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At Home With Eva Galambos

As founder of fashion boutique Parlour X, Eva Galambos is known for her impeccable and playful style โ€“ which unsurprisingly extends to her colour-filled family home
Jason Busch

Two-year-old Paloma is riding her large plastic dog across pristine white floorboards. The dog is rather lovely (itโ€™s a Magis Puppy) but it doesnโ€™t have wheels, so riding it essentially means dragging it.

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Palomaโ€™s mum, Eva Galambos, doesnโ€™t bat an eyelid.

A to-die-for dressing room, pictured, was a must for Galambos. (Credit: Jason Busch)

โ€œThis floor is indestructible. We had that conversation with the painters when we moved in. Easy maintenance is paramount to us. Yes, I am obsessed with style, but I have to be realistic โ€“ we have little kids [this includes older daughter Alexa, 6].โ€

Galambos, who owns iconic Sydney fashion boutique Parlour X, and her fiancรฉ Michael Penny, a creative director, moved into their 1940s house in Sydneyโ€™s eastern suburbs last April. After ripping up the old carpet and sanding back and painting the wooden floors, they put in new bathrooms, a simple white kitchen and French doors both front and back.

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Philippe Starckโ€™s classic Ghost chairs are a foil to the sturdy antique table. โ€œI bought [it] in 1995 in Sussex, England,โ€ says Galambos. โ€œItโ€™s an old refectory table from a boysโ€™ school from the 1800s.

Basics complete, making the house a home was all about the decor. โ€œWe live near Bondi so plenty of white and sunlight gives it a beachy feel,โ€ explains Galambos.

But sheโ€™s no minimalist. โ€œI have eclectic taste โ€“ I donโ€™t like things too neat. And thereโ€™s something to be said for nostalgia.โ€ Galambos is a huntergatherer, just as likely to comb flea markets as she is to buy designer.

Art abounds, like the 1980s Warhol posters in the dining room. (Credit: Jason Busch)
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โ€œColour makes people happy. For me, yellow and this orangey-red are like the sun โ€“ they add warmth. In architectural magazines and on Instagram, everybody seems to be doing tonal white, but I always like to be different,โ€ she says.

In a former life, Galambos studied art history and sheโ€™s currently an ambassador for Sydneyโ€™s Museum of Contemporary Art.

An Anthony Lister work. (Credit: Jason Busch)

She has collected art ever since she banked her first pay cheque and her living room alone now houses show-stopping canvases by Adam Cullen and good friend and Archibald Prize winner Del Kathryn Barton, as well as treasured paintings by Galambosโ€™s father.

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Oh, and then there are the Charles Blackman and Anthony Lister works in the next room, and the Andy Warhol advertising posters in the (reluctantly under-used) dining room.

Forget all-white minimalism โ€“ Galambosโ€™s bedroom reflects her penchant for punchy brights and pattern, with more colourful art drawing the eye. (Credit: Jason Busch)

โ€œI canโ€™t wait to get back into entertaining,โ€ says Galambos, who is renowned for her dinner parties. โ€œThis past year has been all about builders! No matter how carefully you plan, itโ€™s messy, stressful and all-consuming.โ€

Luckily for Galambos and her family, this lovingly curated home is now all about them.

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โ€œEasy maintenance is paramount to us,โ€ she says. โ€œYes, I am obsessed with style have to be realistic โ€“ we have little kidsโ€. (Credit: Jason Busch)

Parlour X: The Boutique

Galambos inside the new Parlour X store, a luxury shopping space housed in an historic Sydney church. Photo: Jason Busch

Shortly after her house was finished Galambos impressively embarked on another project: the relocation of her business Parlour X from a pretty terrace in Paddingtonโ€™s Five Ways to the historic, and neglected, 300 square-metre St Johnโ€™s Church on nearby Oxford Street. Galambos describes leaving her base of 14 years as โ€œemotionalโ€.

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โ€œBut our online business is booming, [meaning] much more stock. And the level of our luxury collections keeps climbing โ€“ Saint Laurent, Balenciaga, Valentino and Alaรฏa arenโ€™t brands that suit a modest space. We needed to create something world-class.โ€

Galambos inside the new Parlour X store, a luxury shopping space housed in an historic Sydney church. (Credit: Jason Busch)

Galambos enlisted architects Tobias Partners to maintain the integrity of the churchโ€™s soaring sandstone interiors while creating a functional workspace. A floating glass mezzanine houses her office and buying team. Beneath, a central cube showcases accessories by the likes of Cรฉline, while the apparel collections line the walls, dramatically lit by original leadlight windows.

โ€œWhen there is not a soul on the road, you get goosebumps when you see them glow,โ€ gushes Galambos. โ€œNow that [both] builds are behind me, I can really revel in how well it has all turned out.โ€

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โ€œSaint Laurent, Balenciaga, Valentino and Alaรฏa arenโ€™t brands that suit a modest space,โ€ says Galambos. โ€œWe needed to create something world-class. (Credit: Jason Busch)

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