How did you get your career start and what path have you taken since? I put myself through uni by wholesaling Art Deco and 1950s pieces. During my final year in 1993, I opened our first store, Plasma. We've grown steadily ever since.
What’s the best lesson you’ve learnt along the way? Being able to deliver the correct balance - giving customers what they want versus giving them what I want! Too heavily weighted either way can be a disaster.
What’s your proudest career achievement? Difficult. There's no Pritzker Prize in my industry. Little things mean a lot - such as being asked by the Robin Boyd Foundation to perform conservation work on furniture from their collection, selling scandinavian glass to a local museum, or simply handling, albeit briefly sometimes, really top-end work by legends such as Schulim Krimper.
What’s been your best decision? The move from sourcing locally to importing.
Who inspires you? Truly creative (and sometimes a little mad) Melburnians such as Michael Delaney-Korabelnikova (behind the interiors of clubs such as Honky Tonks and Bottom End), (my wife, fashion designer) Lisa Gorman, (artist) Rhys Lee, Roger Ward (interior designer from Richard and Roger).
What are you passionate about? My family (my wife Lisa and I have three- and six-year-old girls). Uncovering unusual things in faraway places. Wine.
Which person, living or dead, would you most like to meet? William Candy, the mid-19th century funerary stonemason who built the house I currently live in.
What dream do you still want to fulfil? Importing vintage design from at least two more continents. I have Design A.D.D. - I need to explore, understand, and buy new things all the time otherwise I risk losing interest.