gradually pour in the cornflour mix and continue stirring until<br />

thickened. Turn off heat and set aside.<br />

Ginger stir-fried veges<br />

5. Heat oil in a large frying pan or wok over high heat, sauté onion and<br />

cook until slightly softened, add ginger and fry for 1-2 minutes or until<br />

fragrant. Add remaining veges and stir-fry until cooked to your liking.<br />

6. To serve place cooked chicken in a large bowl and pour the sauce<br />

over top, toss to coat. Serve sticky lemon chicken with rice and<br />

stir-fried veges.


<strong>Style</strong> | Drink 61<br />

<strong>Style</strong> sips<br />

Christchurch-based mixologist Meredith Earle was the deserved<br />

South Island winner of Roots Dry Gin’s recent Show Us Your Roots cocktail competition<br />

for her deliciously captivating cocktail Rōhi – juicy, sweet, salty, complex, compelling,<br />

with a hint of peppery warmth and a hit of rose. Here she shares the secret recipe along<br />

with the inspiration behind her winning drink.<br />

Rōhi<br />

INGREDIENTS<br />

• 45ml Roots Marlborough Dry Gin<br />

• 30ml Mere’s rose cordial<br />

• 12 drops horopito/salt solution<br />

Mere’s rose cordial<br />

• 4g dried rose petals<br />

• 2g pink peppercorns (ground with mortar and pestle)<br />

• 2g grapefruit zest<br />

• 60g sugar<br />

• 100ml water<br />

• 1g malic acid<br />

• 1g citric acid<br />

Horopito/salt solution<br />

• 2g foraged horopito leaf (dehydrated then ground<br />

with mortar and pestle)<br />

• 2g pink Himalayan salt flakes<br />

• 100ml water<br />

METHOD<br />

1. Shake all ingredients and fine strain into a Riedel Nick<br />

& Nora glass or similar.<br />

2. Garnish with a fresh horopito leaf.<br />

Rōhi means Rose in Te Reo Māori – a name passed down from<br />

my nana, Alice Rosie Williams nee Te Atawhai Hema to my<br />

mother, Joanne Rose Earle.<br />

My homemade ‘Mere’s rose cordial’ is inspired by them –<br />

these two women are my roots and have made me the woman<br />

I am today.<br />

I’m incredibly proud to have made this drink in honour of both<br />

of them, especially my mother, who passed away from her battle<br />

with pulmonary artery hypertension on July 14 last year.<br />

The salt reminds me of the Clevedon oyster farm on the way to<br />

Kawakawa Bay, just after our family Mataitai urupā where I feel at<br />

home, while the horopito represents my Māori heritage roots, as<br />

Māori would use it for medicinal purposes.


62 <strong>Style</strong> | Promotion<br />

The modern preserver<br />

Marmalade, sauerkraut, spiced carrots and more with internationally renowned<br />

queen of all things deliciously pickled and preserved, Kylee Newton.<br />

Interview Josie Steenhart<br />

Celebrated foodie, author of two cookbooks (with<br />

another on the way) and guest chef at this year’s The<br />

Food Show, Kylee Newton has – lucky for us – recently<br />

resettled in New Zealand after more than two decades in<br />

London. Here she shares some mouthwatering inspiration as<br />

well as a few of her sought-after recipes.<br />

What are some of your favourite things to pickle/preserve<br />

right now?<br />

We are mid-winter, so citrus is a preserver’s best friend at<br />

this time of the year – I’ve really enjoyed walking around<br />

and seeing all the orange, grapefruit and lemon trees in<br />

everyone’s front gardens. So that means marmalade season.<br />

If jam is not your thing then it’s a great time to make<br />

sauerkraut – I prefer to make kraut in the cooler months<br />

where I can have more control over the temperature, so<br />

a slower ferment.<br />

Otherwise pickle anything in season – beetroot,<br />

cauliflower, carrots.<br />

And how are you enjoying these once created?<br />

Marmalade is a great addition to brighten up a bread and<br />

butter pudding, or steamed puddings.<br />

With kraut I’m finding myself adding it to the top of my<br />

winter-warming soups along with a dollop of crème fraîche<br />

and some toasted pumpkin seeds, for a bit of texture.<br />

I’m currently creating a turmeric-pickled cauliflower recipe<br />

that’s destined for crispy battered cauliflower to eat with a<br />

dip of harissa yoghurt.<br />

What’s your go-to dish when you really want to impress?<br />

This changes, there’s no true ‘go-to’ in my repertoire –<br />

bravely (and probably a little insanely) I like to try out new<br />

things when guests come to visit. Since I was young I loved<br />

to stick my head into my favourite cookery book of the time<br />

and just play.<br />

My husband is a great cook too, in his spare time, and<br />

recently we have been pulling our own handmade biang<br />

biang noodles – there’s always a bit of theatre when visitors<br />

come over for that.<br />

Otherwise a ‘go-to’ would be handmade pasta – people<br />

are always impressed when you don’t just buy it dried or<br />

pre-rolled and cut. Pasta is a crowd pleaser and acts as<br />

a great base for a variety of sauces and/or ingredients.<br />

What is a less popular ingredient that you think deserves<br />

more appreciation?<br />

Vegetable leaves and stems. Over years of marketing people<br />

have stopped eating the leaves and stalks/stems of vegetables<br />

and this perplexes me immensely.<br />

Supermarkets remove the outer leaves of cauliflowers,<br />

where the leaves and stems are delicious baked in a few<br />

Moroccan spices. Carrot tops can be added to salads or<br />

made into pesto, chermoula or salsa verde. Radish and<br />

beetroot leaves are perfectly delectable in salads, while<br />

beetroot stalks can be pickled. Turnip tops create a bitter<br />

twist run through a nduja-spiced spaghetti and celery tops<br />

add to your stocks/broths.<br />

I can not encourage people to ‘eat it all’ enough. Why are<br />

we aimlessly wasting good edible food? The era of waste has<br />

to be addressed.<br />

What can we expect to see from you at The Christchurch<br />

Food Show?<br />

Expect to see a whole lot of pickling – I thought this would<br />

be a good way to show people how easy it is to get started<br />

if new to preserving.<br />

I’ll be running through a few recipes of fruit and vegetable<br />

vinegar brine pickling. There will be sweet pickled pears,<br />

quick pickled radishes, spicy pickled carrots, pickled beetroot<br />

and gin pickled cucumbers.<br />

I’ll go through what a quick pickle is compared with<br />

pickling to preserve, what vinegars are viable to use, spices<br />

and uses of your homemade pickles in everyday meals.<br />

There will be tasting – smoked fish paté on toast topped<br />

with pickles of recipes I’ll make on the day. I’m doing two<br />

45-minute demos, one on Friday at 1pm and one on<br />

Saturday at 2pm.


<strong>Style</strong> | Promotion 63<br />

Gin pickled cucumber<br />

MAKES 1 X 500ML JAR<br />

INGREDIENTS<br />

• 1 cucumber<br />

• 1 banana shallot<br />

• 3 sprigs mint<br />

• 350ml white wine vinegar<br />

• ¾ tablespoon caster sugar<br />

• 1 teaspoon sea salt<br />

• ½ teaspoon chilli flakes<br />

• 10 juniper berries<br />

• 3 tablespoons gin<br />

METHOD<br />

1. Prep the cucumber by slicing into 3mm-thick<br />

discs. Peel and slice the shallot into 2mm discs.<br />

2. Pluck the mint leaves from the stalk and tear<br />

into pieces if large.<br />

3. Make your vinegar brine by combining the<br />

vinegar, sugar, salt, chilli flakes and juniper<br />

berries in a pot, bring to a simmer, dissolve the<br />

sugar and salt and allow to cool.<br />

4. Stack the cucumber discs, layering in bits<br />

of shallot and mint, without squashing, into<br />

a cooled sterilised jar.<br />

5. Add the measure of gin and pour over the<br />

brine to completely submerge.<br />

6. Tap the jar on the bench to release any<br />

bubbles, and seal.<br />

Keeps for 6-8 months sealed – once opened, keep<br />

in the fridge and consume within 4-6 weeks.<br />

Spiced pickled carrots<br />

MAKES 1 X 500ML JAR<br />

INGREDIENTS<br />

• 300g carrots, peeled<br />

• 300ml white wine vinegar<br />

• 40ml water<br />

• 1 tablespoon caster sugar<br />

• 2 teaspoons sea salt<br />

• 2 teaspoons chilli flakes<br />

• 2 teaspoons black peppercorns<br />

• 2 bay leaves<br />

• zest and juice of 1 orange<br />

METHOD<br />

1. Prep the carrots, by slicing into discs or into batons.<br />

2. Make your vinegar brine by combining the remaining<br />

ingredients in a pot, bring to a simmer, dissolve the<br />

sugar and salt.<br />

3. Pack the prepped carrots, without squashing, into<br />

a sterilised jar and pour over the warm brine to<br />

completely submerge.<br />

4. Tap the jar on the bench to release any bubbles,<br />

and seal.<br />

Keeps for 6-8 months sealed – once opened, keep in the<br />

fridge and consume within 2-3 months.<br />

Pickled beetroot<br />

MAKES 1 X 500ML JAR<br />

INGREDIENTS<br />

• 300-400g raw beetroot, peeled<br />

• 350ml white wine vinegar<br />

• 50ml water<br />

• 1 tablespoon caster sugar<br />

• ¾ teaspoon sea salt<br />

• 1 teaspoon black peppercorns<br />

• 2 bay leaves<br />

• 4 cloves<br />

• 3 green cardamom pods<br />

• 2 strips pared lemon zest<br />

METHOD<br />

1. Prep the beetroot, by slicing into thin discs or into cubes<br />

or wedges.<br />

2. Make your vinegar brine by combining the remaining<br />

ingredients in a pot, bring to a simmer, dissolve the sugar<br />

and salt. Add the beetroot and simmer for a minute.<br />

3. Pack the beetroot, without squashing, into a sterilised jar<br />

and pour over the warm brine to completely submerge.<br />

4. Tap the jar on the bench to release any bubbles,<br />

and seal.<br />

Keeps for 12 months sealed – once opened, keep in the<br />

fridge and consume within 2-3 months<br />

See Kylee Newton at The Christchurch Food Show, <strong>August</strong> 19-21, Christchurch Arena.


64 <strong>Style</strong> | Drink<br />

Mix & mingle<br />

<strong>Style</strong>’s merry band of beverage reviewers taste-test the latest and greatest.<br />

Cheeky lager<br />

For those partial to a<br />

cheeky lager, new-to-market<br />

Southern Alps Brewing Co<br />

(the second new brand<br />

from MOA Brewing Co)<br />

has just launched with<br />

two refreshing releases –<br />

Alpine Lager and Low Carb<br />

Alpine Lager. While, like<br />

most lagers, these won’t<br />

knock your socks off when<br />

it comes to big or bold<br />

flavours, the combination of<br />

all New Zealand ingredients<br />

– Gladfield malt (the world’s<br />

purest malt) and Nelson<br />

Sauvin, Motueka and<br />

Wai-iti hops – gives a clean,<br />

fresh taste and smooth<br />

mouthfeel. To round off the<br />

Southern Alps experience,<br />

SABC has partnered with<br />

Kea Conservation Trust,<br />

supporting the organisation<br />

with an annual donation<br />

and helping with key<br />

conservation projects.<br />

Exclusive reserve<br />

For serious rum lovers,<br />

this has to be a staple in<br />

the cabinet. Diplomatico’s<br />

Reserva Exclusiva has been<br />

aged in oak barrels for up<br />

to 12 years. It showcases<br />

a characterful sweet nose,<br />

showing notes of fruit cake,<br />

vanilla ice cream, cocoa,<br />

toffee and sweet spices.<br />

This all leads onto the<br />

palate, which is rich and<br />

extremely well balanced<br />

with some chocolate,<br />

orange and nutty flavours<br />

also emerging. It is deep,<br />

vivid and the perfect<br />

post-pudding tipple.<br />

Fashioned with two tumbler<br />

glasses, this is an ideal gift<br />

just in time for Father’s Day.<br />

Think pink<br />

Nothing says fabulous<br />

fun like pink gin, but if<br />

you prefer your partying<br />

without the alcohol,<br />

Lyre’s have whipped up a<br />

premium non-alcoholic pink<br />

gin alternative, Pink London<br />

Spirit, crafted to capture<br />

the authentic essence and<br />

flavours of a pink gin, sans<br />

booze. “Lyre’s was created<br />

to be true to taste to match<br />

the world’s most popular<br />

spirits in a non-alcoholic<br />

format, each as close to the<br />

original premium spirit as<br />

possible,” explains Lyre’s NZ<br />

ambassador Andrew Down.<br />

Use as you would standard<br />

gin for pretty pink drinks<br />

and no ugly hangovers.<br />

Forged in Scotland<br />

Hailing from the peaty<br />

whisky capital of Islay, the<br />

Machir Bay from Kilchoman<br />

encompasses the signature<br />

style of a rugged Islay<br />

malt. On the nose, fresh<br />

peat smoke mingles with<br />

a soft, cooked stone fruit<br />

sweetness, with layers of<br />

smoke. The palate then has<br />

a surge of tangy peat and<br />

a vanilla pudding sweetness<br />

that leads to a seaside,<br />

peppery smoke. The barley,<br />

oak and peat come together<br />

in harmony on the finish.<br />

Packaged up with two<br />

Kilchoman glasses, the Wills<br />

family at Rockside farm have<br />

really outdone themselves<br />

with this dram.


DRAMS FOR DADS<br />

AT<br />

WHISKY GALORE<br />

W: whiskygalore.co.nz 834 Colombo Street, Christchurch


66 <strong>Style</strong> | Art<br />

Ode to the south<br />

Renowned writer, poet, artist and curator Gregory O’Brien on his latest<br />

projects and his love of regional New Zealand.<br />

Words Rebecca Fox<br />

Provincial New Zealand has played a much greater part<br />

in the arts than it might give itself credit for, writer and<br />

artist Gregory O’Brien says.<br />

The idea that New Zealand’s art history narrative is<br />

a provincial one rather than a metropolitan one<br />

fascinates him.<br />

“It hasn’t been a Picasso in Paris or Max Beckmann in<br />

Berlin. It’s been like Toss Woollaston at Māpua, it’s been<br />

Colin McCahon in North Otago, or Ralph Hotere at<br />

Port Chalmers… Don Binney at Te Henga, Rita Angus<br />

in Hawke’s Bay ... Joanna Paul in Whanganui, Laurence<br />

Aberhart living in Russell.”<br />

Added to that, top-notch regional cultural institutions<br />

such as the south’s Hocken Library, in Dunedin, and Gore’s<br />

Eastern Southland Gallery and it makes a powerful case for<br />

the regions’ place in New Zealand art history, he says.<br />

“On a national level, these artists have gone to outlying<br />

areas of our nation – that is where this really strong art,<br />

not all of it totally but a hell of a lot of it, has come out,<br />

out of the regions and provinces.”<br />

ABOVE: Gregory O’Brien, ‘Poem in the Matukituki Valley I’, 2018, acrylic on canvas, 915 × 1220mm.


<strong>Style</strong> | Art 67<br />

“New Zealand art that is<br />

exciting, artistically,<br />

is so often from the regions.<br />

It is really rooted in<br />

place with imagination<br />

and creativity.”<br />

It is an echo of New Zealand’s place at the bottom<br />

of the world, isolated, giving it an independence<br />

of thought and creativity and a strength of character,<br />

he says.<br />

“These artists go out into the wilderness to discover<br />

who they are, to make their statement. New Zealand<br />

draws that out of people. Places that offer galvanising<br />

solitude, a sense of place and time.”<br />

This is despite the perception of provincial New<br />

Zealand as being small-minded conservative backwaters<br />

or dull.<br />

“New Zealand art that is exciting, artistically, is so<br />

often from the regions. It is really rooted in place with<br />

imagination and creativity.”<br />

Gregory’s conclusions are based on nearly three<br />

decades in the art world as a writer, painter and curator,<br />

after starting out as a journalist in Auckland. He recently<br />

published a book of his poems featuring his own<br />

illustrations called House & Contents.<br />

He has also written books on significant New Zealand<br />

artists including Hotere, Graham Percy and Pat Hanly and<br />

is on the home straight with what he calls a “monster” of<br />

a book on Don Binney.<br />

Binney has dominated his life for the past few years as<br />

he put together the monograph and biography on the<br />

artist, who died 10 years ago in September.<br />

“Don Binney’s is by far [the] biggest book I’ve done in<br />

my life.”<br />

He was drawn to write the book as he felt Binney, like<br />

the others he has written about – the pioneer generation<br />

of modernist New Zealand artists – helped define his<br />

interest in the arts from when he was young.<br />

“Don Binney is almost the final one of that group [from]<br />

when I was a teenager, that shook me up and around and<br />

changed the way I saw the world.<br />

“Binney spent his life putting this stylised modernist bird<br />

in the sky above Aotearoa. When I was a kid, I found it<br />

bracing and now I’m 60 I still find it bracing.”<br />

Gregory also felt the questions Binney asked in his<br />

paintings were similar to what he himself asked about art.<br />

He had also spent time at Bethells Beach where Binney<br />

did a lot of his painting. So it felt like unfinished business.<br />

“He used the bird as his great motif to articulate the<br />

questions: ‘where are we, what are we doing here? How<br />

do we feel about this place? How do we see it? How do we<br />

look after it? What is [the] past, present and future of it?”<br />

ABOVE: Gregory O’Brien takes every opportunity to spend time in Central Otago.


68 <strong>Style</strong> | Art<br />

He had plenty of material to base the book<br />

on as Binney kept much of his correspondence,<br />

wrote huge diaries and even a 150,000-word<br />

unpublished memoir.<br />

“What interests me, is how all that<br />

information completely charges up what his<br />

paintings are saying.”<br />

It also highlights how chance encounters can<br />

change the course of a person’s life. In Binney’s<br />

case it was as a teenager seeing one of his<br />

classmates shoot a bird on the beach for no<br />

reason at all.<br />

“Binney didn’t say anything; he was crippled<br />

with guilt for the rest of his life. So Binney<br />

spent the entire rest of life avidly, and often<br />

noisily, speaking out on behalf of birdlife,<br />

because of that one thing that happened.”<br />

It is discovering stories like this that Gregory<br />

loves about writing.<br />

“It is one of the great pleasures of an art<br />

writer, to bring things out into the open, to<br />

find things in the back room of culture or back<br />

cupboards and bring it out.<br />

“For every book I’ve written, I’ve learnt a lot.<br />

I don’t write these books because I know a lot<br />

to start with, I write to find out things, to go<br />

somewhere new and take people along with me.”<br />

It is writing that gave him the two most<br />

significant events in his life in the past decade,<br />

a trip to the Kermadec Islands as part of<br />

the Kermadec arts project and receiving the<br />

Henderson House residency, in Alexandra, in<br />

2018 alongside his wife, poet Jenny Bornholdt.<br />

For Gregory, the residency was his first chance<br />

to spend significant time in the South Island,<br />

despite visiting regularly for exhibitions and when<br />

writing the book on Hotere.<br />

“To me it was all about being inland, this<br />

mineral, physical, very visceral, very gripping<br />

[place]. Then suddenly understanding the kind<br />

of painting Rita Angus did in Central Otago and<br />

that McCahon did and that Grahame Sydney’s<br />

still doing today.”<br />

These days the couple take every<br />

opportunity to spend time in Central Otago,<br />

having made that connection with the land and<br />

spirit of the place.<br />

Just like he did on his Kermadec adventure,<br />

which opened his eyes to the connection of New<br />

Zealand to the Pacific Island and to the islands<br />

north of the country.<br />

“I went on to Tonga, subsequent to that I<br />

went to Niue, New Caledonia, Easter Island, and<br />

as far away as Chile. It was a big consciousness<br />

expander for me as I came to realise New<br />

Zealand is part of a powerful oceanic reality and<br />

a lot of our art is infused with that – the likes of<br />

Robin White, John Pule, Ralph Hotere, people<br />

like that.”<br />

Two burning cars,<br />

one afternoon<br />

Balclutha fire crews were called out to two vehicle fires in<br />

quick succession yesterday afternoon . . . . Both fires were<br />

extinguished without injury or further incident. Balclutha fire<br />

station officer Stacey Verheul said although it was unusual to<br />

have two such incidents on the same day, engine fires were<br />

more prevalent in spring . . . . ‘Vehicles that haven’t been used<br />

for a while can quickly become a home for nesting birds . . .’<br />

— Otago Daily Times, 18 October 2018<br />

Nature is as<br />

nature does, the fire chief<br />

explains. A car is nothing but<br />

an aviary<br />

and all roadworthiness<br />

ends in ruin –<br />

whether you are talking<br />

a Mark III Zephyr<br />

or Mercedes Benz – the bird singing<br />

beneath the bonnet<br />

will find them all.<br />

The car runs out<br />

before the road,<br />

the season<br />

before its bird-life.<br />

In almost-Spring<br />

an engine compartment<br />

offers ideal nesting<br />

and nature is always<br />

held accountable<br />

for the shape of things<br />

gone west<br />

or elsewhere<br />

or otherwise<br />

up in smoke, leaving<br />

our combustible selves<br />

staring skywards<br />

unfeathered, undusted,<br />

supposedly ‘without injury or<br />

further incident’, no mention of<br />

two parents gone<br />

within one season of a year.<br />

No nest, no nothing.<br />

OPPOSITE: Gregory O’Brien, ‘Ode to the preservation of southern waterways’, 2018, acrylic on canvas, 1220 × 840mm.


<strong>Style</strong> | Art 69<br />

The Spaniards of<br />

Italian Creek<br />

Speargrass above Lake Dunstan,<br />

Central Otago<br />

Urchins of this raised<br />

undersea, at once<br />

ocean-bedded and blue sky’d,<br />

your foreign accent<br />

we forgive you,<br />

your barbed inflorescence<br />

upon which our wits too<br />

are sharpened. In this<br />

the gleaming hour or<br />

golden age of<br />

such things, the water race<br />

that runneth under<br />

low land and lupin, speargrass<br />

and shotgun shell,<br />

chattering, as if to say<br />

we were expecting you<br />

mid-morning, clad in<br />

edelweiss, spinescent.<br />

Bluebells and coral<br />

lichen make up your bed,<br />

the coolest of linens upon which<br />

this armada sails, these<br />

syllables worn and pressed,<br />

sea eggs of the stratosphere<br />

in snow’s pocket.<br />

Poems and artwork from House & Contents by Gregory O’Brien.<br />

Published by Auckland University Press, $30<br />

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70 <strong>Style</strong> | Promotion<br />

Cello virtuoso<br />

Christchurch welcomes back classical music star Catherine Kwak next<br />

month for an unmissable solo performance at the much-anticipated Corpus Medicorum<br />

concert supporting the Canterbury Charity Hospital.<br />

Interview Josie Steenhart<br />

Having first picked up a cello at age seven, Catherine Kwak<br />

studied part-time at the University of Canterbury from<br />

the age of 12 before completing a Bachelor of Music at 18,<br />

and recently added a further string to her bow after graduating<br />

medical school.<br />

This September, she returns to Christchurch as guest cellist<br />

on the Corpus Medicorum orchestra’s South Island tour.<br />

An Australian medical orchestra founded in 2002 by violist<br />

and cardiothoracic surgeon Phillip Antippa, Corpus Medicorum<br />

has played to critical acclaim around the world, and has raised<br />

more than $1m for charities all over the world.<br />

The recipient of the Christchurch Corpus Medicorum concert<br />

is the Canterbury Charity Hospital, which provides free medical,<br />

surgical, dental and counselling services to Cantabrians in need.<br />

The Christchurch symphony concert will feature works by<br />

Weber, Elger and Brahms, with a solo performance by Catherine.<br />

<strong>Style</strong> caught up with the talented 24-year-old, who also works<br />

as a first-year doctor at Middlemore Hospital, to find out more.<br />

When did you first pick up a cello, and what do you love<br />

about it?<br />

I started learning when I was seven years old. I was drawn to the<br />

deep, rich sound that the cello has, and I love the ability it gives<br />

me to express myself, share music and connect with my audience.<br />

At the age of just 12 you became a part-time student at the<br />

University of Canterbury…<br />

At the time, I wanted cello to become my career pathway and<br />

to achieve that, I knew I had to invest more time into practising,<br />

learning, going overseas to festivals/competitions and more.<br />

My teacher at the time was a senior lecturer at the University<br />

of Canterbury so when I was given the opportunity to take some<br />

papers there I took on the challenge!<br />

And then at 15 you studied for a Bachelor of Music, before<br />

going on to study medicine and become a doctor…<br />

I made the decision to leave high school at the end of year 10<br />

and pursue full-time university studies.<br />

After completing my BMus, I made the decision to keep music<br />

as something I did purely out of passion and not for a living.<br />

I decided to go into medicine because I wanted to find a<br />

different way to help others, and I was intrigued by the science<br />

and humanistic art of medicine.<br />

How do you find time for both music at this level and a career<br />

in medicine?<br />

Cello to me is not a hobby or a job, but something I turn to at all<br />

times – it’s a form of stress relief, expression and joy, and lets me<br />

experience emotion to a different level.<br />

I feel fulfilled when playing the cello, especially when performing,<br />

and so I’m always able to make time for something I love.<br />

Congratulations on your New Zealand National Concerto<br />

Competition win, what does it mean to you to win such<br />

a prestigious accolade?<br />

Thank you. Winning this competition means a lot to me as it<br />

signifies years of hard work and my continued endeavours to<br />

keep music as a big part of my life.<br />

What can audiences expect from you at this concert?<br />

Audiences can expect to be taken on a sensational musical<br />

journey full of emotion.<br />

Elgar Concerto is a work that is dear to my heart; it is one of<br />

the most heart-wrenching yet beautiful concertos that showcases<br />

the cello to its full potential. This will be followed by the Brahms<br />

Symphony No.2, which is very well known to be an expressive<br />

masterpiece, and these two works will be preluded with the<br />

exquisite Weber Der Freischütz Overture.<br />

Corpus Medicorum Symphony Concert, Christchurch Town Hall, September 21. Tickets at ticketek.co.nz


SUPPORTED BY<br />

NATIONAL TOURING<br />

PARTNER<br />

SEASON SPONSOR<br />

FEATURING<br />

25-28 AUG • CHRISTCHURCH<br />

Isaac Theatre Royal<br />

BOOK NOW rnzb.org.nz<br />

CHOREOGRAPHY / LOUGHLAN PRIOR MUSIC / CLAIRE COWAN SET AND COSTUME DESIGN / EMMA KINGSBURY LIGHTING DESIGN / JEREMY FERN CONDUCTOR / HAMISH McKEICH VISUAL EFFECTS PARTNER / POW STUDIOS


72 <strong>Style</strong> | Read<br />

The reading room<br />

A place to discover what deserves a spot in your TBR pile.<br />

NEW RELEASES<br />

Sons of a Good Keen Man<br />

The Crump Brothers<br />

Penguin, $38<br />

By no means an easy read, this new release frankly and movingly<br />

tells the stories of how Barry Crump’s six sons have navigated life<br />

with and without him. While in his heyday, writer and character<br />

Barry Crump was held up as the “quintessential Kiwi bloke”<br />

– behind the scenes he was a womaniser, alcoholic and abuser.<br />

Published 25 years after his death, Sons of a Good Keen Man offers<br />

anecdotes that grip, entertain, surprise and even provoke a few laughs.<br />

YOU’VE BEEN<br />

READING<br />

Out of Breath<br />

Anna Snoekstra<br />

HarperCollins, $35<br />

This absolute nail-biter follows Brit Jo Ainsley as she attempts to<br />

escape her troubles. This time her escape brings her to remote<br />

Western Australia, where she meets the charismatic American<br />

Gabe who tells her about a seemingly idyllic off-grid community.<br />

After an accident for which Jo blames herself, she again runs, this<br />

time to the commune. But all is not as it seems… Dark, unsettling,<br />

with great descriptions of the Aussie outback, expect plenty of<br />

twists and turns.<br />

Return to Harikoa Bay<br />

Owen Marshall<br />

Penguin, $40<br />

Over a decade since his last collection of new stories,<br />

award-winning writer Owen Marshall (whose story ‘Coming Home<br />

in the Dark’ was recently made into a major feature film) returns<br />

with this collection of “superbly subversive” tales on a diverse<br />

range of subjects that explore his fellow New Zealanders.<br />

Under a Big Sky<br />

Tim Saunders<br />

Allen & Unwin, $37<br />

Renowned Palmerston North writer and sheep and beef farmer<br />

Tim Saunders writes about his life and work on the farm that’s<br />

been in his family for five generations, looking both back to his<br />

forebears and how they farmed, and forward to how that affects<br />

the present day and future farming practices. Not just for those<br />

with an interest in farming, Tim’s considered prose and flair for<br />

creative writing ensures the book has universal appeal.<br />

WINNING<br />

REVIEW<br />

Animal Farm<br />

George Orwell<br />

Penguin, $24<br />

Animal Farm is a timeless<br />

allegory published in the<br />

dying days of the Second<br />

World War. With obvious<br />

allusions to the Russian<br />

Revolution, the book tells<br />

the story of the Manor<br />

Farm and the animal’s<br />

efforts to overthrow the<br />

tyrannical Mr Jones. When<br />

the animals succeed in<br />

establishing a human-free<br />

society, however, they begin<br />

to resemble the cruelty<br />

and greed of their former<br />

masters. Animal Farm is<br />

a classic, family-friendly<br />

fable that I would highly<br />

recommend.<br />

- Thomas Tracey


<strong>Style</strong> | Read 73<br />

PICCADILLY PICKS<br />

Harbouring<br />

Jenny Pattrick<br />

Penguin, $36<br />

It’s 1839, and Martha Pengillin<br />

bravely follows her husband<br />

Huw from the foundry slums of<br />

Wales to what they hope will be<br />

a better life for their family in<br />

faraway New Zealand.<br />

Huw’s connection with Colonel<br />

Wakefield is an advantage, as the<br />

new settlers are promised land and the means to make<br />

their new adventure a success. Travelling separately, months<br />

go by before Martha and Huw reunite on the shores of<br />

New Zealand.<br />

Huw’s relationship with Hineroa, an outcast from her<br />

tribe, is both beneficial and damaging. She is looking for a<br />

better life, and with her indigenous skills and mana helps<br />

Huw deal with the fraught dealings between Māori chiefs<br />

and the new traders.<br />

The emerging Wellington settlement is being transformed,<br />

as are the lives of the inhabitants as more and more<br />

shiploads of settlers arrive from the other side of the world<br />

endeavouring to seek a better existence.<br />

Another authentically researched and absorbing book<br />

by Jenny Pattrick. If you enjoyed The Denniston Rose, then<br />

Harbouring will not disappoint.<br />

- Helen Templeton<br />

Seventeen: Last Man<br />

Standing<br />

John Brownlow<br />

Hachette, $37<br />

Dominating this book is an assassin<br />

known as Seventeen, who gives a<br />

first-person delivery of one of the<br />

fastest-paced thrillers.<br />

Assassins have a nasty job to do<br />

so they need to be cut out to do<br />

whatever is required to succeed and<br />

stay alive. Like James Bond, but nastier.<br />

After his tidying up and surviving assignments in Berlin,<br />

we learn more about Seventeen, his youth and experiences<br />

in and out of “juvie” and his mother’s murder, which have<br />

helped form the man he is. He is less of a monster than we<br />

might think, and we discover a man who can be ruthless in<br />

his profession, but has another side to him.<br />

Seventeen is the 17th in a line of assassins who originated<br />

as a secret agency 100 years ago and is now contracted by<br />

governments and agencies throughout the world. Eighteen<br />

will be appointed when Seventeen retires, (almost unheard<br />

of), or is killed.<br />

This book is getting rave reviews. Perfect for someone who<br />

never has time to read – they won’t be able to stop!<br />

- Neville Templeton<br />

WIN<br />

READ A GOOD BOOK LATELY?<br />

Send us 50-75 words on why you recommend it, with the title and your first and last name for publication,<br />

to josie@alliedpressmagazines.co.nz and you could win a $25 voucher to spend at Piccadilly Bookshop.<br />

we love books<br />

www.piccadillybooks.co.nz<br />

Shop 1, Avonhead Mall Corner of Merrin Street & Withells Road, Avonhead | P. 358 4835


74 <strong>Style</strong> | Win<br />

GIVEAWAYS<br />

Win with <strong>Style</strong><br />

Every month, <strong>Style</strong> sources a range of exceptional prizes to give away.<br />

It’s easy to enter – simply go to stylemagazine.co.nz and fill in your details on the<br />

‘Win with <strong>Style</strong>’ page. Entries close <strong>August</strong> 22, <strong>2022</strong>.<br />

PILLOW TALK<br />

For ultimate comfort the moment you hit the hay, the<br />

Emma Sleep Foam Pillow incorporates precise pressure<br />

relief to support the neck and head, plus a machinewashable<br />

cool cover to wick moisture. To cater to all types<br />

of sleepers it also features three removable foam layers so<br />

the pillow height can be adjusted for front, back and side<br />

sleepers. We have two pillows to give away, each valued<br />

at $219. emma-sleep.co.nz<br />

AND RELAX…<br />

Cloud 9 Float Club is the home of flotation therapy in<br />

Christchurch, helping Cantabrians use flotation therapy to<br />

beat stress, calm anxiety, release muscle tension and build<br />

mindfulness since 2016. To help you relax this winter, we<br />

have an introductory pack of three float sessions to give<br />

away, worth $255. The prize is shareable if you like, but you<br />

may want all three to yourself! cloud9floatclub.co.nz<br />

GET A GRIP<br />

Logitech’s new LIFT Mouse is a revelation in workspace<br />

wellness that will have you looking and feeling your best<br />

(even on hump day). Designed to literally lift you up, it has<br />

a unique 57-degree vertical design that takes the pressure<br />

off the wrist for a more relaxing grip and natural forearm<br />

posture. We have one to win, worth $150. logitech.com<br />

A NIGHT AT THE THEATRE<br />

Inspired by the twisted genius of Roald Dahl and with<br />

music by Tim Minchin, Matilda: The Musical catapults into<br />

the Isaac Theatre Royal from September 16. Featuring<br />

an all-local cast including some of New Zealand’s most<br />

talented child performers, Matilda will be THE show to see<br />

in Christchurch in <strong>2022</strong>, and for one lucky winner we have<br />

a double pass worth $220. showbiz.org.nz<br />

Previous<br />

competition<br />

winners<br />

NAUMI HOTEL STAY: Lisa Geary<br />

THE FASHION BOOTH SCARF: Anthea O’Sullivan<br />

REB FOUNTAIN TICKETS: Hazel Agnew<br />

THE FOOD SHOW PASSES: Monique Thorburn, Holly<br />

Jamieson, Jacek Pawlikowski<br />

*Conditions: Each entry is limited to one per<br />

person. You may enter all giveaways. If you<br />

are selected as a winner, your name will be<br />

published in the following month’s edition. By<br />

registering your details, entrants give permission<br />

for Star Media to send further correspondence,<br />

which you can opt out of at any stage.


You have just one<br />

Face – Value it<br />

Treating multiple conditions simultaneously,<br />

IPL is an ideal skin rejuvenation treatment.<br />

It stimulates collagen regeneration to<br />

improve volume and elasticity, fades age spots<br />

and pigmentation changes caused by sun<br />

damage, treats acne, rosacea,<br />

spider veins and<br />

broken capillaries.<br />

IPl <strong>August</strong><br />

sPecIAl<br />

Full Face<br />

treatment<br />

$200<br />

Valid until<br />

august 31, <strong>2022</strong><br />

For a personal consultation at no charge<br />

please call 03 363 8810<br />

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www.facevalue.co.nz


Annual Charity<br />

From Alpine View and Burlington Lifestyle Villages<br />

SPCA Canterbury receiving a donation of $21,731.56 from Qestral - a<br />

contribution raised from Alpine View and Burlington lifestyle villages.<br />

448 Prestons Road, Waitikiri<br />

www.alpineview.co.nz<br />

171 Prestons Road, Redwood<br />

www.burlingtonvillage.co.nz<br />

A subsidiary of

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