Absolutely North London February 2024

Page 1

NORTH & EAST

North & East

FEBRUARY 2024 / £3.95

PLU S LOVE IS IN THE AIR Gifts for your Valentine

• DELICIOUSLY DESIGNED

SP ECIA L News and views from the county's best schools

At home with Ella Mills

• BEACH LIFE

FEBRUARY 2024

Ultimate luxury in the Maldives

w

Lounge

ZEST.LONDON

LOVER

Cover with Spine.indd All Pages

IDEAS AND INSPIRATION FOR STYLISH LIFESTYLES ST YLISH / INTELLIGENT / ELEGANT

19/01/2024 12:18


• Available for GCSE and A level • Board specific syllabus coverage • Over 30 years’ expertise in exam preparation • Focus on exam techniques and past-paper practice • Build confidence and prepare for next summer’s exams

Call us today on 020 7835 1355 or visit our website www.mpw.ac.uk MPW_DPS_ABS_FEB2024.indd 1

22/01/2024 11:29


Tailored, not uniform MPW_DPS_ABS_FEB2024.indd 2

When it comes to a good education, one size does not necessarily fit all. At MPW, one of the UK’s best-known names in fifth- and sixth-form education, we have been offering a distinctive alternative to traditional schools for 50 years.

22/01/2024 11:29


AD DIOR.indd 4

19/01/2024 12:20


AD DIOR.indd 5

19/01/2024 12:20


DR_NYLA_DPS_ABS_FEB2024.indd 1

22/01/2024 10:13


DR_NYLA_DPS_ABS_FEB2024.indd 2

22/01/2024 10:13


Girls enjoying success INDEPENDENT DAY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS AGED 4-18

“The quality of the pupils’ academic and other achievements is excellent... The school successfully meets its ambition to empower pupils to become independent thinkers and fearless learners.” ISI Inspection Report

Visit our website to find out more:

www.channing.co.uk

The Bank, Highgate, London, N6 5HF Absolutely Education Ad Feb 2023.indd 1 SLIP2 NORTH CHANNING.indd 8

15/01/2024 12:21 13:14 19/01/2024


ABSOLUTELY

Contents FEBRUARY 2024

42

86 12

C U LT U R E ABSOLUTELY LOVES

H E A LT H & B E AU T Y 55 BEAUTY NOTES

WHAT'S ON

57 FRESH FACES

HOT BOX

INTERIORS 68 INSPIRATIONS

10 things we’re coveting this month

16

Your diary for February

19

Guys and Dolls at the Bridge Theatre

FOOD & DRINK 30 KITCHEN CONFIDENTIAL News from the industry

News and views

Winter skin solutions

News from the industry

72

ON LOCATION

Ella Mills and her new kitchen

34 RECIPES

T R AV E L 86 ISLAND LIFE

FA S H I O N 40 LOVE TOKENS

E D U C AT I O N 98 SCIENCE FOR LIFE

42 THE SHOOT

129 PUPIL TALK

Chinese New Year feasting

Gifts for your Valentine

Jewellery designs from Olga Bonne

34

Twin destinations in the Maldives

Nurturing a love of STEM

A B S O L U T E LY. L O N D O N The online guide to inspirational London living that helps you stay one step ahead of the crowd and gives you the chance to win exclusive prizes. O N T H E C OV E R Shopayda.com @shopayda

Channing's Head Girls speak out A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

CONTENTS.indd 9

9

19/01/2024 13:18


Beautiful timber windows & doors

EDITOR IN CHIEF PENDLE HARTE MAMA EDITOR CARLY GLENDINNING ART DIRECTOR PAWEL KUBA SENIOR DESIGNERS MIKE ROBERTS, SUZETTE SCOBLE MIDWEIGHT DESIGNER CARMEN GRAHAM JUNIOR DESIGNER JOE MUNSEY PRODUCTION MANAGER DANICA BRODIE PORTFOLIO MANAGER ASTRID ELSEN SENIOR MEDIA CONSULTANT STELLA ADAMS FINANCIAL DIRECTOR JERRIE KOLECI CREDIT CONTROL MANAGER ALEXANDRA HVID DIRECTORS CRAIG DAVIES, JAMES FUSCHILLO

Window shopping

MANAGING DIRECTOR SHERIF SHALTOUT

For editorial enquiries please email: pendle@zest-media.com For advertising enquiries please call 07818 690 386 or email: craig@zest-media.com

zest.london Zest Media Publications Ltd. cannot accept responsibility for unsolicited submissions, manuscripts and photographs. While every care is taken, prices and details are subject to change and Zest Media Publications Ltd. take no responsibility for omissions or errors. We reserve the right to publish and edit any letters. All rights reserved. Social icon

Circle Only use blue and/or white. For more details check out our Brand Guidelines.

www.ayrtonbespoke.com 020 8877 8920 enquiries@ayrtonbespoke.com

Fo l l ow Us O n Fa c e b o o k @ABSOLUTELYMAGAZINES T wi t t e r & In s t a g ra m @ABSOLUTELY_MAGS We b si t e

a b s o l u t e l y. l o n d o n

Wandsworth | Crouch End | Dulwich

FLANNEL.indd 10

19/01/2024 13:18


Editor’s

LETTER ABSOLUTELY’S February issue highlights

1 2

5

French fancy

Pastel colours, floral illustration and romantic whimsy characterise Vaisselle's new collection for Anthropologie

F

or some, February is all about romance. A whole month of flowers, cupcakes and heartshaped trinkets. For others, it's a gloomy period in the depths of winter, redeemed only by its relative shortness. For us at Absolutely, it's time to focus on the serious business of education. As anyone looking for a school for their child, whether it's putting their name down at birth (latest) or finding a sixth form for reluctant teenagers, will know, the world of schools is a tricky one to navigate. What school is best for my child? What if they're a high flyer by nature? What if they're not? There are so many decisions to be made and it's easy to feel defeated. That's why we have explored all kinds of issues, spanning early years provision, the benefits of creative subjects, different ways of teaching science, holistic approaches to GCSE and the new face of Sixth Form. We speak to some of the best schools in London and beyond in search of advice and inspiration. We hope you enjoy the issue.

4

Paper play

We're smitten with this lampshade at SCP

PENDLE HARTE EDITOR

Peach Fuzz

The colour of 2024, apparently

Flowers and fragrance

A new scent from Diptyue is always cause for celebration

ED LETTER.indd 11

3

Cake off

The Valentine's layer cake is here

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

11

19/01/2024 13:39


SPIRIT O F L AG OS

Wish LIST 10 things we Absolutely love COMPILED BY

PENDLE HARTE

12

Known for her unique take on luxury loungewear, Banke Kuku takes inspiration from London and Lagos, which influence her bold patterns, resulting in statement prints with captivating impact. bankekuku.com

PIN UP Turkuaz Kitchen’s Betül Tunç's has devised a new collection for Anthropologie that includes this adorable cotton apron. £35 anthropologie.com

DA I SY C H A I N NEON BRIGHT Neon yellow lingerie might not be what you set out to buy, but Amelie's Follies has a collection that's likely to persuade you. ameliesfollies.co.uk

Brighten up your home in anticipation of spring with this cheerful yellow-framed round mirror from Dar Lighting. £118 darlighting.co.uk

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

WISHLIST.indd 12

19/01/2024 13:09


ABSOLUTELY • LOVES

EDITOR’S PICK

SPRING BLOSSOM It's Mimosa season – time to fill your vases with armfuls of scented yellow blooms. But hurry: the season is brief. bybloom.co.uk

NEW TRADITIONS

SHELL OUT The Shellegance candle holder by &Klevering is inspired by the marine world and designed to bring a touch of joy to your home. £32 madeindeign.co.uk

Samantha Siu creates bold, intricately designed jewellery pieces that last a lifetime. Samantha uses centuries-old jewellery-making methods alongside modern technology for quality craftsmanship that pays respect to ancient artisans. samanthasiu.com

CHECK OUT Layered has a beautiful collection of sustainable rugs in graphic and geometric patterns in lots of stylish colourways. layeredinterior.com

H A N D BAGS AT D AW N Each season, Dior invites a number of artists to transform the Lady Dior bag into an objet d'art.. And for SS24, Gilbert and George have done just that. dior.com

IN THE SHADE The Adidas Originals eyewear collection marks an intersection of sport and street style seen through the lens of culture. £129 specsavers.co.uk

IT'S A WRAP This lovely indian flower taupe kimono is one of a selection at One Hundred Stars, the go-to for wafty, printed pieces. onehundredstars.co.uk A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

WISHLIST.indd 13

13

19/01/2024 13:09


Making sustainable living beautiful

Artisan homeware handcrafted in England. www.tomraffield.com

SLIP3 PCLLondon.indd TOM RAFFIELD.indd 14 Absolutely 2

19/01/2024 13:09 15/01/2024 14:35:18


C U LT U R E

TARA DONOVAN, UNTITLED (MYLAR), 2011_2018. MYLAR AND HOT GLUE. DIMENSIONS VARIABLE. INSTALLATION VIEW, MCA DENVER. PHOTO_ CHRISTOPHER BURKE. COURTESY THE ARTIST AND PACE GALLERY. ON SHOW AS PART OF WHEN FORMS COME ALIVE, THE HAYWARD GALLERY

The Agenda 16 • Theatre: Guys and Dolls 19 • Sargent and fashion 20 A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

CULTURE OPENER.indd 15

15

19/01/2024 13:10


The Agenda

EV E N TS N OT TO M I S S I N LO N D O N

T H E AT R E

Dear Octopus 7 February - 27 March LY T T L E T O N T H E AT R E Dodie Smith's tale is set on the eve of WWII as the Randolph family are reunited for a 50th wedding anniversary. As the weekend’s celebrations unfold, the family walks a tightrope between intimacy and estrangement, camaraderie and rivalry, love and hate. Heartbreaking and joyful, it is a moving dissection of family and what it means to grow up and return home.. nationaltheatre.org.uk

T H E AT R E

NYE

Frameless A RT

16 February - 21 May O L I V I E R T H E AT R E Tim Price's new play directed by Rufus Norris, charts the life of Aneurin 'Nye' Bevan and his battle to create the NHS. Michael Sheen plays Nye, whose deepest memories lead him on a mind-bending journey back through his life; from childhood to mining underground, Parliament and fights with Churchill in an epic Welsh fantasia. nationaltheatre.org.uk

O NGO I NG, MA R BL E ARCH

Frameless’ multi-sensory galleries showcase more than 90 minutes of hypnotic visuals set to a dazzling score. Visitors experience 42 masterpieces from iconic artists from Van Gogh to Dalí, each expertly reimagined through cutting-edge digital technology to break free from the confines of a frame. frameless.com

16

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AGENDA.indd 16

19/01/2024 13:10


CULTURE • DIARY

ART

ART

Emotion Air Until 18 February BA L LO O N M U S E U M The first-of-its-kind Balloon Museum makes its highly anticipated London debut with a new group exhibition EmotionAir, featuring 20 internationally acclaimed artists. Located in the historic Old Billingsgate space, spanning an impressive 78,000 square feet, the show is a journey through some of the world’s best immersive, living, breathing art. serpentinegalleries.org

TO WATCH Recommended by Lisa Baker

As we gear up to International Women’s Day, female artists can now submit their work for the annual Women in Art Fair via its Open Call. Now in its second year, Women in Art Fair is dedicated to redressing the gender imbalance in the art industry. WIAF’s mission is to create a positive global platform from which female artists, curators and gallerists are invited to show their work and contribute to the developing exchange of ideas around gender, sexuality and culture. The Fair showcases a range of International galleries each with their own booths, a curated exhibition, plus work by artists selected via an Open Call. The 2024 Open Call invites female artists to apply. Submissions are open now until 5 April. womeninartfair.com

A RT

YOKO ONO: Music of the mind

This Month’s Must See

From 15 February TAT E M O D E R N Spanning seven decades of the artist’s powerful, multidisciplinary practice from the mid-1950s to now, this show will trace the development of her innovative work and its enduring impact on contemporary culture. Over 200 works include instruction pieces and scores, installations, films, music and photography, revealing a radical approach to language, art and participation that continues to speak to the present moment. . tate.org.u

Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize

Art On a Postcard returns with their fifth annual International Women’s Day Auction opening on 27 February, offering the chance to pick up a minimasterpiece by a highly collectible name. Featuring artist picks from eight guest female curators, bidders can anticipate high-caliber, limited-edition postcard-sized artworks from a variety of emerging and established female artists with all proceeds going to the Hepatitis C Trust, specifically the work they do with women affected by the criminal justice system, both in prison and local communities. Each of the guest curators will platform a selection of female artists, reimagining their relative disciplines and unique thematic approaches to fit bespoke postcard-sized designs. Hosted by The Auction Collective. artonapostcard.com

F RO M 23 F E B RUA RY, P H OTO GRA P HE R S ' GA L L ERY

N

ow in its 28th year, the Deutsche Borse Photography Foundation Prize rize has become renowned as one of the most important international awards for photographers, spotlighting outstanding, innovative and thought-provoking work. Pictured is Valie Export's The Birth Madonna, after: Michelangelo Buonarroti, “Pietà” “Madonna della Febre” 1498–1501. tpg.org.uk

SUPER FUTURE KID - DEIMOS AOAP

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AGENDA.indd 17

17

19/01/2024 13:10


ADVENTURE AT WESTERN CANADA'S FAIRMONT HOTELS

FAIRMONTS OF WESTERN CANADA

LUXURY BANFF & LAKE LOUISE SKI HOLIDAY

15 NIGHTS FROM £5,549 †

8 NIGHTS FROM £2,449 ◊

Flights, 13 days fully inclusive car hire, 4★+ to 5★ hotels, Jasper Harley-Davidson Tour, Ultimate Rockies Explorer Ticket and ferry transfers

Direct flights, 5★ hotels, 6 Days Banff & Lake Louise Ski Lift Pass, Banff Gondola and shared transfers

• Stay in Canada’s most opulent hotels • Enjoy 6 FREE exclusive upgrade offers • Witness stunning views of the Rockies

• Ski on world-renowned slopes • Enjoy activities on the frozen Lake Louise • Unwind in the famous Banff Hot Springs • Admire views of snow-capped mountains from the top of Banff Gondola

6 FREE room upgrades – Saving over £850 per couple

Saving over £800 per couple

ALL YOUR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS TAKEN CARE OF IN ONE PLACE Call

on 020 7368 1506 or visit your local Travel Centre

Prices are per person based on a twin/double share & valid for selected †Sep ◊Nov departures. Offers are subject to availability & restrictions may apply. Prices correct at time of going to print on 15 Jan 24.

AD TRAILFINDERS.indd 18 TRAIL_Fairmont_Absolutely Mag_297x210.indd 1

“Truly excellent: patient, friendly, helpful & a mine of knowledge, tips and advice.”

19/01/2024 13:10 15/01/2024 13:27


THEATRE • REVIEW

G uys & D O LLS The Bridge Theatre's immersive production is unstoppable and fun

R

emoving all seats in the stalls to create an open, standing area was a genius idea. This immersive production of Guys and Dolls has been a huge success ever since it opened almost a year ago, and it's extended its run until August 2024, with a new cast starting later this month. And it's easy to see why: this innovative production is bold, energetic and joyous. We're in the standing area, transformed into a New York street, where a pre-show hotdog stand is doing a strong trade, surrounded by neon signage, traffic lights and cafe tables. As the show begins, stage hands (some of them dressed as NY police) usher us gently into position as the stage rises from the floor, and throughout the action there's a lot of reconfiguring, platforms rising and falling. Sometimes we're right at the front, experiencing the action in a thrillingly intimate way, swept up in the movement and energy. Clearly the people in the

traditional seats are missing out. It's an old story that takes in gangsters and their girlfriends, sinners and saviours, gambling and marriage, with lots of catchy tunes and witty lyrics. Nathan Detroit (Daniel Mays) has been engaged to feisty Miss Adelaide (Marisha Wallace) for many years and she believes (wrongly) that he has given up gambling. Wallace inhabits the part with a huge supply of charisma, great comic timing and a wonderful voice that's perfect for lyrics such as "In other words, just from worrying if the wedding is on or off... A person can develop a cough". Meanwhile, Sky Masterson (George Ioannides) has fallen for Sarah Brown (Celinde Schoenmaker) from the Salvation Army mission and is pretending to want to reform his ways, ending up taking her to Havana for a night of Bacardi and dancing in one of the play's best scenes. Excellent choregraphy, costumes and lighting, plus the clever shifting, stages create a whirlwind of movement and energy. As a finale, the stage sinks to the floor and we're all suddenly inhabiting the same space: smiling actors invite the audience in and the whole space becomes a dancefloor. It's a riotous show with a big focus on fun. GUYS AND DOLLS Booking until August 2024 The Bridge Theatre, The Bridge Theatre 3 Potters Fields Park, SE1 2SG; 0333 320 0051 bridgetheatre.co.uk

DANIEL MAYS (NATHAN DETROIT), PHOTO BY MANUEL HARLAN

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

REVIEW.indd 19

19

19/01/2024 13:10


CULTURE • EXHIBITION

DRESS S E N S E

A new exhibition offers a fascinating insight into the role of costume in John Singer Sargent’s portraits By EVE HERBERT

P TOP: John Singer Sargent, Lady Sassoon, 1907. Private Collection © Houghton Hall ABOVE: John Singer Sargent, La Carmencita, Paris, musée d'Orsay. Photo © Musée d'Orsay, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais Patrice Schmidt RIGHT: Costume worn by La Carmencita, c.1890. Private Collection © Houghton Hall ABOVE RIGHT: John Singer Sargent, Mrs Carl Meyer and her Children, 1896. Photo © Tate

20

ortrait painter John Singer Sargent (1856-1925) was renowned for the ability to bring his subjects to life. Rather than being driven purely by the sensibilities of his wealthy clientele, he used dress and fashion as a powerful tool to establish their individuality while proclaiming his own aesthetic agenda. A new exhibition at Tate Britain explores this, featuring 60 paintings alongside more than a dozen period dresses and accessories, many of which were worn by his sitters. Sargent worked collaboratively with his subjects, but also took creative liberties, changing and omitting details as he saw fit. He regularly chose their outfits or manipulated their clothing, as in Lady Sassoon 1907, which will be displayed at the start of the exhibition alongside the original black taffeta opera cloak worn in the image, revealing how he pulled, wrapped, and pinned the fabric to add drama to his portrait. In this respect, Sargent was working in a similar way to how an art director at a fashion shoot would today. Sargent and Fashion also explores the artist’s subversion of social codes and conventions through portraiture. His clothing choices suggest the blurring of characteristics that once defined masculine and feminine appearance, reflecting the shifting ground of traditional gender roles at the end of the 19th century. In addition to his wealthy patrons, Sargent chose to

portray professional performers, including dancers, actors, and singers, which allowed him to indulge his taste for visual spectacle. His dramatic image of Ellen Terry as Lady Macbeth 1889 will be shown alongside Terry’s dress and cloak. Together, this collection of paintings and garments offer a new generation and those already familiar with his work the chance to discover and reconsider Sargent and his enduring influence. Sargent and Fashion 22 February – 7 July 2024 Tate Britain, Millbank, SW1P 4RG tate.org.uk

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

SARGENT FASHION.indd 20

19/01/2024 13:10


SLIP4 PCL AURIENS.indd 21

19/01/2024 13:10


From the director of Cluedo and The Play That Goes Wrong

JASON DURR and HELEN FLANAGAN as Colonel Mustard as Miss Scarlett

A brand new story by LAURENCE MARKS and MAURICE GRAN Directed by MARK BELL

29 FEB - 02 MAR

RICHMOND THEATRE ATGTICKETS.COM/RICHMOND* *TRANSACTION FEE APPLIES

AD - RICHMOND THEATRE.indd 22

19/01/2024 13:11


CULTURE • SCULPTURE EJ Hill. A Subsequent Offering, 2017. Courtesy the artist

Sh a p e u p A new look at sculpture at the Hayward Gallery

Matthew Ronay. Brontes, Strops, and Arges, 2023. Basswood, dye, primer, plastic, steel. 28.25 x 19.5 x 7.25" / 71.8 x 49.5 x 18.4cm © Matthew Ronay. Courtesy the artist and Casey Kaplan, New York. Photo: Matthew Ronay.

“These sculptures invite a tactile gaze, and trigger physical responses”

W

hen Forms Come Alive is a new show at The Hayward Gallery that spans over 60 years of contemporary sculpture, this exhibition highlights ways in which artists draw on familiar experiences of movement, flux and organic growth. Inspired by sources ranging from a dancer’s gesture to the breaking of a wave, from a flow of molten metal to the interlacing of a spider’s web, the artworks in When Forms Come Alive conjure fluid and shifting realms of experience. Undulating, drooping, erupting, cascading and promiscuously proliferating, these sculptures invite a tactile gaze, and trigger physical responses. In an era when our encounters are increasingly digitised and disembodied, these artworks call to mind the pleasures of gesture and movement, the poetics of gravity and the experience of sensation itself. Palpably dynamic, they proclaim that nothing in the world stays the same, that everything is moving, seething, changing and transforming. The exhibition features work by 21 international artists: Ruth Asawa, Nairy Baghramian, Phyllida Barlow, Lynda Benglis, Michel Blazy, Paloma Bosquê, Olaf Brzeski, Choi Jeong Hwa, Tara Donovan, DRIFT, Eva Fàbregas, Holly Hendry, EJ Hill, Marguerite Humeau, Jean-Luc Moulène, Senga Nengudi, Ernesto Neto, Martin Puryear, Matthew Ronay, Teresa Solar Abboud and Franz West.

To 6 May, Hayward Gallery southbankcentre.org.uk

Lynda Benglis. Power Tower, 2019. White tombasil bronze. 228.6 x 179.4 x 172.2 cm © Lynda Benglis. Courtesy the artist, Pace Gallery and Thomas Dane Gallery. Photo: Davin Lavikka/ Pace Gallery.

Installation view, Ruth Asawa, David Zwirner Gallery, New York, NY. September 13- October 21, 2017. Photo © Laurence Cuneo. Artwork © 2023 Ruth Asawa Lanier Inc./Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Courtesy David Zwirner.

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

HEYWARD EXHIBITI.indd 23

23

19/01/2024 13:19


CULTURE • PROMOTION

MOVIE NIGHTS The Nova Cinema is home to Surrey’s most stylish screens

N

ova Cinema is Surrey's local independent cinema, dedicated to delivering a rich tapestry of cinematic experiences, ensuring a galaxy of memories for audiences of all ages. From the latest blockbuster hits that leave you on the edge of your seat, to timeless classics that evoke nostalgia, Nova Cinema is where the enchantment of film comes to life. Nova Cinema invites you to witness the magic of recorded theatre shows, Nova Live is where the stage comes alive on the big screen, preserving the raw emotion and energy of live performances. The high-definition visuals and immersive sound transport you into the heart of the theatrical production, allowing you to relish every nuanced expression and powerful dialogue. Whether it's a classic play, a cutting-edge contemporary performance, or a mesmerizing musical, Nova Cinema

24

transforms each screening into a celebration of the performing arts. As the curtains rise on the silver screen, Nova Cinema promises a blend of theatrical authenticity and cinematic brilliance, ensuring that every viewer is transported to a world where the spirit of live theatre is beautifully preserved and accessible to all. Some of the highlights screening soon include Andrew Scott's Vayna, Titanic The Musical, which was filmed at The New Victoria Theatre, and the Royal Ballet's Swan Lake. These screenings tend to fill up fast, so we encourage you to buy tickets early in advance.

“Nova Cinema is where the enchantment of film comes to life ”

On 22 February, experience the ultimate Middle Earth adventure with The Lord of the Rings Marathon: Extended Editions, screening in 4K and Dolby Atmos surround sound only at Nova Cinema! Through three epic films, witness breathtaking landscapes, thrilling battles, and the triumph of Frodo Baggins and his companions. Don't miss the chance to immerse yourself in the magic of Tolkien's world on the big screen in one epic marathon! Tickets will go fast, so buy yours now. Nova Cinema has seven stylish screens, including one luxury screen, an elegant fullservice bar, and a cutting-edge media suite for community and business hire. The best in cinematic technology has been installed in Screen One with state-of-the-art 4K laser projection and top-of-the-range Dolby ATMOS surround sound for extra immersion. Plus, the foyer has plenty of space to relax and grab a bite before or after the film. novacinema.com

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AVTL_NOVA CINEMA.indd 24

19/01/2024 16:11


SCAN HERE TO FIND OUT MORE ABOUT SILVERSEA'S ANTARCTICA EXPEDITIONS

ULTRA LUXURY ANTARCTICA

SAVE £3,000 PER COUPLE ON SELECTED SAILINGS* ASTONISHING ANTARCTICA

ALL INCLUSIVE

EXPEDITION TEAM

An Antarctica expedition is the pinnacle for any explorer, particularly when paired with Silversea’s excellence. Their intimate expedition ships and expert teams ensure you come home with lifelong memories and endless photos of penguins, icebergs and whale tails!

Enjoy butler service, all-suite accommodations, gourmet dining and beverages. Embark on Zodiac adventures, hike across tundras or kayak with incredible wildlife. You'll also be provided with a complimentary parka jacket. It's all included.

Silversea Expeditions has assembled a team of experts from all relevant fields to help you truly experience Antarctica. You'll benefit from their passion and knowledge on every Zodiac trip, workshop or bird spotting from the bow of the ship.

ALL YOUR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS TAKEN CARE OF IN ONE PLACE Call

dedicated Expedition Cruise team on

020 7408 9020 or visit your local Travel Centre *Book by 29 Feb 24

AD TRAILFINDERS2.indd 25 TRAIL_Silversea_Absolutely Mag_297x210.indd 1

“Truly excellent: patient, friendly, helpful & a mine of knowledge, tips and advice.”

19/01/2024 13:20 15/01/2024 16:05


RMS_FP_ABS_FEB2024.indd 1

19/01/2024 14:18


CULTURE • PARTNERSHIP

MURDER mystery Cluedo 2 comes to the Richmond Theatre

F

ollowing the huge success of the smash hit original play, Cluedo is back with a brand-new hilarious whodunit, Cluedo 2. Set in the swinging 1960s, we meet a host of new suspects, a new house, and lots of new bodies, in this all-new tale of murder, mystery and secret passageways. The brilliant cast includes West End and TV star Jason Durr, whose numerous credits include leading roles in Heartbeat and Casualty, playing Colonel Mustard, and award-nominated actress and star of Coronation Street and I’m a Celebrity favourite Helen Flanagan playing Miss Scarlett. If you're a fan of the much-loved board game, you’re going to enjoy this. And if you enjoyed the hysterical first play, you’re going to love this one! If you missed the first play it doesn’t matter – this is a brand new story. Rock ‘n’ roll legend Rick Black has not had a hit for years and he’s broke. But as he settles into his new, expensive home, Graveny Manor, Rick is desperate to revive his fading career and reclaim his fame and fortune – and he is prepared to do anything to get it back. Excited to reveal his longawaited comeback album, Rick has assembled his supermodel wife, The Honourable Emerald Peacock, his manager, Colonel Eugene Mustard, long-time roadie “Professor” Alex Plum, Annabel Scarlett, his trusted interior designer and housekeeper Mrs White, who came with the house and who knows all its secrets. But there is still someone missing. Rick’s former song-writing partner “The Reverend” Hal Green, who disappeared mysteriously at the same time that Rick’s career went downhill. Without him, has Rick still got it? As the bodies pile up, our infamous colourful characters uncover each other's mysteries and secrets, as they dart from room to room trying to escape the killer and survive the night. With an all-new story written by BAFTA Award winners Laurence Marks and Maurice Gran, (Birds Birds of A Feather, Dreamboats and Petticoats)

and directed by Mark Bell - director of the original hit UK production of Cluedo and the global phenomenon, The Play That Goes Wrong, Cluedo 2 is a rollocking spoof of a comedy that will keep you guessing right up to the final twist and invites budding detectives of all ages, from eight to 80 and beyond, to watch for the clues and unravel the secrets, as we all try to work out whodunit…. with what... and where. Cluedo 2 begins its UK tour at Richmond Theatre from 29 February – 2 March. Tickets start from £13, available to book from ATGTICKETS.COM/Richmond

“An all-new tale of murder, mystery and secret passageways”

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

RICHMOND THEATRE.indd 27

27

19/01/2024 13:20


Handcrafted in the English Countryside A London Dry Gin from the Surrey Hills distilled with 24 botanicals, bursting with aromatic floral layers of lavender and chamomile combined with fresh notes of citrus and the subtle richness of estate grown honey.

silentpooldistillers.com Please enjoy Silent Pool Gin responsibly

AD SILENT POOL_19-Jan-2024_ABSOLUTELY LONDON.indd 28 1772_SPG_A4-Ad-Absolutely-Magazine-v1-AW.indd 1

19/01/2024 19/01/2024 15:36 14:32


FOOD & DRINK

SWEET TREAT VAISSELLE

Presentation is key. Especially when it comes to cupcakes for your Valentine. We love Vaisselle's new collection for Anthropologie, which includes cake plates adorned with little hearts and flowers, plus pastel-coloured vases and pretty glasses. anthropologie.com

Food News 30 • Eating out 33 • Recipes 34 A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

FOOD OPENER.indd 29

29

19/01/2024 13:20


WHAT TO DRINK

TASTING NOTES

GRAPE news

London’s food news and most exciting openings this month By PENDLE HARTE

Wine recommendations for the month By THE WINE SOCIETY

Chateau Rahoul Blanc 2016 Graves  £17.50 From a tiny Bordeaux property with a growing reputation this is an appetising, aromatic blend of 78% semillon and 22% sauvignon blanc, with citrus notes on the nose and a lovely creamy texture on the finish.

The Society's Saumur Rosé Brut NV  £11.76 This fragrant rosé, made mostly from cabernet franc with a touch of grolleau for roundness and charm, has a soft, fruity flavour and persistent fizz. Delightfully clean and refreshing, this is a lovely aperitif but is gorgeous, too, with shellfish.

Beaujolais Villages Vieilles Vignes d’Emeriniges  2022 £9.50 A serious BeaujolaisVillages from a very well-sited estate close to Juliénas, in the north of the Beaujolais region. After the lighter 2021 vintage, the 2022 delivers more depth of flavour with bags of ripe, fresh, crunchy red fruit, and a long finish. Since it was founded back in 1874, The Wine Society has dared to do business a little differently. Bringing together a community united by a shared love of wine, The Society is a co-operative and owned by its members. This means there is no requirement to pump profit into annual dividends or bonuses for shareholders – all profits go back into the business. The Wine Society welcomes all wine lovers. Become a member today and receive £20 off toward your first order. thewinesociety.com

30

An edible journey GINGERLINE

Gingerline, pioneers of the underground, immersive dining scene are back. The Grand Expedition: The Incredible Edible Journey combines immersive design with a mouthwatering menu of four plus courses, innovative cocktails and an otherworldly storyline. Animated projections create an impression of floating and movement coupled with rhymes, riddles, extravagant dance pieces and audience interaction. Tickets £120. gingerline.co.uk

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

FOOD NOTES.indd 30

19/01/2024 13:20


FOOD & DRINK • NOTES

TOP THREE Delicacies in jars

YEAR OF THE DRAGON YAUATCHA

Seafood heaven AZZURRA

Italian seafood restaurant Azzurra is the most anticipated restaurant opening yet from Aqua Restaurant Group and international restaurateur David Yeo. Expect seafodd inspired by travels to Sicily, Sardinia and hte Amalfi Coast. azzurrarestaurant.co.uk

GY M K H A N A A selection of the restaurant’s signature sauces and marinades now comes in jars. These are undoubtedly the best chutneys and pickles outside the subcontinent. gymkhanafinefoods.com

Yauatcha' Chinese New Year menu features seven dishes using auspicious ingredients. Highlights include the Dragon Phoenix Dim Sum platter, the Alaskan King Crab in kam heong sauce with Taro and dried shrimp, and the Stir-fried Surrey Angus rib eye beef, soy kumquat sauce with Pickled kumquat and shishito pepper. yauatcha.com

AU ST R A L I A N R A R E Australian Rare’s honey is chemicalfree, and 100% pure, with the highest medicinal strength in the world. The exclusive collection is available at Harrods. australianrare.com

R E A D Y, S T E A D Y

COOK FIELDGOODS

Good fortune HAKKASAN

T O N KO T S U

Hakkasan's special Chinese New Year menu features celebratory dishes from different Chinese regions, using auspicious ingredients that bring good fortune. Plus there's a cocktail in partnership with Moët & Chandon Champagne and Belvedere vodka – all available until 25 February. hakkasan.com

Tonkotsu's chilli oil won two stars in the Great Taste Awards and this pack of three includes regular and extra hot chilli oil, plus chilli ketchup. Yum. tonkotsu.co.uk

FieldGoods is on a mission to elevate the humble ready meal. Food-obsessed brothers Elliot and Sam Day have created a range of delicious, nutritious, sustainable meals designed to be delivered frozen and ready in under an hour. Don't miss the cauliflower butter masala. fieldgoods.co.uk A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

FOOD NOTES.indd 31

31

19/01/2024 13:20


Initial design & quotation is free

A fantastic selection of

beautiful kitchens

Come to our showroom and create your dream kitchen

Burbidge Kitchen Stori Aisling Corian Durasein Hanex Staron Durat Silestone Modern Quartz Classic Quartz CRL Kitchens & Worktops

Unit 1 Four Seasons Crescent, Kimpton Road, Sutton SM3 9QR

AD K+W.indd 32

020 8641 0354 sales@kitchensandworktopsltd.co.uk kitchensandworktopsltd.co.uk

19/01/2024 13:20


FOOD & DRINK • REVIEW

ABSOLUTELY eats out…

“Salty seafood and courgette transports you to a Sardinian beach bar”

AZ ZU RR A A global feel to this new Chelsea Italian

FOOD Italian seafood luxe

B y PENDLE HARTE

R

ecently opened on Sloane Street is Azzurra, a large, glamorous eaterie with an Italian slant and a focus on seafood. If it feels international, that’s down to David Yeo, the corporate lawyer-tured restuarateur whose Aqua group operates restaurants in Hong Kong, New York, Miami and Dubai. In London, he’s the man behind Aqua Shard and Hutong at The Shard, plus Regent Street’s Aqua Kyoto and

DECOR Aqua Nuevo. This Chelsea opening has a modern global vibe with its spacious interior, atmospheric dim lighting, comfortable seating and crisp electronic soundtrack. You could imagine yourself anywhere in the world. The menu is firmly located in Italy and there’s an impressive seafood counter and. We start with glasses of Franciacorta sparkling wine – a northern Italian treat that’s rarely exported – and examine a menu of Crudo, Antipasti, Pasta e Risotto and Secondi. It’s our fault entirely that we end up

Dark, atmospheric, spacious

PRICE Primi £14- £36 Secondi £31- £130

VERDICT A glamorous Sloane Street destination

overordering, anticipating wrongly that dishes would be elegantly tiny. Spoiler alert: they’re not. To start, red mullet comes lightly torched with a green, herby, breadcrumby sauce and is lovely, while red snapper with pear and Calabrian chilli is excellent: subtle, sweet and refreshing. Next is linguini alle vongole, a classic that lists Sicilian olive oil and Calabrian chilli – and it’s just as good as I hoped. Juicy clams, lots of lemon, garlic and parsley – and portion size is generous. A plate of fritto misto is equally generous, with lots of moreishly salty seafood and courgette that transports you to a Sardinian beach bar. We could have stopped there, but we ordered Secondi too: catch of the day is a winning sea bass, served with a high class caponata. My stone bass is less successful: it’s a heavy dish with lobster bisque, stuffed zucchini flower and gnocchi, but somehow lacking the light elegance of everything else. Pudding, however, is excllent: pistachio tiramisu, assembled in front of us with lots of dramatic flourish, is sweet, nutty and luxurious. AZZURRA 127-128 Sloane Stret, SW1 azzurrarestaurant.co.uk

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

FOOD REVIEW.indd 33

33

19/01/2024 13:21


Chinese

FEASTS Recipes to celebrate the Year of the Dragon Wo r d s S U Z I E L E E

RECIPES.indd 34

P h o t o g r a p h y L I Z Z I E M AY S O N

19/01/2024 13:21


FOOD & DRINK • RECIPES

Chilli and Black Bean Mussels with Noodles Serves 6 I first made this dish during lockdown as my children were really enjoying mussels, and I decided to bulk it up with some noodles to stretch out the dish. I hold back on the amount of chilli I use in this dish for my family, but I do love the kick it adds. Preparation time: 25 minutes Cooking time: 20 minutes

INGREDIENTS • 1kg fresh mussels • 6 dried egg noodle nests, each weighing about 60–75 g • 3 tbsp Chinese dried fermented black beans • 1 tbsp vegetable oil • 30g fresh ginger root, peeled and sliced into rounds • 6 large spring onions (scallions), 4 chopped into 7.5 cm (3 in) pieces and 2 finely sliced For garnishing • 4 large garlic cloves, finely chopped • 1 large chilli, finely sliced (optional) • 2 tbsp light soy sauce • 2 tbsp sesame oil • 1 tsp sugar (optional) • 1 tbsp cornflour (cornstarch) paste • Approx. 200ml water • salt and white pepper

METHOD To prepare the mussels, clean each one on the outside with a scourer/brush. Check for ‘beards’ around the seams, pulling them out and discarding these ‘hairy’ pieces. Throw away any ones with broken shells, they are spoiled. 2 Put the mussels in a bowl of cold water and allow to sit for about 20 minutes, so the grit can be rinsed out. Give the mussels another rinse in the bowl under a cold running tap. Then use a colander to drain off the water. Tap any unclosed mussels on the work surface: if they close, they are still alive, but otherwise discard them. 3 Prepare the noodles by rehydrating in cold water for at least 30 minutes until the strands are separable, then drain, pat dry and leave on top of some paper towels to remove excess water. (You can also use fresh egg noodles.) 4 Fry off the ginger and the four chopped spring onions for a couple of minutes. Add the garlic and chilli (if using) to the wok/pan and fry for about a minute until everything becomes fragrant. 5 Next, rehydrate the black beans by 1

soaking in just enough boiling water to cover them for 15 minutes, then pour off the excess water just before using. 6 Add the rehydrated black beans without the soaking water to the wok/ pan followed by the soy sauce, sesame oil and sugar (if using), and allow to simmer for a couple of minutes. Then stir in the cornflour paste. 7 Toss the mussels into the wok/pan and add approximately 200 ml (7 fl oz/scant 1 cup) of water. Cover with a lid or some tin foil and cook for at least 5 minutes, shaking the wok/ pan occasionally. Keep checking to see if all the mussel shells have opened. 8 Finally, add the rehydrated noodles to the wok/pan and mix everything together. Allow to come up to the boil for a couple of minutes until the sauce is absorbed by the noodles. 9 Season to taste with salt and pepper. You may wish to add more soy sauce or sesame oil as well or even more chilli. Before serving, garnish with the sliced spring onions. • Fermented black beans (fermented soy beans) can be bought in your local Chinese supermarket or online. Make sure you don’t buy Mexican black beans, which are completely different!

Spicy Cucumber Salad Serves 4 There are many variations of a cucumber salad, here I have created a very simple no fuss recipe. You can omit the chilli oil from this cucumber salad, but I love the kick it gives it! I love adding it to rice and noodle bowls and even snacking on the pieces of cucumber straight out of the jar. Preparation time: 10 minutes

INGREDIENTS • large cucumber, topped, tailed and finely sliced into circles • salt 1 teaspoon • sugar 1 teaspoon • rice wine vinegar 4 teaspoons • light soy sauce 1 teaspoon • sesame oil 2 teaspoons • Spicy Chilli Oil 2 tablespoons

METHOD 1 Layer the cucumber slices on a plate and sprinkle over ½ teaspoon of salt, then add another layer of

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

RECIPES.indd 35

35

19/01/2024 13:21


FOOD & DRINK • RECIPES

cucumber and sprinkle with another ½ teaspoon of salt. Mix with your hand and leave for 15 minutes. 2 Strain off the liquid from the cucumber, then pat dry with a couple of pieces of paper towel to remove excess salt. Mix the sugar, rice wine vinegar, soy sauce and sesame oil in a bowl to make a dressing for the salad. Toss the cucumber in the dressing, then taste and adjust the seasoning – you may want it sharper, so add more rice wine vinegar. 3 Finally, add a couple of tablespoons of homemade spicy chilli oil for extra flavour.

Coca Cola Wings Serves 2

Coca cola was introduced to Hong Kong in the 1960s and has made its way into a couple of recipes – boiled cola with ginger and coca cola chicken. Coca cola wings are one of those dishes I remember Mum making and thinking: how are we allowed to eat these, as she wouldn’t let us drink a tin of coke when we were younger! I started making these wings for my kids only recently and they are gobbled up before they even eat their rice. Cooking time: 20 minutes

INGREDIENTS Chicken wings • 1kg chicken wings, separated into wingettes and drummets • vegetable oil, for frying • salt and white pepper Sauce • 30g fresh ginger root, peeled and sliced • 2 tbsp Shaoxing wine • 2 tbsp dark soy sauce • 1 tbsp light soy sauce • 3 garlic cloves, sliced • 330ml full-sugar cola

METHOD 1 Put the wingettes and drummets in a saucepan, cover with cold water and bring to the boil. Then boil for 5 minutes, skimming off the impurities or scum that float on the surface with a large spoon. Use a slotted spoon to remove the wings and keep the chicken broth for other uses. 2 To make the sauce, heat 1 tablespoon of vegetable oil in a wok or large frying, add the ginger and garlic, then fry for about 30 seconds to start releasing the aromas. Then

36

throw in the chicken wings and brown for about 3–5 minutes to add extra flavour. 3 Now add all the remaining sauce ingredients to the wok/pan. Bring to the boil, then lower to a simmer and cover with a lid. Allow to bubble away for about 15 minutes until the liquid has reduced to a sticky sauce. 4 Toss the wings in the sticky sauce, then season to taste with salt and pepper. Bring the heat up to full again, so the sauce caramelises and coats the lovely wings.

“Coca cola was introduced to Hong Kong in the 1960s and made its way into a couple of recipes”

Top Tips

For this recipe, you must use fullsugar cola as it is the caramelisation of the sugars that produces the thick sticky sauce. You can also use a zero or diet version of coke, but please note that the sauce will not thicken up, so add some cornflour (cornstarch) paste and boil until thickened. Any leftover cooked little wings freeze well and can be kept for a month in the freezer.

Recipes taken from Simply Chinese Feasts by Suzie Lee (Hardie Grant, £24)

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

RECIPES.indd 36

19/01/2024 13:21


Luxury Holiday Rentals at Glenmor Make yourselves at home in the heart of Gleneagles The Gleneagles experience is one of a kind – you can now enjoy it from the comfort of a Glenmor luxury holiday home, located in the heart of Gleneagles. On your stay you can enjoy complimentary golf for one person, plus access to all of the leisure, dining and pursuits of the 5 star estate. We have 2, 3 and 4 bedroom properties available, perfect for all the family. 3,750 2 , 4,720 3 5,180 4 7

Find out more: GLENEAGLES.COM/GLENMOR + 44 (0)1764 694321 OWN@GLENEAGLES.COM

The Timeshare, Holiday Products, Resale and Exchange Contracts Regulation 2010 requires Gleneaglesto provide you with certain key information in relation to the proposed seasonal ownership contract. A standard information form which contains this key information in relation to that contract may beobtained by contacted us via the above methods.

AD ASCOT - GLENEAGLES_FEBRUARY 2024_ABSOLUTELY LONDON.indd 37

19/01/2024 14:31


Bleed: 10mm

Life feels better wit h

COLOUR SALE 50% OFF • 4TH FEB – 2ND MAR *Terms and conditions apply, visit headmasters.com for details.

Headmasters_Full-Page_5mm-bleed_CSFEB24.indd 1 AD HEADMASTERS.indd 38

19/01/2024 12:26:48 19/01/2024 13:21


FA S H I O N

PURE WOOL

HERD

Herd is a knitwear brand that's dedicated to making a positive impact on the environmnent, while creating modern heirlooms with heritage sensibilities. By sourcing fibres directly from farmers and harvesters they ensure superior wool and fabric. herdwear.co

Valentine's gifts 42 • Olga Bonne's jewellery 44 • Peachy jewels 51 A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

FASHION OPENER.indd 39

39

19/01/2024 13:21


DELLA VITA Prosecco hosting set, £65 maisonflaneur.com

PERSIAN APOTHECARY Rosewater House tea, £31.99 selfridges.com

DIOR Diorfantastica butterfly sunglasses, £1,050 dior.com

Be my

VALENTINE Stylish gifts for your beloved By PENDLE HARTE

EDITOR’S PICK

DIPTYQUE Fleur de Peau, from £51 diptyqueparis.com

DIRTEA Lion's Mane Mushroom Powder £39.99 dirteaworld.com

LAVENDER GREEN Valentine's bouquet, from £150 lavendergreen.co.uk

40

SILHOUETTE Fuschl in Black, £265 silhouette.com

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

VALENTINES.indd 40

19/01/2024 16:11


FASHION • VALENTINE'S

GLOSSIER Sandstone candle, £45 glossier.com

MARI JO Ayama bra and brief in Fruit Punch, £POA ameliesfollies.co.uk

LOLA'S CUPCAKES Valentine's Day cake, medium, £42.50 lolascupcakes.co.uk

GRIND X SHANTELL MARTIN 30 home-compostable pods and limited edition Shantell Martin tin, £13.50 grind.co.uk

AUSTIN AUSTIN Limited Edition Hand Soap and Hand Cream gift set, £42 austinaustinorganic.com

JO MALONE LONDON Red Hibiscus Cologne Intense, £150 jomalone.co.uk

SILK WORKS LONDON Mulberry silk pillowcase, £65 Silk eyemask, £35 silkworkslondon.com

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

VALENTINES.indd 41

41

19/01/2024 16:11


SHOOT.indd 42

Fr e e

19/01/2024 13:21


Olga Bonne's collection for Maaneston is a tribute to the freedom and adventure of childhood MAANESTEN.COM

s p i ri t

SHOOT.indd 43

19/01/2024 13:21


SHOOT.indd 44

19/01/2024 13:22


SHOOT.indd 45

19/01/2024 13:22


SHOOT.indd 46

19/01/2024 13:22


SHOOT.indd 47

19/01/2024 13:22


SAVE

£20 FREE delivery FREE returns

Crew Neck Knitted Jumper Ref: A13L · WAS £65

20% Cashmere · 80% Merino wool Machine washable Size: XS · S · M · L · XL Celestial Blue

Use Code:

RAB1

NOW

£45

* Limited time only

Cream

Lilac

Bright Apricot Orange

Navy

Aqua

Pink Violet

Jade Green

Black

*Terms & Conditions: Use code RAB1 for total saving of £27.00 including FREE standard delivery and returns for Mainland UK only. Offer ends 1st May 2024 and cannot be used in conjunction with promotional codes, multibuys or discounted items. Offer is valid on advertised styles (A13L) only. All orders are subject to acceptance under WoolOvers standard terms and conditions. Items can be exchanged or your money refunded, providing it is returned within 28 days from the date of purchase. WoolOvers shall not be liable for any washing errors or detergent damage. For full terms and conditions visit www.woolovers.com/terms.

Sleep Soundly with Wool

BEDS | BEDDING | MATTRESSES | KIDS & BABY | HOMEWARES 38 West Street, Marlow, Bucks, SL7 2NB | 01628 472287 | info@thewoolroom.com

www.woolroom.com

AD WOOLOVERS - WOOLROOM.indd 48

19/01/2024 13:22


FASHION • PROMOTION

Made to perfection How Loupe is creating a new, luxuriously delightful shopping experience

L

uxury diamond, fine jewellery and watch brand, Loupe has opened its highly anticipated second boutique in Croydon’s Centrale Shopping Centre. Following an investment of over £3m and set across over 4,300 sq. ft. of retail space, the Loupe boutique features a large, dedicated showroom for prestigious watch brand Rolex with an adjoining Rolex Authorised Service Centre. Loupe is a thoughtfully curated concept designed to meet the rising demand for immersive, hyper personal luxury retail. The boutique features Loupe’s own collection of breathtaking diamonds and the most exceptional contemporary fine jewellery. Made to perfection, each of Loupe’s iconic fine jewellery collections has its own unique story to tell, making Loupe the destination for exceptional luxury. The boutique will also house brand new immersive showrooms for its Swiss watch brand partners OMEGA, Breitling and TUDOR, and will be the only stockists of these brands in Croydon. Every element has been considered to ensure a luxurious delightful shopping experience for each client, every time. Loupe Croydon has a new extensive hosting area, including its own bar, feature lighting and luxurious Italian cotton, velvet and twill

furnishings. The boutique even boasts a secret room, The Drum, which is completely private and allows clients to listen to their own playlist through its media wall. Loupe is a thoughtfully curated concept by 105-year-old jewellers Beaverbrooks. After transitioning from the well-known Lyons brand, following the opening of its flagship boutique in June 2022 in Milton Keynes, Loupe has further developed the brand with its new Croydon boutique, which has been in the town for 29 years. The team will remain the same and are excited to continue enriching the experience for Loupe’s new and existing clients. Rob Keemer, Boutique Manager at Loupe Croydon, who boasts 30 years of experience in the jewellery sector, says: “Loupe brings a

fresh approach to the luxury sector; even the name itself – which signifies the magnifying glass used by jewellers and watchmakers – has been chosen to break conventions and be memorable. It represents the concept of looking through a portal into an exciting new world and magnifying craft and beauty." Loupe has also launched its highly anticipated luxury e-commerce proposition, Loupe.co.uk, providing clients with access to Loupe’s wider portfolio. LO U P E Unit 69/70, Centrale Shopping Centre, Croydon, CR0 1TY; 020 3887 2254 croydon@loupe.co.uk, Loupe.co.uk @LoupeUK; facebook.com/LoupeUK

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AVTL_BEAVERBROOK.indd 49

49

19/01/2024 13:22


skin-fluencer.com

AD SKIN INFLUENCER.indd 50 SKINFLUENCER.indd 2

19/01/2024 11:39 13:22 24/03/2021


HEALTH & BEAUTY

ECO LUXE SILOU

Silou's elevated active essentials are made from sustainable fabrics including ECONYL®, TENCEL™ and BCI Cotton. The UK brand's pieces are produced in small production runs and they work with sustainable mills in Europe. Sculpting and comfortable to wear, the designs are so beautiful, you won't want to save them for just the yoga mat or treadmill. siloulondon.com

Beauty notes 55 • Winter skin 57 • Fitness focus 59 A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

HnB OPENER.indd 51

51

19/01/2024 13:22


EXPERTS EXPERTS IN IN THE THE NATURAL NATURAL LOOK LOOK TreatTreat a loved a loved one this oneValentine’s this Valentine’s to thetogift theofgift eternal of eternal beautybeauty

Doctor Nyla Doctor is aNyla skin is specialist, a skin specialist, trusted by trusted TV personalities, by TV personalities, well-known well-known celebritycelebrity figures and figures some and ofsome Britain’s of Britain’s most familiar most faces familiar in the faces media in theindustry. media industry. FounderFounder and Medical and Medical DirectorDirector of Doctor ofNyla Doctor Medispa Nyla Medispa is a highly is a highly respected respected and much and sought muchafter sought cosmetic after cosmetic Dermatology Dermatology GP and is GPconsidered and is considered one of the one top of cosmetic the top cosmetic doctors doctors in the country. in the country. Having practised Having practised medicine medicine for over for 20 over years20 and years having andpersonally having personally delivered delivered over 200,000 over 200,000 treatments treatments with trulywith exceptional truly exceptional results, she results, has gained she hasthe gained admiration the admiration of the industry. of the industry.

TRANSFORMATION TRANSFORMATION TM TM FACELIFT FACELIFT

The Transformation The Transformation Facelift TM Facelift by Dr.TMNyla by Dr. Nyla offers a offers blend aofblend remarkable of remarkable age-defying age-defying treatments treatments curatedcurated to rejuvenate to rejuvenate your your appearance, appearance, making making you lookyou andlook feeland a feel a decade decade youngeryounger within awithin six-week a six-week period. period. This innovative, This innovative, multi-technique multi-technique facial is facial is available available solely atsolely Dr. Nyla’s at Dr.clinics Nyla’sprovide clinics provide non-invasive non-invasive skin firming skin and firming elevation and elevation that that addresses addresses all signsall ofsigns aging, offrom aging, uneven, from uneven, lifeless skin lifeless to pronounced skin to pronounced lines and lines and sagging.sagging. TailoringTailoring a regimen a regimen that harnesses that harnesses an arrayan of array advanced of advanced technologies technologies tailoredtailored to your individual to your individual skin needs. skin needs.

Follow Follow us on us on @doctornyla @doctornyla 0162 0162 552 3307 552 3307 or 0800 or 0800 009 6661 009 6661 For a FREE For aconsultation FREE consultation pleaseplease contact contact Medispa Medispa or visitor visit www.doctornyla.com www.doctornyla.com

ADV DR NYLA.indd 52

19/01/2024 13:22


AESTHETICS AESTHETICS IN MENOPAUSE IN MENOPAUSE

Menopause Menopause is a signifi is acant signifi stage cantinstage a woman’s in a woman’s life that life canthat bring canabout bringnumerous about numerous physicalphysical and and emotional emotional changes, changes, which Dr which Nyla Dr entirely Nyla entirely understands understands being abeing woman a woman headingheading towardstowards her 50s.her 50s. Oestrogen Oestrogen and progesterone and progesterone levels decrease, levels decrease, leadingleading to a reduction to a reduction in collagen in collagen production production and an increase and an increase in in fine lines fine and lines wrinkles, and wrinkles, plus a decrease plus a decrease in the skin’s in theability skin’s ability to retaintomoisture retain moisture and protect and protect itself. The itself. Medispa The Medispa group group offers non-surgical offers non-surgical facial aesthetic facial aesthetic treatments, treatments, which which will address will address skin concerns, skin concerns, boost collagen boost collagen production production and offering and offering tailoredtailored solutions. solutions. Body fatBody and muscle fat and muscle composition composition can alsocan change also change dramatically dramatically during during menopause, menopause, causingcausing weight gain. weight Drgain. Nyla Dr is an Nyla expert is an expert in bodyin contouring body contouring and offers anda offers varietya of variety treatments of treatments to lowertoyour lower riskyour of gaining risk of gaining excess weight, excess weight, as well as as well as to streamline to streamline your figure yourwith figure no with downtime no downtime or surgery. or surgery. PatientsPatients can speak cantospeak the team to the at team Dr Nyla at Dr Medispa Nyla Medispa to find to find out howout to maintain how to maintain a healthy a healthy lifestyle,lifestyle, as well as as nonwell as nonsurgicalsurgical methods methods of removing of removing fat suchfat as such Coolsculpting as Coolsculpting EmeraldEmerald laser and laser Emsculpt and Emsculpt

t

s d

W H YW CH HYO O CH SE O O SUER O MUERD IMS EP D A I S PA

The only The Diamond only Diamond “Clinic of“Clinic the year of the year Winner ofWinner the of the The largest The largest The largest The largest PremierePremiere Coolsculpting Coolsculpting clinic clinic 2019/20”2019/20” at the at the prestigious prestigious “BTL “BTL Skin Tightening Skin Tightening Ultracel Clinic Ultracel Clinic London outsideand London the second and the second safety in safety Beautyin Beauty Face of the Face year” of the year”clinic in the clinic in the outside of outside outside of largest Coolsculpting clinic in clinic in Awards. Awards. award. award. United Kingdom. United Kingdom.London. London.largest Coolsculpting Europe Europe

COOLSCULPTING COOLSCULPTING

EMSCULPT EMSCULPT

Doctor Nyla Doctor Nyla EMSCULPT EMSCULPT is the is the MedispaMedispa have thehave the only procedure only procedure latest technologies latest technologies which helps which helps to help contour to help contour women women and men and men and transform and transform build muscle build muscle the body. the The body. The and burn and fatburn fat CoolSculpting CoolSculpting simultaneously. simultaneously. Elite is even Elite more is even more In addition, In addition, powerfulpowerful and and EMSCULPT EMSCULPT with larger withsized larger sized provides provides the the applicators applicators to to world’s world’s first nonfirst nonfreeze even freeze more even more invasiveinvasive buttockbuttock fat - the fat results - theare results are lift. EMSCULPT lift. EMSCULPT is basedison based high-on highseen even seen quicker even quicker intensityintensity focusedfocused than traditional than traditional electromagnetic electromagnetic energy.energy. A singleAEMSCULPT single EMSCULPT CoolSculpting. CoolSculpting. One of the Onebest of the things bestabout things about session causes thousands causes thousands of powerful of powerful muscle muscle CoolSculpting CoolSculpting Elite is that Elitewe is can that treat we can twotreat areas two at areassession at contractions contractions which are which extremely are extremely important important in in once. You once. canYou havecan both have arms both treated arms at treated the same at the same improving improving the tonethe and tone strength and strength of your of muscles. your muscles. time. time.

Medispa Medispa Mayfair: Mayfair: 32 Dover 32 Dover Street,Street, Mayfair, Mayfair, London London W1S 4NE W1S 4NE UK CLINIC UK CLINIC OF THE OFYEAR THE YEAR 2019 TO 2019 2020 TO SAFETY 2020 SAFETY IN BEAUTY IN BEAUTY AWARDS AWARDS

ADV DR NYLA.indd 53

19/01/2024 13:22


AD THE EYE PLACE.indd 54

19/01/2024 13:22


HEALTH & BEAUTY • NOTES

BEAUTY NOTES

The latest in luxury makeup and skincare B y C A R LY G L E N D I N N I N G

REVIEW

FRUITY FLORAL

EDITOR’S PICK

Dr Surbhi Virmani’s signature treatment

K AYA L I

A

Huda Beauty’s sister brand, KAYALI, has launched a new fragrance: Eden Sparking Lychee 39. The fruity floral fragrance is a blend of lychee, blackcurrant, and candied violet £70. hudabeauty.com

UNDER THE SEA C H A N T E CA I L L E

Luxury, botanical, conversationalist brand Chantecaille continues its tradition of supporting philanthropic causes with a brand-new makeup offering: The Sea Turtles Collection. The collection of eye trios and ‘Lip Chics’ supports the Amazon Conservation Team (ACT) and their Ancestral Tides initiative. From £45.

chantecaille.co.uk

P LU M P IT UP Q +A

Q+A has launched a new collagen booster serum. Perfect for anti-aging, the highly concentrated formula is vegan-friendly and contains ingredients that help tighten, smooth, and plump the skin. £12.

French Girl Brow part from the disaster of over-plucking my eyebrows in the noughties, I confess I’ve never worried too much about my browline. However, everything has a tendency to droop as we get older (a cheerful thought), as Dr Surbhi Virmani points out when I visit her clinic on Dover Street. Renowned for offering state-of-the-art treatments, she has pioneered ‘The French Girl Brow’ method – which offers the opposite appearance of the over-pulled ‘Fox Brow’ of the past. After taking some images of my face, we sit down to discuss a treatment plan. Dr Surbhi has various methods in her arsenal – including inserting MONO thread fibres around the eyebrow area and using Botox. However, we agree on a gentle approach, using targeted ultrasound to help lift my brow and minimise the lines on my forehead. Dr Surbhi measures my face before I lie back on the bed. The ultrasound waves tingle a little, but are not painful. Harnessing the gentle yet effective power of the bands of energy, the aim is to reinvigorate the area and work very precisely around the eyebrows triggering my body to signal my cells to create collagen. After the treatment, Dr Surbhi measures my face again and the results are impressive. After just one treatment there’s already a 1mm lift and my brow is more symmetrical.

COSDERM UK Dover Street London, from £700

cosderm.co.uk

qandaskin.com A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

BEAUTY NOTES.indd 55

55

19/01/2024 13:22


AD ADURO_SAMBUCOL.indd 56

19/01/2024 13:27


HEALTH & BEAUTY • TREND TRISH MCEVOY Even Skin® Correct & Brighten Beta Hydroxy Pads, £45 selfridges.com

ANTIPODES Flora Probiotic Skin-Rescue Hyaluronic Mask, £29 antipodesnature.com

DERMALOGICA Stabilizing Repair Cream, £65 dermalogica.co.uk

SALI HUGHES X REVOLUTION SKINCARE TRISH MCEVOY Gorgeous™ Cream Blush, £38 selfridges.com

Face Blanket Facial Oil, £11.85 lookfantastic.com

KAMA AYURVEDA Kumkumadi Revitalising Facial Oil, £122 kamaayurveda.com

EARL OF EAST Onsen Hand Cleansing Kit, £55 earlofeast.com

EMMA LEWISHAM Illuminating Cleansing Oil, £48 spacenk.com

WINTER GLOW Say goodbye to dull and dry skin

EDITOR’S PICK

JAN MARINI The Skin Management System, £292 skinstation.co.uk

B y C A R LY G L E N D I N N I N G

U BEAUTY The Super Tinted Hydrator, £98 theubeauty.co.uk

BEAUTY PRODUCTS.indd 57

INSTITUT ESTHEDERM Age Proteom Advanced Serum, £89 lookfantastic.com

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

57

19/01/2024 13:23


ICR50 Special Edition Indoor Cycle

T 5.5 S Folding Treadmill

List Price £1,299

Speeds of up to 19kph and inclines of up to 12%

NEW

Our Price £499

Was £1,299 | Now £999

Take on a virtually limitless variety of cycling workouts in the comfort of your own home with the Matrix ICR50 Special Edition Indoor Cycle, the big-name bike with an unbeatable price.

30 Day iFIT Family Subscription Included**

Connect to a range of training apps for on-demand classes and virtual cycling routes.*

Quote

ABSOLON0224

EXCLUSIVE HOME FITNESS DEALS

for the best in-store offers

Big savings from selected top brands, while stocks last Pro Round Rubber Dumbbell Set 800IC Indoor Cycle

2.5kg to 12.5kg & 2-Tier 32in Rack

100 micro-adjustable resistance levels Sync with leading cycling apps

List Price £642.94

List Price £1,599 | Our Price £899

Our Price £329.99

Access immersive home cardio training with Peloton®, Kinomap and Zwift™ compatibility.* Get a JRNY™ membership FREE for 2 months!**

DISCOVER OUR RANGE OF TREADMILLS, BIKES, CROSS TRAINERS, RACKS, WEIGHTS & BARBELLS Try Before You Buy

Expert In-Store Advice

Never Beaten on Price

Visit us at Hyde House, The Hyde, Colindale, NW9 6LH or call 0203 3708 855

0% Finance Available †

Scan here for store locator

Code expires 3rd March 2024. Prices may vary, see website for current prices. † Subject to age and status. *Subscriptions required. **Subscription required after trial.

AD FITNESS SS.indd 58

19/01/2024 13:23


HEALTH & BEAUTY • FITNESS

FITNESS

TOP

PICKS

NOTES

THREE FROM ECO BRAND SILOU

By CARLY GLENDINNING

CORE FIRMING Silou's 'Lana' leggings feature contour seams on the thigh, leg, and hip, but don't have a front seam – for a flattering silhouette. They are made from eco-friendly materials that quickly wick-away moisture. £149. siloulondon.com

ON POINTE

GET A GRIP Made from eco-friendly and biodegradable materials, Silou's stylish cork yoga mat provides optimal grip for the sweatiest of stretch sessions. The TPE base is gentle on your joints and it's also free from harmful toxins. £135. siloulondon.com

PERFECT FIT Designed in collaboration with Barre Series founder Catie Miller, the 'Catie' bodysuit is designed with a sleek and elegant fit. Made from eco-friendly fabrics, it's both moisture-wicking and quick-drying to provide all day comfort. £229. siloulondon.com

I

Carly Glendinning meets Catie Miller, founder of Barre Series, at her Mayfair studio

t's a frosty Friday morning when I head to Catie Miller's Barre Series class in Mayfair. The changing rooms are buzzing with dancers limbering up for an audition in another studio – and the anticipation and excitement are palpable. Getting out and about for classes isn't always easy since I became a mum, and it feels like a nice switch up from working out in my living room. Catie does, in fact, have an amazing online platform – a glossy on-demand Barre workout library, that you can access anytime, anywhere. But I'm ready for her to put me through my paces in-person. With a background in dance, and certified in Barre, STOTT Pilates,

Pre + Postnatal Movement and Total Body Resistance (TRX), Catie started Barre Series as a reaction to the high-intensity interval training everywhere in the fitness industry. Redefining what a Barre class can feel like, her approach blends ballet, Pilates and cardio to help you sculpt your body without burning it out. Catie bounds out of the studio to greet me. She has such a warm and lovely energy, and she invites me to choose some light hand weights and a mat. The class feels cosy, and it's not long before we're all flowing together – pliéing, relevéing, and sautéing. I find it easy to follow along, and Catie helps me with my form as the

class progresses. Cardio, abs, and core-work focus on small, but effective movements and I definitely feel the burn. What I really love about the class though is how welcoming everybody is. Chatting after class, Catie tells me: "At Barre Series, we take pride not only in our dynamically curated classes but also in fostering an engaging community of like-minded members who contribute to the resilience and shared success of every individual on their wellness path." And it's this that makes me want to come back to one of Catie's classes soon. Mayfair and Hampstead classes £30 per session. A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

FITNESS NOTES.indd 59

59

19/01/2024 13:23


Chimes is a newly completed collection of 39 one, two and three bedroom apartments in the heart of Westminster. With facilities to rival the world’s best hotels it’s your time to embrace life within one of the London’s most iconic neighbourhoods. Prices from £1,487,500 99-105 Horseferry Road, Westminster, London SW1P 2DX

“The second I walked in; I had no doubts that it was exactly what I was looking for. The place was incredibly charming, and I felt right at home. In fact, it was the last apartment we saw, moving in shortly after the viewing. Every time I walk in, I love it more and more!” Siham Resident, Chimes Westminster

Arrange your viewing on

0207 980 8570 or email chimes@lifestory.group chimeswestminster.com Terms and Conditions apply. Prices correct at time of print. Please speak to the sales team for more information.

AD LIFESTORY.indd 60

19/01/2024 13:52


HEALTH & BEAUTY • PROMOTION

10

PRIZES TO BE WON

WIN a Sambucol wellness hamper

DR JENNA MACCIOCHI

T

Help protect your family this cold and flu winter season

o help beat the winter bugs, Sambucol, the UKs No.1 brand for immunity*, is offering you the chance to win a selection of their family favourite Black Elderberry immune health vitamins worth over £60, plus secrets for staying healthy from an expert Immunologist. Here to help you and your family’s natural immune defences this winter, this wellness bundle includes Sambucol’s sought-after Immuno Forte Liquid and Gummies, with all the goodness of the original Sambucol Black

Elderberry juice, plus Vitamin C and Zinc for extra immune support. As well as Sambucol’s Extra Defence liquid for when you need that added protection. Also included are the bestselling Sambucol Kids Liquid and Sambucol Kids Gummies for immune support, which also taste delicious! And to top it all off, Sambucol have thrown in a signed copy of their expert ambassador Dr Jenna Macciochi’s book ‘Your Blueprint for Strong Immunity’. Guiding you through your very own health MOT to help you audit your current lifestyle to avoid the continual viral spiral of illness and help you get better faster when you do fall ill.

Sambucol is the original Black Elderberry brand, founded in 1991, and has undergone years of scientific research on the berry’s properties. Sambucol combines the natural properties of Black Elderberries with vitamins such as Vitamin C and Zinc which contribute to the normal function of the immune system. It is a recognised immunity supplement brand to protect families all year round. Sambucol is available from select Boots stores, for more information visit sambucol.co.uk

HOW TO WIN Answer the following question to get your hands on this immune support giveaway and look after your family with Sambucol. What is the main active ingredient of Sambucol? • Strawberry • Raspberry • Black Elderberry Email answers to: sambucol@ adurocommunications.co.uk Competition ends 1.3.2024, 10 winners will be selected randomly and contacted via email within 30 days. Open to UK residents only aged 18 and overx*Nielsen MAT 08/2023

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AVTL_ADURO.indd 61

61

19/01/2024 13:53


Advanced Skin & Body Aesthetics Clinic

020 3489 8010 | 7 High St, Cheam, Sutton SM3 8RQ info@definitionskinaesthetics.co.uk | definitionaesthetics.co.uk

DEFINITION_SKIN_AESTHETICS_HP_ABS_AUG22_v5.indd 1

AD DEF SKIN - GARDEN ROOMS_FEBRUARY 2024_ABSOLUTELY LONDON.indd 62

29/09/2022 10:46

19/01/2024 14:35


HEALTH & BEAUTY • PROMOTION

WE MAKE

EYES OUR BUSINESS

A

s I write this, I wonder how much readers know about macular disease. You will probably have heard of the retina and know that it is the structure at the back of your eye that enables you to see. The macula is part of this intricate system of vision that so many of us are fortunate enough to be able to process. Unfortunately, there many who have issues with these processes not working correctly, resulting in problems with their sight. Sight problems can be caused by several different issues such as glaucoma, diabetes, cataracts and macular disease or degeneration. According to the Macula Society, nearly 1.5 million people in the UK have macular disease, and around 300 people are diagnosed every day. Macular disease is the biggest cause of sight loss in the UK. You may have heard macular degeneration referred to as ‘age related macular degeneration’ or AMD for short; but this is just one type, and it can affect people of any

age. At present not enough is known about the disease and there is no cure. However, with the help of donations to the Macular Society research is being carried out and potential treatments are being trialled. There is reason to believe that one day there will be a cure for macular disease. Losing your sight can be debilitating and isolating. Macular disease restricts your ability to do all tasks as it results in central vision loss-everything you look at appears to have a black spot in the middle of it. This black spot then grows and restricts any usable vision to the very periphery of your normal view. There are two great advancements that have the chances of helping reduce the development of macular disease and slowing its progress. The first relates to reducing those who could potentially get it and this starts with slowing down the onset of myopia (short sightedness) from a young age. At the Eye Place, over the last 18 years we have been fitting contact lenses, and now spectacles that can help to slow down the

onset and progression of myopia. This is called myopia management and is best started from the earliest age possible, such as when spectacles are first prescribed, and in some children when the risk factors are much higher, even earlier than that. The second is very new and helps treat and manage dry AMD, which is the most common of the macular diseases. The Lumi Thera Valeda is a light delivery system that has been shown to slow down the progression of Dry AMD in 80% of treated patients measured at thirteen months*. If you would like to know more or know whether you or someone in your family is suitable for any of the above, please book in for a comprehensive eye examination at The Eye Place with one of our eyecare professionals. T H E E Y E P L AC E 108 Fleet Street, London, EC4A 2AF 020 7353 1408. fleetstreet@the-eye-place.co.uk 153 Haverstock Hill, London, NW3 4QT 020 7722 5446. belsizepark@the-eye-place.co.uk

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AVTL_THE EYE PLACE.indd 63

63

19/01/2024 14:41


HEALTH & BEAUTY • PROMOTION

Tired of feeling

TIRED? How this unique Magnesium supplement could recharge your energy levels

64

F

eeling at a low ebb? Or just flat-out exhausted? Either way, welcome to the club. One in eight Britons say they feel tired ‘all of the time’, and a quarter of us ‘most of the time’, according to YouGov research. The shorter days and colder nights can leave some of us feeling low and rather worn out. But if you’re stuck with persistent low energy levels you can’t shake off, then a lack of magnesium could be the real culprit. Magnesium is an essential mineral for all aspects of health, from muscles to even just getting a good night’s sleep – and it’s vital for fighting tiredness and fatigue. Amazingly, more than half of us aren’t getting the daily recommended magnesium intake from our diets, according to a recent UK National Diet & Nutrition Survey. Magnesium is present in foods like kale, nuts, bananas and whole grains – but it’s difficult for our bodies to absorb. More and more Brits are now discovering the link between a lack of magnesium and persistent low energy, and are finding that a supplement can help. For instance, Annabel Simons was advised by her doctor that she was deficient in magnesium. She tried adding more magnesium-rich foods to her diet, but they didn’t seem to make any difference – and

neither did the magnesium supplements she tried. Despite feeling sceptical of trying yet another supplement, Annabel was persuaded by the idea of increased bioavailability. ‘I liked the fact that scientific research is fundamental to FutureYou Cambridge, so I decided to give Magnesium+ a try. ‘I slept more consistently because I stopped waking up at night with muscle cramps. This meant my general wellbeing was much better. Suddenly exercise seemed easier. I bounced out of bed in the morning and I soon realised I felt just like I used to.’ Magnesium+ was developed by FutureYou Cambridge, a British food supplement company. Many magnesium supplements use magnesium oxide formulations simply because they contain a high amount of magnesium. ‘However, there’s a drawback – the magnesium is not easily released into the body,’ explains Dr Miriam Ferrer PhD, Head of Product Development at FutureYou Cambridge. ‘Taking more magnesium oxide to try and make up for the problem can lead to an upset stomach. We created Magnesium+ using magnesium lactate which is twice as absorbable as a standard magnesium oxide supplement. This means you need much less per capsule to deliver the same amount, making it a much more efficient way to take this essential mineral.’

HOW TO CLAIM YOUR FREE TRAIL PACK To claim your free 28 day Magnesium+ subscription trial pack worth £11.50 Visit FutureYouOffers.co.uk or freephone 0800 808 5740

QUOTE THE CODE MGF210

Your first box is free (just pay £1.50 postage) and you will be enrolled into a flexible subscription costing £11.50 every 28 days, which you can cancel at any time. Introductory offer valid for new UK customers only. Offer expires 31st March 2024. See FutureYouHealth.com/MGF210 for full terms and conditions.

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AVTL_FUTURE YOU.indd 64

19/01/2024 13:53


Beolab 8

Fidelity from every angle

AD BANG+OLUFSEN.indd 65

19/01/2024 13:53


CARLHANSEN.COM

Retail prices incl. VAT.

DETAILED CRAFTSMANSHIP

Børge Mogensen

Børge Mogensen was known as ‘the people’s designer’ – partly due to his engaging personality, but also because he always designed quality furniture that was within people’s reach. BM1106 Huntsman Chair, FSC™-certified oak, oil, stainless steel, saddle leather, cognac, £2,733 BM1160 Hunting Table, oak, oil, stainless steel, £3,455 BM0253 Shelving System, FSC™-certified oak, oil, black powder coated steel, contact for pricing

Flagship Store, London 48A Pimlico Road, Belgravia London, SW1W 8LP london@carlhansen.com

AD CARL HANSEN.indd 66

Monday - Friday: 10 am - 6 pm Saturday: 10 am - 5 pm +44 0 (20) 7730 8454

19/01/2024 13:53


INTERIORS

UNDER FOOT L AY E R E D

Layered is a Swedish interior design brand that combines a bold contemporary expression with genuine craftsmanship and sustainable materials. Inspired by contemporary movements in different art forms, they offer a new take on classic minimalism with a collection of rugs that focus on sustainable craftsmanship and natural or recycled matericals. Scandinavian elegance, with an edge. layeredinterior.com

Interior inspirations 70 • In the kitchen with Ella Mills 74 • Spotlight on chairs 81 A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

INTERIORS OPENER.indd 67

67

19/01/2024 13:53


INTERIORS N OT E S Ideas, designs and styles for your home By PENDLE HARTE

GOOD VIBES LUST HOME

Drawing inspiration from the designs of the 1970s, Lust Home’s new 70s Style Collection is a nostalgic celebration of bold colours, iconic patterns, and a touch of retro flair. From psychedelic patterns to geometric shapes, each wallpaper features warm and inviting hues such as orange, mustard and avocado. lusthome.com

THREADS OF INDIA SOFAS & STUFF

Sofas & Stuff have teamed up with the V&A for Threads of India, a fabric collection drawn from the museum’s archives, and a tribute to India’s timeless textiles and their enduring global influence. The collection can be made to order onto any of the brand's key furniture pieces. sofasandstuff.com/vam

68

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

INTERIORS NOTES.indd 68

19/01/2024 13:53


INTERIORS • NOTES

TA K E F I V E Scented candles

EMMA J SHIPLEY Polar scented candle, £78.40 emmajshipley.com

K YOTO CO LO U RS &TRADITION

WO R K S PAC E ALMOST BLUE

Symphony has launched new kitchen colourway Alby Blue. This soft , serene and subtle shade works well with copper accents as well as matt black appliances and crisp white marble or natural wood worksurfaces and has new ribbed glazed doors as an added design feature. symphony-group.co.uk

CARRIÈRE FRÈRES La Rose Aime La Menthe, £54 carrierefreres.co.uk

Artist and designer Jaime Hayon has created a limited edition of his Japanese-inspired lighting range for &Tradition. The JH5 pendant draws inspiration from the traditional hand-painted lanterns from Kyoto, combined with Hayon’s signature bold colours and organic shapes. scp.co.uk

DIPTYQUE La Droguerie candle, £56 diptyqueparis.com

Dance floor candles, £54 discothequefragrances.com

MIX UP

JO MALONE LONDON

Lighting design studio lights&lamps has designed a new lighting edit, comprising six lampshades and six bases, crafted from 12 novel materials. Designed to be interchangeable, the Editions collection allows users to pair their choice of materials and create a tailored configuration. lightsandlamps.com

DISCOTHEQUE

LIGHTS&LAMPS

Rose Blush candle, £59 jomalonelondon.co.uk

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

INTERIORS NOTES.indd 69

69

19/01/2024 13:53


S

A

L

E

Our annual sale is now on, save up to 40%

0333 011 3333 |

AD WEST ONE BATHROOMS.indd 70

19/01/2024 13:54


INTERIORS • TREND

EDITOR’S PICK

NINE ANGELS Broken pieces jesmonite clock with peach stand, £38 nineangels.co.uk

GISELA GRAHAM Tonal Pinks Twist Dinner Candles, £6.49 giselagraham.co.uk

LUST HOME Ogata Kuren Peach Wallpaper, £45 lusthome.com

NAKED KITCHENS Harpley Kitchen, £POA nakedkitchens.com

WEBB & GRAY Gilded Barley Twist Candlesticks, £140 webbandgray.com

PEACHY KEEN Celebrating Peach Fuzz, Pantone's colour of the year By P E N D L E H A R T E

LIBERTY Large teapot, £130 libertylondon.com

EFFORTLESS TRADING Jaipur pale pink mini cushion, £40 effortlesstrading.co.uk

DIVINE SAVAGES Where the Wildflowers Grow Dusk Wallpaper, £150 divinesavages.com

TRUFFLE TABLESCAPES

OLENKA DESIGN Florence Peach Wallpaper, £155 olenkadesign.co.uk

Apricot Flower Placemat, £21 truffletablescapes.co.uk

LOAF Shindig Sofa in Pressed Peonies Clever Velvet, £1,895 loaf.com

PEACH PRODUCTS.indd 71

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

71

19/01/2024 16:12


TEST KITCHEN DELICIOUSLY ELLA.indd 72

Ella Mills – of Deliciously Ella fame – shows us around her carefully designed new kitchen By EVE HERBERT

W

hen Ella Mills, founder of Deliciously Ella, needed a new kitchen, it was to replace a long, industrial-style studio space which, despite large light-flooded windows, had a lacklustre atmosphere and required a rethink. Working closely with Ella, Neptune’s kitchen design team had a clear vision to divide the room into two distinct sections, creating one kitchen for shooting and one for preparation, with different cabinetry to

19/01/2024 13:54


INTERIORS • DESIGN

ELLA MILLS

XXXXXXXXXXXX

clearly define each area. This enabled Ella to maximise the space available and manage different projects simultaneously. Taking centre stage, the shoot kitchen is situated next to the large windows to obtain the most light. Ella was instantly drawn to the heritage feel of the Henley kitchen; its elegant and classic design reflects her personal style and means it will stand the test of time. Fred Horlock of Neptune said: “A welldesigned kitchen should balance function and style, and dividing this studio into two distinct areas has given Ella much more flexibility and functionality. The thoughtful details help the kitchen work for Ella and her team, whether it’s

The green has a minty coolness to it, echoing the Deliciously Ella brand colours

the bespoke larder, easy-access drawers, clever layouts to maximise the layout, or the hardwearing worktop.” Painted in Neptune’s Cactus eggshell paint, the deep relaxing green has a minty coolness to it, echoing the Deliciously Ella brand colours without being too overpowering. The structure of the kitchen design required enough space for the cameras to shoot, while taking the flow and existing appliances into account. To avoid overly tight corners, standard measurements were adjusted between the island and wall to increase space for camera equipment. High on Ella’s wishlist was a double door larder, and while the Henley collection doesn’t A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

DELICIOUSLY ELLA.indd 73

73

19/01/2024 13:54


INTERIORS • PROFILE

The design required enough space for the cameras, while taking the existing appliances into account 74

traditionally offer one, the team crafted an integrated double cupboard to echo the same effect. Built-in plug sockets mean appliances can be used straightaway without having to be taken out, and hidden behind doors when not in use. The result is a beautiful piece of cabinetry full of storage which is ‘transformational’, says Ella. While the shoot kitchen naturally draws the eye, the prep kitchen needed to work just as hard. "It is a space we use a lot," says Ella. "Sometimes we might shoot 11 or 12 recipes in a day, so the layout needs to be really functional." In the prep kitchen space, Ella chose Neptune’s Suffolk kitchen for its clean lines and understated simplicity with recessed door and drawer panels. The design includes plenty of cupboards and drawers, and an L-shaped countertop for prepping tasks. Through clever

storage and maximising countertops, the kitchen has a much larger and practical feel to it. With the finished redesign and functionality of her new studio space, Ella can easily film her content, as well as regularly host customers and important partners. Ella Mills is delighted with the outcome. She says: “Neptune's design team has created the perfect space for us, and the feedback from everyone who walks through the door has been amazing. We’ve already started shooting in the new space and the layout is completely night and day to anything we’ve had before. The amount of work surface and storage space that the design team has created really reinforces my belief in the 'tidy space, tidy mind' mantra, as the new set-up makes work so much easier. It’s such a pleasure to work in our new kitchens.”

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

DELICIOUSLY ELLA.indd 74

19/01/2024 13:54


The home of handcrafted furniture

AD DELCOR.indd 75 25424-Delcor Absolutely-fullpage-ATLAS.indd 1

19/01/2024 05/01/2024 13:54 14:19


Contemporary, reliable and expertly crafted swimming pools

POOL CONSTRUCTION | MAINTENANCE | SPA | LANDSCAPING Simplicity and expert finishings have been our unbeatable combination for over 40 years. Based in Surrey, we are a family run business that is committed to providing a premier service on both private and commercial projects.

www.lagoonpoolsltd.co.uk

AD LAGOON 76(1).indd 3 Lagoon Pools POOLS.indd A4 Ad template

01932 569 569

info@lagoonpoolsltd.co.uk

19/01/2024 19/05/2023 13:54 14:06


INTERIORS • ART

ARTFULLY WALLS

Off the wall It can take a lifetime to amass a collection of artworks but what to do if you’re in a hurry? Go online, of course By PENDLE HARTE

G

allery walls have been a major trend for several years now. But of course hanging pictures on your walls was a thing long before anyone came up with the idea of a gallery wall. And while some people naturally acquire things they like and frame them, others don’t know where to start. Realistically, it can take a lifetime to amass a collection of artworks and who has time for that? Art lover and tech visionary Cathy Glazer came up with a solution. Her online gallery Artfully Walls is dedicated to providing something for everyone, with all tastes catered for with the same approach to high quality printing and framing. It’s a carefully curated yet vast and diverse archive of artworks of all kinds, where everything can be bought in a variety of sizes, with several framing options,

and each piece is printed to order as a museum quality fine art print with archival inks on premium paper and canvas. It’s a seemingly infinite resource, and its genius lies not only in Glazer’s professional eye for quality but in the technology that organises an enormous body of work into a searchable library. Because how is a person supposed to choose? When faced with thousands of potential pictures, even the most decisive person is likely to feel exhausted. And where to begin? Searching by artist is an obvious starting point, but only for someone who knows artists that they like. Maybe medium? So you might search photography, say, or watercolour, or collage, or illustration. This is where Artfully Walls comes into its own. You might search something more abstract, such as, say ‘abstract’ or ‘landscape’ or ‘portrait’. You might like cats and search that, or seascapes, or architectural drawings, or botanical images. You might want something

that’s mostly red to go with your sofa. You might want something traditional, or something experimental. Each image is so precisely tagged and categorised that searches are impressively accurate. Alternatively, the archive includes a large series of designer picks, where people from all over the world with an eye for design offer up their own gallery walls for inspiration. Most of us don’t have tastes that are entirely consistent, and these walls show how pieces can work together even if they wouldn’t be classified together by any algorithm. All of this data creates an excellent resource for analysing trends too. Current demand shows a diversity of popular choices, with lots of searches for Greek and Roman motifs, as well as 18th century oil paintings. Linocuts are in vogue, as are portraits. You heard it here first. artfullywalls.com A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

WALL ART.indd 77

77

19/01/2024 13:54


BLIND AND CURTAIN SHOWROOM Refresh your home with new curtains and blinds made from a wonderful collection of fabrics, including designers Sanderson, Harlequin, Romo and more Bespoke Luxaflex blinds including SmartHome integration Browse and buy our gifts online at www.curtain-call.co.uk Curtains and Blinds by Appointment Only Opening Hours: Tues-Sat 10am to 5pm 52 Friars Stile Road, Richmond, Surrey TW10 6NQ 020 8332 6250 • www.curtain-call.co.uk info@curtain-call.co.uk CURTAIN _CALL_HP_ABS_APR2023.indd 1

10/03/2023 11:17

Jennings-Bramly Furniture Ltd

0208 945 5794 | 0771 555 4694 BRAMLY_HP_ABS_SEP2023_v2.indd 1

AD CURTAIN CALL - BRAMLEY.indd 78

www.bramly.co.uk 10/08/2023 12:17

19/01/2024 13:54


INTERIORS • TREND

SIX THE RESIDENCE Cane Upholstered Dining Chair with Arms, £325 sixtheresidence.co.uk

PEPPER SQ Spindle Wood Dining Chair, £245 peppersq.com

ARTERIORS Dune Chair In Emerald Velvet, £3,631 arteriorshome.com

EDITOR’S PICK

SIX THE RESIDENCE Wishbone Dining Chair, £225 sixtheresidence.co.uk

HOT SEATS Fabulous chairs for all situations

BEN ROUSSEAU

By P E N D L E H A R T E

California Chair, £POA benrousseau.co.uk

ELLA JAMES Natural Rattan Accent Chair, £469 ellajames.co.uk

L.ERCOLANI X 2LG Upholstered Butterfly Chair In Jordan Colour Palette, £899 lercolani.com

ARTERIORS Jax Chair, £2,517 arteriorshome.com

SAZY Lester Dining Chair, £329 sazy.com

LOAF Squishbag Chair in clever velvet, £995 loaf.com

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

PRODUCTS.indd 79

79

19/01/2024 13:54


Now supplying all your interior needs...

SALE Sale starts NOW ON January

BEDROOM

SAVE

furniture

+ BATHROOM

20% *

furniture

Call 020 8341 2020 for more info. 128 Crouch Hill, London N8 9DY

www.funktionalkitchens.co.uk *Subject to terms and conditions

FUNCTIONAL_KITCHEN_HP_ABS_FEB2024.indd 1

AD CARMENDELPRAT - FUNKTIONAL KITCHEN.indd 80

09/01/2024 15:49

19/01/2024 14:04


INTERIORS • FLOWERS

B E AU TIFUL B LOOM S FLOWERS FOR VALENTINE'S DAY AND BEYOND

1

M A D E TO L A S T S H I DA

This is a fresh approach to floristry, using naturally dried and preserved flowers that bloom beautifully all year. These contemporary bouquets elevate your spaces and your mood. shida.florist

1

2

2

B I R T H DAY B OX

3

GLUTTONOUS GARDENER

February’s birth flowers are pretty primroses.Inside this birth flower gift box, the recipient will find a packet of Primrose seeds and a slate engraved with their name and birth date. glut.co.uk

3

ENGLISH ROSE L AV E N D E R G R E E N

The Chelsea-based florists behind Pippa Middleton's wedding flowers have a new Valentine's Day collection, which includes luxury flowers and bouquets of roses and tulips, from £95 lavendergreen.co.uk

4

4

P OT LU C K LEAF ENVY

Forget flowers and gift an actual plant. The Peace Lily’s stunning white flowers and elegant long leaves, make this a very calming and beautiful addition to any home. . leafenvy.co.uk

5

F LOW E R S H OW NEILL STR AIN

5

A pioneer of the flower world, Neill channels passion, skill, and environmental consciousness in every phase of his distinctive, award-winning work. All Neill Strain arrangements are one of a kind. neillstrain.com A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

TOP 5 FLORISTS.indd 81

81

19/01/2024 14:04


RUG STORE specialise in a wide selection of new, old and Antique Persian, Turkish, Caucasian and Turkmen Carpets. Various antique, old and new Kilims are available. We offer a professional hand-cleaning and restoration service. We buy old and antique carpets even damaged rugs. Part exchange and evaluations.

312 UPPER RICHMOND ROAD WEST, EAST SHEEN, RICHMOND, LONDON, SW14 7JN Tel: 020 8876 0070 • wwww.rugstoreonline.co.uk

RUG_STORE_QP_ ABS_JUNE2023.indd 1

28/04/2023 11:43

SBI Ltd has been providing all of your shelter and shading requirements, since 1998

0800 0742 721 | sbiproducts.co.uk

Verandas • Glass Rooms • Awnings • Pergolas Carports • Solar Garage Doors & Shutters • Parasols • Conservatory Sail Blinds Glass Wind Screens for patios, awnings, verandas and parasols !

We provide comprehensive awning services, f rom cleaning and repairs to seasonal maintenance. Get in touch today for the highest quality awning servicing!

SBI_HP_ABS_FEB2024.indd 1

AD RUGSTORE - WLAC - SBI_FEBRUARY 2024_ABSOLUTELY LONDON.indd 82

19/12/2023 10:07

19/01/2024 13:58


INTERIORS • DESIGN

F R E N C H

FANCY Spotlight on Vaisselle’s new collection Words E V E H E R B E R T

“Delicate floral illustrations, bold geometric patterns, and whimsically sculpted shapes ”

C

onceived with the aim of enhancing dining experiences, Vaisselle is a tableware brand rooted in London, brought to life by French entrepreneur Léa Zana. Drawing inspiration from French heritage and eclectic global antiques, the collection is thoughtfully crafted to offer interchangeability, adding a playful twist to your table setting. Under the creative guidance of Léa Zana, a French-born artist who transitioned from the world of fashion to tableware design, Vaisselle mirrors her fond memories of exploring vintage flea markets during childhood and her admiration for diverse ceramics. Executed with precision in London, each ceramic piece undergoes a meticulous process of handcrafting, painting, and glazing, ensuring a distinctive and individualized touch to every item. In a new collaboration with Anthropologie, the new collection showcases pastel vases and elegantly shaped coupes. The assortment extends to encompass charming dinnerware, glassware, candles, candlestick holders, and vases – each piece adorned with quirky patterns in soft pastel hues and bursts of joyful colors. Infused with a playful romanticism, every item has intricate hand-painted details, featuring delicate floral illustrations, bold geometric patterns, and whimsically sculpted shapes. Zana says “This collection is inspired by those lighter days, when spring is about to slowly come into the French countryside. Soft pastels from the tulips contrast with bold red, a classic tone for French homeware. Timeless gingham as a nod to my grandmother’s tablecloths, and my favourite: little hearts!” The collection promises to inject a dose of cheer to any table. A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

VAISSELLE.indd 83

83

19/01/2024 14:04


CORSICA | FRANCE | GREECE | ITALY | MALLORCA | TURKEY

Your time is precious... Our service is exceptional

Kalkan Regency, Penthouse Pool Suite - Draco, Kalkan, Turkey

020 3282 5125 | simpsontravel.com

AD SIMPSON TRAVEL.indd 84 Absolutely magazine A4 ad_Jan2024_artwork_KalkanRegency-draco.indd 1

Book with confidence

19/01/2024 15:53 14:05 11/01/2024


TRAVEL

INTO the DEEP WALDORF ASTORIA

MALDIVES ITHAAFUSHI

Impossibly luxurious villas, outstanding natural beauty and excllent cuisine characterise Waldorf Astoria's enchanting Maldives outpost. Definitely one for the bucket list. waldorfastoriamaldives.com

Two Maldives hotspots 86 • Adventures in Antarctica 90 • 24 hours in Athens 92 A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

TRAVEL OPENER.indd 85

85

19/01/2024 14:05


86

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

MALDIVES.indd 86

19/01/2024 14:05


TRAVEL • MALDIVES

ULTIMATE

Maldives A twin-centre break on two iconic Maldives resorts more than doubles the pleasure, as Libby Norman discovers

M

aldives resorts are bywords for barefoot luxury, so the opportunity to visit two iconic resorts in one trip is too good to miss. First stop is Conrad Maldives Rangali Island, which arguably defined the Maldives experience. It has notched up numerous firsts, including first overwater villas on stilts and first underwater restaurant. Most recent is a private residence built over and under the ocean. It also bagged a prime spot in a country of abundant nature – swimming and snorkelling are a delight from its twin natural islands. Impressive, but it doesn't prepare us for how welcoming Rangali Island feels. There are many repeat visitors (warm hugs and catch-ups between guests and staff), and we feel among friends. We're on adults-only Rangali Island, connected to livelier, larger (and child-welcoming)

Rangali Finolhu Island by a wooden bridge. We have the pick of restaurants and bars on both sides. Also, we get to dawdle back after dark marine life spotting – even rays make regular appearances to gambol in the water lit up by the bridge lights. Our Sunset Water Villa with Pool is bliss, and with a view to thrill – a sightand-sound oceanside immersion. We love the shifting panorama from our giant bed, bathtub, large deck and personal pool. From here, it's a few steps down to the sea below – so private it feels like our personal pool, only bigger. But we are not alone. On my first dip, I spot a crab watching from poolside. He and his tiny gang hang out on our steps to catch a breath, diving back in whenever they spot feet coming. Shoals of fish race past, seemingly on the clock, and sitting on the beach or swimming in the infinity pool near The Quiet Zone beach bar becomes a nature watch. We spot resident flying foxes at dusk, graceful and silent. Then there's George the heron, an island legend, who I mistake

CONRAD RANGALI ISLAND

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

MALDIVES.indd 87

87

19/01/2024 14:05


WALDORF ASTORIA MALDIVES ITHAAFUSHI

for a beach sculpture until he turns up at Vilu Restaurant, our favourite breakfast spot, standing silently by like some watchful avian maître-d. There's a busier breakfast vibe and huge choice at Atoll Market over the bridge, which also offers delicious a la carte and themed dinner options. Rangali Bar is our spot for leisurely lunches. We enjoy a dinner of exceptional quality at Mandhoo Spa Restaurant – designed to detox, and still leaving us feeling pleasantly plump. Other high points include a sunset cruise accompanied by pods of playing dolphins, and champagne and canapés five metres below at Ithaa, where sharks and rainbowhued fish circle lazily. We discover that Rangali Island's new first – The Muraka – is a level beyond on a special tour. Upstairs, this private residence has magnificent sleeping and entertaining spaces (with butler thrown in), while 16 feet down is another glass-walled suite where you are lulled to sleep by dazzling marine life. You

88

can even take the lift to your underwater quarters – it feels very James Bond. And so do we when we are whisked by seaplane back to Malé and straight on to a private yacht (55-foot Princess, no less) for the short transfer to our second Maldives experience – Waldorf Astoria Maldives Ithaafushi. My partner is wildly excited by the boat (desperate to drive it), while I play it cool, drinking in champagne, ocean views and beautifully smooth ride. Opened in summer 2019, Waldorf Astoria Maldives Ithaafushi has quickly garnered a host of prestigious travel awards, and high-profile visitors, and we can see why. Not only is the setting on private linked islands lush, but the dining and accommodation choices stand out for breadth – and high glamour. There's even a totally separate private island for exclusive use by up to 24 guests. Our King Overwater Villa is palatial, with lofty ceiling and double-height doors that can be closed to divide living and sleeping

spaces. There's a cool glass-floored dressing room and a glamorous bathroom with ocean vista. The private pool is big enough for a party, with multiple lounge spots – plus steps down to your own slice of ocean. Bikes are laid on; buggies are a phone call away and personal concierges organise dining and entertainment. We love the relaxed beach-club vibe at Nava, a hub during the day. There's plenty to keep active types busy, with tennis and other court sports, exercise classes, kids' club (plus one for teens). There's a fabulous lagoon-style pool for families – we gravitate to the tranquil adult pool for lazy laps and snoozing off lunch. Food is definitely the thing, with roundthe-world dining options and star chefs. We can't squeeze everything in, but we give it our best shot, grazing at Tasting Table at breakfast, lunching like kings at Peacock Alley and drinking in the after-dark ambiance at Glow. Our standout evening happens at The Ledge by Dave Pynt (of

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

MALDIVES.indd 88

19/01/2024 14:05


• XXXXX XXXXXXXX TRAVEL • MALDIVES

“16 feet down is a glass-walled suite where you are lulled to sleep by dazzling marine life” SEAPLANE, CONRAD MALDIVES

WALDORF ASTORIA MALDIVES ITHAAFUSHI

CONRAD MALDIVES ITHAA UNDERSEA RESTAURANT.

Singapore's Burnt Ends fame). The Aussie barbecue-inspired flavours are smoky and complex – the reputation well deserved. Our rum and tasting menu pairs fine Flor de Cana vintages with tuna and caviar, lamb 'cigars', buttery lobster and the most heavenly rum baba. If The Ledge is an out-of-this-world indulgence, so too our session at Waldorf Astoria's Aqua Wellness Centre. We're not usually spa goers (although the main spa here is fabulous), but here's a unique twist. We are guided around a special pool, each zone containing a water jet that targets a tension point. Starting with feet and ankles and ending with neck and head massage, it's a dreamy hour that leaves us both restored and relaxed. So relaxed, in fact, this feels like the perfect finale to one hedonistic week at two iconic Maldives destinations. * Conrad Maldives Rangali Island; conradmaldives.com. Waldorf Astoria Maldives Ithaafushi; waldorfastoriamaldives.com. A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

MALDIVES.indd 89

89

19/01/2024 14:05


THE BIG

BLUE

Explore Antarctica in ultra luxury with Silversea

A

s the sun comes up over the Antarctic Sound, blood red gives way to sky blue, and colonies of Adèlie penguins slowly shake themselves awake. The ice creaks and shifts underneath as Weddell seals roll around in pure white blankets of virgin snow. Venture a bit further inland and you’ll find Antarctica isn’t just cold and ice. Jagged grey mountains watch over fjords teeming with wildlife and species you’ll encounter nowhere else. Silversea welcomes you to Antarctica, the last and most unexplored continent on Earth. Here, no two cruises are alike, and there is a wealth of untamed wilderness to uncover. Prepare to be moved by intimate encounters with wildlife while the sheer majesty of the landscape makes you feel like you’re travelling for the very first time. Their team members will guide you every step of the way, as they take the utmost care when travelling to this remote region, ensuring that the impact on Antarctica’s delicate ecosystem is minimal to none.

90

ANTARCTICA EXPERTS

Silversea has assembled a top-notch team of naturalists and other experts to help you discover Antarctica’s hidden secrets. They boast one of the highest expeditionpersonnel-to-guest ratios in the entire expedition cruising industry, and every voyage features up to 28 qualified specialists. These uniquely experienced and talented experts have all been chosen for their passion and dedication to their specialised field, as well as their openness, friendliness, and infectious enthusiasm. Each team comprises a variety of experts, including biologists, ornithologists, geologists, historians and photographers. Whether you’re looking for the perfect exposure setting for your money shot, need to know the name of the bird staring at you, or would like a detailed history of the local area, you’ll find someone to answer your questions.

ADVENTURE IS INCLUDED

There’s nothing like listening to large sheets of ice break off a millennial glacier from a Zodiac, or catching sight of a great humpback whale as it spy hops vertically

out of crystal clear waters. You can get up close and personal with the stunning landscapes and teeming wildlife of Antarctica on guided hikes, keeping a lookout for unique fauna and colonies of penguins. Towering icebergs and humpback whales look great from afar, but there’s nothing like floating alongside a glacier in total silence on a kayaking trip where a curious leopard seal could even glide right beside you in the water. Under the guidance of certified instructors, you’ll be able to experience this and much more. And prepare for the onshore excursions as their experts provide you with inside information on what to expect. They’ll pique your curiosity with captivating details about the land, water, ice and wildlife of this unusual continent.

THE SILVERSEA DIFFERENCE

With Silversea you get utmost peace of mind so you can focus on what’s important: exploring the magic of your destination to the fullest and enjoying all your time onboard and on-shore. Fine cuisine has always been a jewel in their crown. Onboard their expedition ships you’ll have the choice of up to four different luxuriously appointed restaurants, where

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AVTL_TRAILFINDER.indd 90

19/01/2024 14:05


TRAVEL • PROMOTION

“No two cruises are alike, and there is a wealth of untamed wilderness to uncover”

world-renowned chefs create dishes using the highest quality ingredients. What’s more, with nearly one member of staff for every guest, personalised service is unparalleled. Every Silversea suite features a butler, so after a day out on the ice you might find a steaming hot cup of your favourite tea waiting for you, or a warm bath already set up for you to soak in.

TRAILFINDERS

Trailfinders have a dedicated and highly knowledgeable Expedition Cruise team who offer expert and impartial advice on choosing the right itinerary and ship for your perfect expedition cruise holiday. Our team have made countless voyages to this region and are always happy to share their first-hand experience. trailfinders.com/silversea; 020 7408 9025 A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AVTL_TRAILFINDER.indd 91

91

19/01/2024 14:05


TRAVEL • EUROPE

THE ACROPOLIS

24

HOURS IN

ATHENS Absolutely’s essential guide

A

thens is a wonderful city, worth much more than just a stopover. But if you’re just heading from the airport to the ferry port, there’s still a lot you can see. Here’s our guide to spending 24 hours in Athens Athens, the cradle of Western civilization, blends ancient history with modern vitality. The Acropolis, perched high on a rocky outcrop, stands as an enduring symbol of ancient Greece. It’s a good idea to visit in the PIRAEUS, MARINA

early morning or the early evening to avoid not only the crowds but also the fierce heat. Descending from the Acropolis, a stroll through the historic Plaka district unveils narrow cobblestone streets lined with neoclassical buildings and charming cafes. Breakfast at a local taverna offers traditional Greek fare, with olives, feta, and fresh tomatoes for a flavorful start to the day. The National Archaeological Museum houses an unparalleled collection of artefacts that span millennia. From intricately detailed sculptures to ancient pottery, the museum offers a comprehensive look into the evolution of Greek civilization. Each exhibit tells a story of myth, heroism, and the enduring legacy of the Hellenic world. No visit to Athens is complete without a wander through the bustling Monastiraki flea market. Vibrant and eclectic, the market is a treasure trove of antiques, crafts, and souvenirs. Vibrant street art and a lively atmosphere showcase the city's modern flair,

“Athens, the cradle of Western civilization, blends ancient history with modern vitality” 92

VIEW FROM THE ALEX'S ROOFTOP RESTAURANT

a harmonious blend of the old and the new. For a respite from the urban buzz, the National Garden provides a serene escape. Lush greenery, meandering paths, and hidden corners create a peaceful oasis in the heart of Athens. The Zappeion, an elegant neoclassical building within the garden, adds a touch of sophistication to the natural surroundings. Lunch at a traditional tavernamight take in souvlaki, moussaka and tzatziki, showcasing the Mediterranean's culinary prowess. And in the afternoon, visit the Ancient Agora, once the heart of Athenian life, which unfolds with ancient temples, stoas, and the iconic Temple of Hephaestus. The serene surroundings invite contemplation, offering a glimpse into the daily lives of ancient Greeks. Dinner in the vibrant district of Psiri captures the essence of Athens' nightlife. From traditional tavernas to trendy rooftop bars, the city comes alive after dark. Locals and visitors alike savor the spirited atmosphere, enjoying live music, dancing, and the warmth of Greek hospitality. And if you’re catching the ferry in the morning, then it’s a great idea to stay near Piraeus. The Alex hotel, Monte Kastella, is our tip, with its excellent air conditioning and breezy rooftop bar and restaurant. A cab will get you to the port in 10 minutes, and your island adventure awaits. santikoscollection.com/thealex

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

ATHENS.indd 92

19/01/2024 14:05


AD CAP ST GEORGES.indd 93

19/01/2024 14:05


“Excellent”

ISI

A day and flexi boarding school for girls and boys aged 3 to 13. Conveniently located near the A3 and M25, and with daily bus routes from South London and the southern Home Counties, Feltonfleet is a rural oasis amongst the urban hustle, where children are encouraged to use their imagination, think creatively, explore the world around them and strive to excel. Arrange a visit to find out more.

www.feltonfleet.co.uk

COBHAM

SURREY

KT11 1DR

WHERE INDIVIDUALS REALLY MATTER AD FELTON FLEET PREP.indd 94

19/01/2024 14:06


TRAVEL • PROMOTION KATOUNA SUITES, LEFKADA

“Aboremp orerisque et labor solo volorehenda eiunt, odiam fuga. quam eum volut”

D R E A M I N G

O F

SUMMER Planning your next trip? Find the holiday that's right for you with Simpson Travel

D

istinctive, intimate and truly individual, Simpson Travel’s exclusive collection of boutique hotels never compromise on the personalised service that makes your stay a pleasure from start to finish. Each one is carefully chosen for its idyllic Mediterranean location, and whether you’re metres from golden sands or gazing out over crystal clear coves, you'll find the same thoughtfully designed accommodation, a dedicated Simpson Concierge, cool cotton bedlinen and days that begin with a delicious home-cooked breakfast. Adult-only hotels are ideal for honeymoons, anniversaries, or quality

BELLA MARE HOTEL, CORFU

time with the one who matters most. Discover Simpson Travel’s blissful child-free hotels set in magical locations across the Greek islands and Turkey. Alternatively, at Simpson's familyfriendly hotels, children aged five to 11 can look forward to fun and games all the way during the summer holidays thanks to Simpson Travel’s unique Beach Life programme of supervised activities at their magnificent Bella Mare Hotel, Corfu and GK Beach Hotel, Crete. Complimentary for hotel guests, the grown-ups can kick back and enjoy some much-needed freedom while the youngsters are hard at play under the expert eye of the Beach Life team. simpsontravel.com

AROSMARI VILLAGE HOTEL, CRETE

GK BEACH, CRETE

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AVTL_SIMPSON TRAVEL.indd 95

95

19/01/2024 14:06


Strive for Excellence Fulham School is an independent co-educational school for children aged 3-18 years old.

AD FULHAM SCHOOL.indd 96

19/01/2024 14:06


SPECI A L

PREP VALUES D U W I C H P R E P LO N D O N

Since 1885, Dulwich Prep London has been at the forefront of preparatory schooling in England. Generations of boys and nursery-aged girls have benefited from a school that has embraced change, keeping pace with pedagogy and technology, and keeping the school’s values at the forefront of everything they do. dulwichpreplondon.org

Inside this section LIVING SCIENCE 98 C R E AT I V E F U T U R E S 1 0 6 H OW TO FA I L 1 1 2 A M U LT I C U LT U R A L E D U C AT I O N 1 1 5 T H E PA N D E M I C L E G ACY 1 2 6 THE MODERN SIXTH FORM 132

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

EDUCATION OPENER.indd 97

97

19/01/2024 14:06


SCIENCE CLUB AT GORDON’S SCHOOL

LIVE

SCIENCE How do we deliver science and engineering subjects in a way that moves them beyond dry theory and into real life? Absolutely speaks to leading schools building both broader understanding and scientific connections

98

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

SCIENCE.indd 98

19/01/2024 14:07


EDUCATION • FEATURE

Tonbridge School

A

t Tonbridge School in Kent, the £20m Barton Science Centre is a hub that makes STEM subjects come to life. Opened in 2019 and named after a Nobel Prize-winning alumnus, it includes 20 state-of-the-art classrooms and labs across three floors. Practical and teaching spaces combine with libraries, a dedicated project lab, and interactive displays. With lots of whiteboards, the centre is designed with a focus on collaboration, says Head of Science Nick Waite. “With the adage that ‘the most effective way to test a student’s understanding of a topic is to ask them to explain it to others’, lessons will often include boys presenting their group’s work to the class.” Feeding academic curiosity is crucial, so first-hand investigation and enquiry are prioritised. At Wednesday Afternoon Activities (WAA) Chemistry Research Group, for instance, Tonbridge boys joined forces with a local girls’ grammar to investigate Ionic Liquids. The group also visited Queen Mary University of London, where students prepared their IL samples for NMR and IR spectroscopy analysis. This was an object lesson in real-life research. The Tonbridge Student Science

SCIENCE BROUGHT TO LIFE AT TONBRIDGE SCHOOL

“Last year, more than 100 students from schools across the UK came together to share their research at Tonbridge School’s Barton Science Centre” Conference, hosted annually at the Barton Science Centre, is an opportunity for students to present their research projects. Last year, more than 100 students from schools across the UK came together to share research. This was a full programme, with 50 student presentation sessions plus display stands created by pupils from as far away as Los Altos High School in California. The school ensures a huge range of extracurricular opportunities to build connections between STEM subjects. Multiple science clubs meet during the school day – Astronomy Club do so after dark when members observe the night sky using the telescopes on the roof of the Barton. Nick Waite says it’s often the wackier projects that create the connections between science and life and spark deep curiosity. “When pupils are given the opportunity, for example, to design a rocket and fire it thousands of feet into the air at several hundred miles per hour, or to build an intricate puzzle box to stump the best ‘safe crackers’ amongst their peers, it creates a great sense of achievement and fun. “A quote displayed in the Barton Science Centre sums up our philosophy on science enrichment activities: ‘Only attending the lessons is like opening a beer and just looking at it. Sure, you’ve made a start, but you’re missing the point...’.”

Gordon’s School

A

t Gordon’s School in Surrey, the team have worked hard to counteract the perception of science subjects as dry and ‘geeky’ and make them appealing to both girls and boys. It has worked, as STEM subjects are now attracting record numbers. This is also reflected in onward study choices, with science and health fields being popular university choices for all students. The school says it has invested heavily in the infrastructure that brings science and engineering subjects to life, with a STEM hub, purpose-built Maths block (completed two years ago) and, even more recently, a Business and Computer Science suite. Another Science lab recently joined six others at the school and the Design Technology department has also been upgraded. “This is a new era for STEM at Gordon’s. We have invested heavily in the infrastructure and upgraded the facilities available as well as expanding what we offer to students,” says Deputy Head (Academic) Andrew Reeve. In the early stages of a student’s journey through STEM at Gordon’s, the emphasis is on building their curiosity and engagement, also relating subjects back to everyday life. Making solar-powered pancakes or lava lamps A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

SCIENCE.indd 99

99

19/01/2024 14:07


“For Gordon’s younger students, creating solar-powered pancakes or learning how to make ice cream without a freezer have proved popular” in an after-school club, or learning how to create an endothermic reaction to make ice cream without a freezer have proved popular, unsurprisingly. Students in the younger years have also competed in the TeenTech Awards. Older students are encouraged to develop their interests through co-curricular options such as Olympiads, CREST Awards, SATRO and Siemen’s competitions. A regular InterHouse Maths competition has joined the sports and arts competitions – adding to those mainstays of intra-school battles. Outside school, students have participated in the UKBC Biology Challenge. This tasks entrants to look beyond curriculums to other sources – including media and current affairs. And an all-female coding club won ‘Judges’ Favourite’ in the Global Innovators category of the Apps for Good Showcase with their food app that encourages healthier and less wasteful diets. Andrew Reeve sees such student enthusiasm for science as hugely positive. “It’s an era of adventure and exploration within the curriculum and finding talent for something that the students can take further in life,” he says. “There are countless opportunities for students to go above and beyond the curriculum.”

PRACTICAL WORK IN THE LABORATORY AND THE SCIENCE TIMELINE MURAL AT HEATHFIELD SCHOOL

Heathfield School

A

t Heathfield School in Ascot, the focus is on a lively and challenging syllabus with strong connections to the real world. Head of Science Lucy Johnson says it’s designed to inspire students to get a glimpse of the future scientists they could become. Enquiry and projects are incorporated into teaching and learning, engaging students and enabling connections across the syllabus, and with other subjects. There’s a huge focus, too, on fun and practical experiments and investigations that relate things back to the real world and spark a spirit of enquiry. Over the past year, students have investigated whether coffee will help spring onions to grow hydroponically, built wind turbines and solar-powered phone chargers, tested the strength of dog poo bags, determined which crisps would be the best for lighting fires in the wilderness and

measured the concentration of catalase in different vegetables and hair types. The Science Building at the school is designed to foster a ‘can do’ attitude, with the entire downstairs corridor displaying a photo-realistic mural of the timeline of scientific breakthroughs, with a focus on Women in Science – especially women of colour – within STEM fields. Lucy Johnson, who is lead in Biology as well as Head of Science, says: “Facilities in our STEM building include specialist laboratories for each science subject, supported by subject-specific technicians. This enables us to build practical work into our teaching and learning, so we can support tricky or abstract concepts with experimental work and demonstrations”. The aim is to replicate the environment students will encounter within science-based environments and professional labs. STEM is also taken beyond the classroom and lab. “Every year we have a range of trips across different year groups. These may include a trip to the farm with the lower school, a visit to a gin distillery with

“Heathfield students have built wind turbines and solar-powered phone chargers and determined which crisps would be the best for lighting fires in the wilderness” 100 A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

SCIENCE.indd 100

19/01/2024 14:07


EDUCATION • FEATURE

MALVERN COLLEGE COSMETICS CHALLENGE

A-level Chemists, or the ever-inspiring Natural History Museum,” says Lucy Johnson. Tapping into both student interests and the future direction of careers, study of sustainability and the environmental impact of human activities is also prioritised. “A-level Biologists benefit from a residential trip to learn ecological and environmental sampling and study skills from the experts at the Field Studies Council. These trips help our students view science in a wider context.” The Science team at Heathfield have been raising the profile of physics and engineering-related careers in recent years. Activities have included STEMKarts – with racetracks set up in the Sports Hall for a spot of high-energy racing with battery-operated go-karts. The fun is accompanied by serious science related to electric car technology, aerodynamics, design and sustainability. “This year we are entering the F1 in Schools UK competition and are planning to take a group of students to visit the McLaren Technology Centre,” adds Lucy Johnson. There are plenty of extracurricular STEM-related activities through the year – from wildlife watching with motionsensor night cameras to dissection club and designing siege weaponry. Every year, the school hatches ducklings and one of the most coveted Science Club positions is duck monitor – caring for and teaching the brood how to swim. “Science really does come to life at Heathfield!” says Lucy Johnson.

Malvern College

M

alvern College, which sits in Worcestershire’s Malvern Hills, has a superb science setting in its state-of-the-art Science Centre, complete with multiple labs and prep rooms and a lecture theatre. With a full range of traditional science subjects on offer, there’s also a ground-breaking approach that brings STEM applications into the real world. Young scientists at the school are asked to put their entrepreneurial hats on for the annual FY Challenge, which sees teams of budding scientists and inventors produce and market their own cosmetics brand. This is a challenge grounded in

“Malvern College’s FY Challenge sees teams of budding scientists and inventors produce and market their own cosmetics brand”

real-world industry because the UK health and beauty market is currently estimated to be worth £36 billion. With that in mind, Foundation Year (Year 9) students are tasked to look for an elusive gap in the market. Malvern College sees this as a great example of inter-departmental working and sharing best practice, since Chemistry, Business, DT and Maths are all thrown into the mix – along with English, for good measure. The multi-day project this year kicked off with an insight into starting up an ethical cosmetics company, with a guest lecture by Old Malvernian Vicky Charlesworth, founder of JAYA Beauty. Further business acumen was then shared by teachers from English, Economics and Business who gave talks on ‘the analysis of advertising messages’, ‘what makes a good brand for a business’ and ‘pitfalls to consider when advertising in a different country’. With target market identified, the challenge progressed to the Chemistry department where raw materials were waiting to be transformed into a skin cream and lip balm. The critical and most challenging part of the manufacture was to make an emulsion of the correct consistency to be used as a skin cream. Beeswax and natural oils were carefully combined to form an emulsion, and essential oils were then added for fragrance. Once satisfied, the UV absorbance properties of the A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

SCIENCE.indd 101

101

19/01/2024 14:07


AD DULWICH PREP.indd 102

19/01/2024 14:07


“DOYRMS students manufactured and tested WiFi antennas for Infineon Technologies, ensuring they were delivered on time and to client specifications” LAB WORK AND LIVE ENGINEERING AT DOYRMS

product had to be thoroughly tested. When the product had been manufactured in the lab, pupils return to the DT department to design and create their logo, packaging and pointof-sale display. The financial underpinning of their business plan was guided by the Maths department, who took the teams through costing and forecasting their business model. The project, which happens every year over three days, compresses what it takes to bring a new product to market. From initial inspiration to the R&D process, pupils must also consider the realities of sales. Every year, pupils produce a short video for social media, and an advert for the overseas market, while the final showcase pitch sees pupils present and respond to rigorous grilling in a Dragons’ Den-style session. This annual challenge is included in all Year 9 timetables because it has proved to be an exercise that pupils find inspiring and exciting. Not only does it allow them to apply real-world scenarios, but they also develop presentation skills and learn to work as part of a team while honing high-level STEM skills. And who knows where this knowledge might lead them?

Duke of York’s Royal Military School

A

t DOYRMS in Kent, students (known as Dukies) have the option to study Engineering, Product Design and the Sciences, including Computer Science, across GSCE, BTEC and A level. The school’s recent £24.9 million refurbishment included the creation of state-of-the-art science labs and engineering and design classrooms. Students have access to equipment such as 3D printers, laser cutters, a chip forge and brazing hearth. The school is supported by industry sponsors the James Dyson Foundation, Secondary Engineer and Infineon Technologies, and all three contribute teaching resources to build a real-world understanding of engineering and STEM practices. Recently, students manufactured and tested WiFi antennas

for Infineon Technologies, ensuring they were delivered on time and met client specifications. Students also go on lots of science and engineering trips. Recently, this included visiting CERN in Geneva. Activities outside the classroom and working with science and engineering institutions add invaluable real-life scenarios and hands-on experiences. The school has an extensive cocurricular programme, with over 80 weekly clubs and activities, many of them covering science and engineering. Inspired by James Dyson’s story, the school works on the basis that engineers and scientists share common characteristics – thinking outside the box and perseverance. Teachers across subjects work together to ensure DOYRMS students’ understanding stretches across subject areas. Theories and knowledge learnt in the science classroom are often put into practice in engineering lessons, and vice versa. With leading industry sponsors in the mix, students here take part in real-life challenges and create STEM products – some of which have even gone on to be used in industry and developed further. There’s lots of support from the school’s careers team, who help children unlock their interests and strengths when considering future opportunities. Many students from the school have gone on to study engineering, design and the sciences at leading universities, while some have secured professional apprenticeships with companies such as Amazon in fields such as Mechatronics Engineering. The school prides itself on ensuring students are equipped with as much information as possible to make informed decisions about their future pathway, be it further study, apprenticeship or employment. A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s 103

SCIENCE.indd 103

19/01/2024 14:07


Godstowe

Discover something special

AD GODSTOWE.indd 104

19/01/2024 14:07


EDUCATION • FEATURE

MAKER-DOER APPROACHES AT DOYRMS

“Engineering-related projects at Pangbourne include the design and manufacture of an electric car, but also classic car restoration projects”

Pangbourne College

A

t Pangbourne College in Berkshire, live science means plenty of time for practical work. The outdoor classroom is a recent addition. Head of Science and Physics Dr Katerine Richard says this is particularly useful for experiments such as ‘whirling bung’ and messy jobs such as planting peas. “We place great emphasis on practical equipment being ‘old fashioned’ – rulers, stop watches, and

so on – through to cutting edge,” she says. “Pupils need a range of ways of interacting with the taught content.” This flexible approach extends to learning opportunities beyond the classroom. There are wholeyear-group trips to broaden everyone’s exposure to science. “At the other end, we provide opportunities for specific classes, groups of pupils or individuals – from external competitions or speakers invited to chat and answer questions with a single class to going out to support teaching of science in primary schools.” There’s a vibrant extracurricular programme designed to work alongside

SCIENCE INVESTIGATIONS ARE FOSTERED AT PANGBOURNE COLLEGE

academics. Opportunities develop up the school, starting with Science Club for Year 7 and evolving into CREST Awards and the STEM Ambassador programme in Sixth Form. Pupil ambassadors support the Science Department and the school’s annual Science Week. There’s lots of joined-up departmental thinking at Pangbourne – for instance a joint KS3 Science and Geography trip to see wind turbines and solar farms at work, followed by a sustainability survey at a nearby town. Students also acquire strong practical skills via the Design Technology facilities. The large mixed media workshop develops basic hand skills in lower years, with increasingly sophisticated applications taught as students progress. The aim is to get their critical thinking to the stage where they can tackle a design and manufacture task from ideation to production. Fun DT-inspired and engineeringprojects at the school include the design and manufacture of an electric car and classic car restoration. Everyone is looking forward to the national competitions promised in the future by the school’s emerging Electric Car Club. This four-wheeled challenge is a shining example of science being brought up to speed and into real life. A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

SCIENCE.indd 105

105

19/01/2024 14:07


EDUCATION • TALKING HEAD

Creative

THINKING The Head of Maida Vale School on a long-overdue realisation that creative subjects help to fuel the UK economy and build rewarding careers

ART AND MUSIC AT MAIDA VALE SCHOOL

L

ast June, the Conservative government published a sector strategy for the creative industries. In his foreword to the report Rishi Sunak wrote: “These industries generate £108 billion a year, employ over 2.3 million people in every corner of the country. And there is a real sense of energy in the sector, which has grown at more than 1.5 times the rate of the wider economy over the past decade”. An eclectic list followed of Great British Creative Products: Ed Sheeran, Football Manager (the console game, rather than the archetype), the National Theatre and Adele amongst others. This told us something about the PM’s music and gaming habits but was also a welcome indication of the pride the UK should feel in its creative industries. STEM subjects have been the zeitgeist since Michael Gove spoke to the Royal Society in 2011. In that speech he said: “Asia has a massive trade surplus, holds the fate of the dollar in its hands, enjoys surging growth and is developing schools, technical colleges and universities which are dramatically outpacing our own”. TikTok,

“Schools have an opportunity to re-energise, restore and reconstitute the creative curriculum”

AliBaba and Shein were coming to get us. So, Dusty Springfield amongst others – recorded. In schools piled into resourcing STEM subjects September 2024 we will be launching a course which led to STEM degrees at university in Games Development and Coding, alongside which were ‘sought-after’ by employers. Music Technology and our current A-level But this focus began the gradual denudation Music. Our aim will be to have a game designed of the creative landscape in school music, art and coded by a Sixth Form student, with and drama. The Education Policy Institute’s music written by another Sixth Form student, analysis of 2023 GCSE results shows fewer recorded in Maida Vale Studios (#Radio3 grades awarded for creative arts subjects Sound of Gaming) by an ensemble, and with than STEM subjects. Against the background Deputy Head Mr Toby Fisher on bass guitar. of the government’s ‘sector vision’, and the We welcomed our first Sixth Form cohort realisation that UK Plc needs songwriters, this year, and as we grow, we plan to ensure sound technicians, dancers, game designers, the range of subjects and pathways on offer graphic designers and will become the broadest among costumiers as much as it needs London independent schools. aeronautical engineers and Many students will still choose pharmacologists, schools have traditional subjects, and certainly an opportunity to re-energise, STEM and the humanities are restore and reconstitute popular at MVS. But for those the creative curriculum. who want to practise musical Maida Vale School is only theatre, then Performing Arts a ten-minute walk from the and Productions Arts is the former BBC Maida Vale pathway. And then a career in the MAGNUS BASHAARAT Studios where a panoply of creative industries – songwriting Head rock royalty – David Bowie, for Ed Sheeran or onstage at Maida Vale School The Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the National – awaits.

106 A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

MAIDA VALE SCHOO.indd 106

19/01/2024 14:07


find out more at kcs.org.uk AD KINGS COLLEGE WIMBLEDON.indd 107

19/01/2024 14:07


m

24

DISCOVER YOUR TALENT AT CRANLEIGH BOARDING AND DAY CO-EDUCATION FOR PUPILS AGED FROM 7-18. INSPIRING ACADEMICS SUPPORTED BY A FULL PROGRAMME OF CREATIVE AND PERFORMING ARTS, SPORTS AND ACTIVITIES.

ADMISSIONS@CRANLEIGH.ORG OR WWW.CRANLEIGH.ORG | 01438 276377

AD - CRANLEIGH SCHOOL.indd 108 S3502 CS_Absolutely Education 210x297 v1.indd 1

19/01/2024 13:09 14:07 14/12/2023


EDUCATION • TALKING HEAD

BEYOND DATA

The Head of Kew Green Prep on why schools need to look beyond data-driven approaches in education to fully develop children's talents, skills and self-esteem

O

ur pupils are growing up in a complex and nuanced world, steered by rapid change. For schools, it’s good to be nimble; good to be adaptable. Every school is a microcosm of the society in which it sits, and we therefore need to accept the changing landscape, and move forward – unafraid to take a new and innovative approach. It’s a time to avoid complacency and allow our aims and culture to evolve, taking risks where necessary to remain purposeful, responsive, and proactive. Keeping the interests of the child, and who they are becoming, must be at the heart of all our decisions. While pupil data must still hold an important place in all schools, it’s now fundamental to look beyond the measurable outcomes within academic subjects, recognising the importance of the skills

“It’s fundamental to look beyond the measurable outcomes, recognising the importance of the skills and aptitudes our pupils will need to thrive” and aptitudes that we know our pupils will need to thrive in the wider world – with self-esteem at the core. As the poet Maya Angelou said: "my mission in life is not merely to survive, but to thrive; and to do so with some passion, some compassion, some humour and some style". Our ethos at Kew Green Preparatory School reflects this view. We aim to provide our pupils with the knowledge, skills and values to shape a brighter future for

KEW GREEN PREP PUPILS

themselves and society at large. We also aim The leadership culture in any school to equip them with a strong moral compass, plays a vital role in this, as it is through educated so they embrace opportunities the leadership culture that the talents and make a positive contribution. of other people can come to the fore. It is in non-academic experiences – the The role of the teacher is to draw out co-curricular subjects, such as Art & the talent that exists in our pupils. Design Technology, Music and Sports, With this approach, our pupils and the learning and experiences that develop independence, an inner ‘grit’ happen outside of the classroom through and determination to achieve through extracurricular and a rich school calendar hard work and perseverance. – where we see the most personal growth. As Headteacher of a London prep, I This might be on the sports pitch, recognise that pupil data continues to overcoming the nerves of drive the 11+ options for many a school swimming gala, pupils, but it does not (and performing on the stage in must not) define a child as front of an audience, debating a success or a failure. They an opinion or achieving in are so much more than their new experiences as part of a data. I urge us to look beyond residential trip. It is in these the data and recognise our non-academic situations where nuanced and rapidly changing our pupils become leaders world. We should be educating of and responsible for their our children to embrace SASHA DAVIES own character development, opportunity, achieve through Headteacher growing and achieving endeavour, and develop their Kew Green Prep School beyond academic data. self-esteem along the way. A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s 109

KEW GREEN PREP.indd 109

19/01/2024 14:07


KHS - Absolutely Education - full page - v2.pdf 1 16/01/2024 17:00:12

C

M

Y

CM

MY

CY

CMY

K

AD KEW HOUSE.indd 110

19/01/2024 14:08


EDUCATION • TALKING HEAD

Critical skills Sara Williams-Ryan, Head of Falcons School in Putney, on why inspiring curiosity and critical thinking are the best ways to develop truly ambitious learners

A

s the Head of Falcons School, Putney, I am determined that our students should be academically ambitious and take responsibility for their learning from the moment they join us. We know that this is the greatest accelerator of pupil progress, both academically and developmentally. We have, therefore, embedded the Thinking School approach – focused on critical thinking and curiosity – across our Nursery and Prep, so the boys and girls in our school can truly thrive and succeed academically. The introduction of critical thinking skills into school programmes is backed by evidence of its impact. As far back as the 1980s, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) reported the need for schools to produce independent thinkers and problem solvers, also questioning the long-term effectiveness of school initiatives. An inquiry by Exeter University’s Cognitive Education centre

“I hear this language of critical thinking echoing in the conversations between children and parents at the school gates”

PUPILS AT FALCONS SCHOOL

concluded that the issue lay not in the for their learning, as well as their behaviour, programmes themselves, but with the way both inside and outside of the classroom. in which they were being introduced into Difficult at first, but we know that this practice school curriculums. This finding has deeply has helped our pupils become ambitious, influenced our thinking at Falcons School. independent learners with a growth mindset. Here, our methods reach far beyond We crucially extend our support to parents, the National Curriculum, by systemically sharing with them strategies such as the Habits embedding the Thinking School approach of Mind, Zones of Regulation and Thinking across all areas of learning and at all age Routines. This helps them to reinforce their levels. This is so it has the long-term impact children’s learning habits at home. I am set out by the OECD. From Early Years up to delighted that our parents embrace this new Year 6, we have implemented a deep range way of teaching and learning – and I hear this of age-appropriate metacognitive strategies language of critical thinking echoing in the and thinking tools into the conversations between children learning programme. Set and parents at the school gates. these alongside the academic Falcons School is a testament rigour you would expect to the fact that education from a prep school, and our can be a powerful tool for pupils can achieve truly positive change. When we exciting learning outcomes. start by sowing the seeds of Guided by our school curiosity and critical thinking values of ambition, resilience in the youngest of minds, and respect, pupils are working step by step, we can SARA WILLIAMS-RYAN encouraged to be reflective then nurture a generation of Head in their thoughts and actions confident, independent, and Falcons School and to take responsibility ambitious future leaders. A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

FALCONS.indd 111

111

19/01/2024 14:08


EDUCATION • TALKING HEAD

Growing COURAGE The Head of Ravenscourt Park Prep Carl Howes on helping children to acquire the courage to fail, learn from mistakes and try, try again

T

he start of the new academic year provided a wonderful opportunity for us to reflect on our core values and how these underpin the educational provision that we offer to our students. For my start of term assembly, I selected the value of ‘Courage’ from our school behaviour culture, which comprises High Expectations, Kindness, Respect, Courage, Integrity and Consideration. I chose the story of the abolitionist and suffragist Harriet Tubman to exemplify someone who had demonstrated incredible courage throughout her life, and I outlined the importance of this value in the context of our learning in school. At RPPS, our children are very familiar with the importance of viewing mistakes as a positive part of the learning process. Our classrooms are ‘mistake friendly’ environments and children are proud when they have identified and learned from their ‘marvellous mistake’. This way of thinking requires courage: most children don’t like getting things wrong, and their early perception of being

“Our classrooms are mistake friendly environments – children are proud when they have identified and learned from their marvellous mistake” successful often entails being the first person to finish a task. Our aim is for children to reconsider what successful learning means, thinking more about the process as opposed to the outcome. This means embracing the struggle associated with being temporarily stuck in the learning pit (as described by James Nottingham). Our teachers strive to recognise and celebrate students’ effort and the determination

112

RAVENSCOURT PARK PREP PUPILS

also aids our young people as they get older shown during the learning process. to resist the influence of peer preference Being courageous helps children build their – the tendency to emulate risky behaviour self-confidence and self-esteem. It should be shown by their peers – and avoid putting an integral part of their learning toolbox. The themselves in harm’s way simply to fit in. courage to ‘have a go’, or to answer a question The renowned poet Maya Angelou once in front of their peers if they aren’t sure said: “I am convinced that courage is the most they have the right answer, is so important important of all the virtues. Because without during these formative years. How many courage you cannot practise any other virtue academically high-achieving teenagers have consistently. You can be kind for a while; you we encountered terrified by the prospect can be generous for a while; you can be just for of failure? The more we can encourage our a while, or merciful for a while, primary-aged students to work even loving for a while. But it is at the edge of their comfort zone only with courage that you can and beyond, the better prepared be persistently and insistently they will be for later life. kind and generous and fair”. As with many schools, we Through building up our emphasise the importance of children to be courageous, we moral courage, so that children are providing them with a firm are empowered to develop the foundation, and equipping strength of character to stand them with the resilience up for what is right, calling out CARL HOWES and determination needed unkind behaviour when they Headmaster to navigate the challenges encounter it. This positively Ravenscourt Park and setbacks that they will impacts our school culture and Prep School encounter in the future. helps to prevent bullying. It

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

RAVENSCOURT.indd 112

19/01/2024 14:08


North Bridge House

Book a Visit

‘Personal challenge with tailored teaching in a nurturing setting’ Good Schools Guide NURSERY & PRE-PREP WEST HAMPSTEAD 2 - 7 YEARS

NURSERY & PRE-PREP HAMPSTEAD 2 - 7 YEARS

PREP SCHOOL REGENT’S PARK 4 - 13 YEARS

FRI 22 MARCH FRI 20 APRIL

WEDS 13 MARCH (2+) TUES 19 MARCH (4+)

FRI 8 MARCH FRI 19 APRIL

NORTH_BRIDGE_FP_ABS_FEB2024.indd 1

SENIOR HAMPSTEAD 11 - 16 YEARS

SENIOR CANONBURY 11 - 18 YEARS

TUES 5 MARCH THURS 9 MAY

THURS 7 MARCH TUES 7 MAY

19/01/2024 15:27


JOY Your child’s primary years are fundamental in shaping not just what they become, but who they become. King Alfred School has over 120 years of experience of designing joyful learning experiences which give each child the space they need to discover and develop their passions, to embrace challenge and reflect on their achievements. Our creative curriculum inspires children because they do it

STRUCTURE

SPACE

DEPTH

through experience, through play, through genuine interest; we nurture an eagerness to know more and encourage greater depth of understanding. We have high expectations for our children and give them the freedom to explore and grow - all within a structure which lets them develop at the pace which is right for them. The results speak for themselves; happy, confident children who love to learn.

Find out more about the school, or book to attend an open event at www.kingalfred.org.uk Lower School Open Mornings: 22 Feb & 23 May AD KING ALFRED S.indd 114

LowerSchool Ad Full Page 210x297mm_FINAL_23_24_Open_Morning_Dates.indd 1

19/01/2024 14:12

19/12/2023 13:33:31


EDUCATION • INSIDER

MULTICULTURAL THINKING The Primary English Coordinator at Lycée Français Charles de Gaulle de Londres on how multicultural schools broaden linguistic skills and life opportunities

M

ulticultural teaching institutions undoubtedly give pupils an edge in a globalised world. At international schools, many nationalities and languages converge in classes, playgrounds and other shared spaces. This creates an interesting and open environment in which to grow up. But how do pupils benefit from this wealth to nurture both their native linguistic skills and build new ones?

W E LCO M I N G A LL LE V E L S International schools generally follow a national educational system and prepare pupils for corresponding exams with the relevant curricula. At the Lycée Français Charles de Gaulle de Londres for example, the main curriculum is French, but most pupils follow a mixture of the French and English curricula, and all can choose which final exams to take between the French Baccalauréat and A levels. To achieve complete bilingual proficiency by the time pupils graduate, they either develop their English or French skills. Regardless of their starting point, international pupils receive full support to acquire the language needed to follow lessons. Linguistic and literary aspects are thoroughly taught but, above all, language learning is focused on communication. This means acquiring knowledge in all school topics, understanding instructions, producing written work and participating in oral discussions in class.

ALEXA ROCHE PHOTOGRAPHY/LFCG

E X TR A S U P P O R T FO R F R E N C H Non-native speakers are welcome to join and are encouraged to do so as early as possible – ideally from nursery – for quick integration. This is sometimes subject to testing. However, for them to succeed, the new language must be part of a family project. It should not be viewed as one of many ‘good-to-have’ skills, but as a ‘whole culture’ endeavour. This would include travel to that country, learning about its history and traditions and effectively making it part of the pupil’s life. At the Lycée’s primary and early secondary

LYCÉE FRANÇAIS CHARLES DE GAULLE DE LONDRES PUPILS

“Newcomers feel at ease – sessions highlight what pupils know already” levels, pupils who are less confident in French can benefit from small-group support classes led by tutors qualified to teach French as a school language, rather than as a native tongue. Focus is on making newcomers feel at ease using the language as a communications tool. Most importantly, sessions highlight what pupils know already and emphasise the progress they regularly make. Such small groups mean these classes are highly interactive and resources can be more playful – usually incorporating audio, video and digital resources rather than traditional learning media. The purpose is to build pupils’ self-confidence and independence.

perhaps progress in a new language. This progression can be achieved through various learning pathways, such as the International Baccalaureate, at certain schools. At the Lycée here in London, for example, there is an International Section focusing on literature and history. There’s also a Plurilingual Section offering the French Baccalauréat with up to four languages. You will even find a British Section which pupils are able to join from Year 10 to prepare for their GCSEs and A levels. In a world where our borders are becoming increasingly permeable, multilingualism should be a priority in our children’s educational choices – international schools provide exactly that opportunity.

R E I N FO RC I N G E N G LI S H S K I LL S At the other end of the spectrum, pupils who are already completely fluent in English should cultivate this asset and find the opportunity to further their skills or

C E R I A N M A R AV I G LI A Primary English Coordinator for the Lycée schools A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

LYCEE CHARLES DE.indd 115

115

19/01/2024 14:08


EDUCATION • TALKING HEAD

Learning

EVOLUTION Siobhan McGrath, Executive Principal of Southbank International School, on delivering an education fit for life in an evolving world

A

s the world continues to evolve, the way in which we prepare our children must do the same. Southbank International School is an IB World school for children aged 2-18 years old, with campuses located across central London. The IB at Southbank is a comprehensive and international curriculum that takes a holistic approach to education, fostering intellectual, personal, emotional and social skills, from early years to post-16 education. With new technologies revolutionising the way we live – and increased global uncertainty impacting the world’s economy and future outlook – it’s more crucial than ever that we equip young people with the tools to navigate the complexities of our century. The onus is on schools and colleges to support students as they take their first steps in the outside world, ensuring they are ready to thrive in whatever path they choose after school. A focus on cultural diversity, independent thinking and nurturing morals and values is what many believe needs to come to the forefront. I hold the view that the International

“We ensure our students enjoy and learn from all the rich resources available to them in and around London”

116

YOUNG LEARNERS AT SOUTHBANK INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL

Baccalaureate (IB) programme gives and nature centres to study wildlife. children the best possible start in life, At the heart of Southbank’s ethos is a focus both academically and personally. It is a on community service and giving back. This curriculum that encourages its students to is embedded across every campus and every do more than blindly accept what is put in age group. Examples of community projects front of them. It is also a curriculum that across our three central-London campuses develops young people’s natural capacity are wide-ranging – everything from busking to question, to be inquisitive and to think to raise money for refugees to cooking independently, critically and creatively. meals for vulnerable people. We also work The school’s aim is to support individuality to provide practical support for homeless and encourage our young people to be curious communities and to help combat loneliness about the outside world. We work to instil among elderly people in our neighbourhoods. in them the desire to explore, to challenge Our teaching accelerates individual growth the status quo and to make a while encouraging openness difference to the world around to the outside world and an them. We ensure our students appreciation of different enjoy and learn from all the rich cultures and perspectives. It resources available to them in nurtures a readiness to see and around London, using this other points of view and builds great city as their classroom. an acceptance of people who This includes organising visits are different from us. Here to the many museums, art at Southbank, we emphasise galleries, historic buildings, inquiry, creativity, risk taking SIOBHAN MCGRATH theatres and concert halls. and accountability. We teach Executive Principal Our young people also get valuable skills for life, whatever Southbank involved in student conferences the future holds for your child International School and visit parks, woodlands in our evolving world.

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

SOUTHBANK INT.indd 116

19/01/2024 14:08


Academic Excellence Ivy House School thrives as a distinguished, co-educational, and non-denominational school for children aged 2 to 11.

www.ivyhouseschool.co.uk

AD IVY HOUSE.indd 117

19/01/2024 14:08


Option 2

Academic Excellence Academic Excellence Falcons School is an independent, co-educational, and non-denominational prep school for children aged 2 to 11. www.falconsschool.co.uk

AD FALCONS 118 London 210x297mm.indd 2 100372 FalconsSCHOOL.indd School_ Absolutely

19/01/2024 11/01/2024 14:09 10:43


EDUCATION • TALKING HEAD

HOLISTIC THINKING The Headmaster of Kew House on the ways in which the GCSE diet can be enriched with a holistic and interconnected learning approach

been made, to avoid the glare of GCSE result performance, but to provide the best education for their pupils. At Kew House School, we have our own Gardener Award (GA) scheme. By mapping the content of the core curriculum, coalescing around five themes; enterprise, perspectives, wellbeing, community and creativity, our pupils gain a coherent insight into topics as they meet them across subjects – either simultaneously or as part of their spiral curriculum. They are still prepared for their subject GCSE exams, but gain a greater interrelation understanding of the issues.

‘H

olistic education’, where do we start? The concept has ancient roots in Greek pedagogy, was championed in the early 20th century by Jan Smuts in Holism and Evolution and carried forward by the writings of Abraham Maslow with the concept of ‘self-actualization’ in the latter part of the century. The idea of a broader, fuller, interconnected treatment of a young person’s educational pathway is a striking counterpoint to the linear, subject-silo, test-of-recall basis of the Victorian Education system that we in England are yearning to adapt, change or just throw away. The momentum of educational discussions during Covid, exemplified by the Education Commission convened by The Times, has stalled. For now, we are stuck with GCSEs, but we are not alone in testing young people at this age. Cambridge University research reveals that only seven countries globally with comparable

KEW HOUSE SCHOOL PUPILS

“It is a strength of independent education that we can innovate and move in the direction that we feel is best for our pupils”

excellence in national education, do We are not content to rest there. We not externally assess 16-year-olds. The add curriculum time in the ‘GA’ strand focus on examination assessment is one to deliver statutory elements, but also strand of the deeper discussion regarding teach skills and values in the context of the efficacy of our education system in the areas they are meeting in their core preparing our children for their world. curriculum. Finally, we bring this all The response to the challenge at national together with the students using an online level is stymied in the vested interests of platform to register their own additional exam boards and mired in the political engagements and successes: volunteering, cycle, with education a football, rather than music exams, extracurricular activities. a jewel in the eyes of the political classes. At each Key Stage, the GA teacher This has left independent schools to go it moderates the pupils’ achievements, with alone in creating innovative various forms of assessment, curricula to broaden, deepen including presentations, and interconnect the strands of interviews, group tasks their pupils’ learning. Bedales and competitions. We then School, from its origins, was award a GA qualification at innovative, but not alone in the appropriate level. It is creating its own curriculum a strength of independent with Bedales Assessed Courses education that we can (BAC). More recently many innovate and move swiftly other schools have attempted when we are not being lead WILL WILLIAMS to create innovative, holistic at the national scale, and go Headmaster diets for their pupils. in the direction that we feel Kew House School is best for our pupils. These attempts have not A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

KEW HOUSE.indd 119

119

19/01/2024 14:09


queen ethelburga’s collegiate, york welcoming students 3 months to 19 years & boarders from year 3

excellent facilities & results

over 100 enrichment clubs

open mornings:

9th march & 27th april 2024

book your place at www.qe.org admissions@qe.org - 01423 333333

AD QUEEN ETHELBURGA.indd 120

19/01/2024 14:09


EDUCATION • PROMOTION

A CURRICULUM

OF CHOICE Queen Ethelburga’s Collegiate (QE) in York explains how its campus built on choice creates well-rounded, future-ready students

A

n education at QE is all about learning through experiences, trying new things, and discovering what you enjoy and excel at. Students choose from a wide range of subject options and are encouraged to try extra-curricular activities which enrich their education and enable them to become more well-rounded individuals. There are more than 100 clubs for students to get involved in, including Mandarin, Games Design, Home Economics, Woodland Sessions, and Esports, as well as more traditional options such as Art, Dance, Design Technology, Drama,

Gymnastics, Music and both competitive and recreational sports clubs. We have academically focused clubs in Medicine and Veterinary, Journalism, Law, Enterprise, History, Politics, Psychology, and Philosophy, which better prepare them for university applications and further education. QE seeks out the most enriching opportunities for our students. That is why we became the first ever UK school team to participate in the Student Motorsports Challenge and why our students had the opportunity to work with professional music producers Billen Ted to create and record the hit song, ‘Feels Like Home’. As

MUSIC AT QUEEN ETHELBURGA'S COLLEGIATE

ABOVE AND LEFT: PUPILS AT QUEEN ETHELBURGA'S COLLEGIATE

well as composing the melody, creating lyrics, singing and playing instruments, students created the choreography for the music video. All recording and filming was done on-site, making the most of our stateof-the-art facilities and 220-acre site. Those interested in STEM can benefit from the Practical Science CREST Award, Critical Thinking Club, Advanced Mathematics Club, and the internal Medical Conference Competition. Students can join annual QE Volcano and Bath Bomb Days and send items to space as part of the Mars Balloon national initiative. The QE Stretch and Challenge Programme encourages students to seek opportunities that foster a lifelong passion for knowledge. This includes attending industry professional and alumni lectures, entering internal and external competitions, work experience, volunteering, and partaking in both personal and group research projects. Students can also become representatives and leaders in a variety of roles throughout the school that allow them to grow in confidence whilst developing core collaboration and leadership skills. Nestled in 220 acres of North Yorkshire countryside, QE is a co-educational day and boarding school for students from 3 months to 19 years. Contact admissions@qe.org to book onto our open morning on 9 March or 27 April, or to organise a private tour. qe.org A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AVTL_QUEEN ETHEL.indd 121

121

19/01/2024 14:09


Academic Excellence Wetherby Pembridge Minors Holland Park School is an independent co-educational school for children aged 2-4 years old

AD WETHERBYS.indd 122

19/01/2024 14:09


EDUCATION • PROMOTION

DIGITAL INNOVATION The dynamic role of a digital coach at Halcyon London International School Wo r d s F AY E E L L I S

I

n the ever-evolving landscape of education, technology has become an indispensable tool for both teachers and students. At Halcyon London International School, we recognise the transformative power of digital tools, and I’m lucky enough in my role as Digital Coach to work alongside amazing teachers and students every day to explore creative and innovative digital tools. As a highly collaborative school, Halcyon allows numerous opportunities to use technology in the most effective ways possible and for teachers to share and amplify best practice. We like to take risks and experiment to find new ways to engage students and enhance learning, and our tech-savvy students are always extremely willing to experiment and push the boundaries. In the last year, we’ve redesigned a wide range of learning activities to include virtual and augmented reality, 3D design, AI and robotics. We’re also always looking for ways to enhance day to day classroom practice through

the use of technology, and I work closely with teachers and our fantastic Learning Coach to make learning personalised and accessible for all students. The best thing about my role at Halcyon is how varied it can be. One day I might be team teaching in Maths, helping students to use digital journals to record their learning through text, video and audio, and on another day I might be collaborating with Art teachers to explore ways that AI can play a role in the process of creating art. We’re very excited about the potential of AI in education, but we also want to make sure that we’re taking a thoughtful,

“Halcyon allows numerous opportunities to use technology in effective ways"

critical approach to the ways in which we use it across the curriculum. Some of the most effective uses of AI that we’ve seen have been where students use it as part of a broader project or process. For example, they might use AI tools to help spark creative ideas in Design, to generate ideas for story settings and characters, or to model different scenarios in Individuals and Societies. We’re also keen to develop AI Literacy across the curriculum. One of the most exciting things we’re working on this year is a school-wide Innovation project, where a team of us is exploring what Innovation means and how we can continue to innovate as a school community. With my focus on technology, I’ll be researching and trialling innovative approaches to assessment that leverage the power of AI. It’s an incredibly exciting opportunity to rethink assessment and ensure we’re preparing students for the future by making them critical, capable users of technology as well as giving them a wide range of skills in areas like communication and collaboration. A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

HALCYON AVTL.indd 123

123

19/01/2024 14:09


aim for higher things House Competition Cup est. 1930s

Independent Boys’ School (7-18 years)

Book your visit warwickschool.org/key-dates

AD WAWICK PREP.indd 124

19/01/2024 14:09


EDUCATION • FOCUS

S P A C E T O

LEARN & GROW How Cranleigh Schools encourage pupils to discover their passions

C

ranleigh Schools cover an area of almost 300 acres of classrooms, studios, theatres, workshops, sports facilities and beautiful countryside in the Surrey Hills. Pupils enjoy the freedom to discover their passions, surrounded by green space. Our schools all share the motto Ex Cultu Robur ("from culture comes strength"). It’s the phrase that underpins our approach to providing an holistic education with a wealth of opportunity designed to allow pupils to discover themselves. Across all three schools we provide an inspiring and nurturing environment. Strong academics are supported by a huge range of co-curricular activities, providing a tailored educational journey that supports each child to flourish both individually and as part of a dynamic community. We aim to prepare all Cranleighans for global citizenship and equip our pupils to operate effectively in an increasingly more diverse and inclusive wider society. We put the experience of each individual child at the heart of everything we do. At Cranleigh children are encouraged to give their best in the classrooms and explore opportunities where they can contribute to the wider school community. Teamwork, empathy, resilience and a sense of service are traits we aim to foster. At our senior school, we pride ourselves on providing a breath-taking range of opportunities in a school small enough for everyone to know and support one another, so that every pupil in our care can flourish. Our culture aims to nurture in pupils the core human qualities that enable communities to

“By the time they leave us they are resilient and independent young people” ALL IMAGES: PULIPS AT CRANLEIGH

thrive and celebrate individuals. Cranleigh is home to motivated, passionate students who are ambitious for their future. Our reputation for A-Level results is excellent, and we have an impressive track record of helping students to gain places at top universities in the UK and around the world. Whether students join us from Cranleigh Senior School or from another school, the individual talents of every student are celebrated and valued. Pupils are always encouraged to take leadership roles across all areas of school life as they discover their voice and their independence. By the time they leave us they are resilient, balanced and independent young people. Our hope is that Cranleighans grow to recognise their privilege and go out into the world ready to give back and help to create meaningful change. A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AVTL_CRANLEIGH.indd 125

125

19/01/2024 14:09


G r o w i n g

EVIDENCE A major long-term study will provide important data on both UK education and growing up during and after the pandemic

W

e are surrounded by ‘pop’ surveys – headlinegrabbing findings that make lively news but often don’t give us much in the way of reliable information. Good then to have a major longitudinal study into education, beginning this year and designed to provide a solid base of evidence about what it’s like to grow up in the here and now. ‘Five to Twelve’ is being undertaken by the National Centre for Social Research and has been commissioned and funded by the Department for Education (DfE). There will also be collaboration with the National Children’s Bureau and National Foundation for Educational Research. The study of primary and early secondary education runs over a five-year period. Importantly, data from the longitudinal study will be gathered from independent schools as well as the state sector. Longitudinal studies are, of course, a very different beast from their snapshot cousins as Jules Allen, Senior Researcher on ‘Five to Twelve’, explains. “The main benefit of a longitudinal study as opposed to a single

wave (which we call a cross-sectional study) is that, because we collect data at repeated intervals over time, researchers who use the dataset can identify developments and changes in the population that we’re studying,” she says. “You can look at causation rather than just correlation.”

GATHERING DATA Longitudinal studies require careful design. “We definitely do not start these studies with what we want to say, we start with what we want to find,” says Jules Allen. What is under the spotlight here is understanding more about education outcomes and inequalities – why some children do better than others and the multiple factors shaping these outcomes.

“Importantly, the longitudinal study will span not just the state sector, but independent schools”

The groundwork for ‘Five to Twelve’ began in summer 2022 and a ‘dress rehearsal’ took place in spring 2023. While many longitudinal studies begin by randomly sampling postcode files, the target here is specific – children in schools – so both studies began with the DfE central database of all children in school. That database was then used to randomly select children via their schools. As study parameters include insights into the independent sector (where there’s no such central database), the research team asked independent schools to opt in. From there, they were able to gather a random sample of pupils for the study. For ‘Five to Twelve’ participating children have annual cognitive exercises until Year 6, when they respond to questions. For their parents, there’s a mix of face-to-face and online or phone surveys annually. Teachers are asked for input too, with an additional element where headteachers respond to describe school ethos, culture, and so on. This body of evidence gathered over time requires buy-in and commitment from all those involved. Jules Allen says they are delighted so many have responded so positively. “People are quite enthusiastic. In

126 A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

PANDEMIC FOCUS.indd 126

19/01/2024 14:10


EDUCATION • FEATURE

‘FIVE TO TWELVE’ MONITORS PROGRESS AND AREAS SUCH AS WELLBEING

particular, we’ve found that children really enjoy the cognitive exercises. And teachers too – despite how busy they are – we have found that they respond to the survey.” We should be grateful to these thousands of participants for their time because their input will provide a seam of really useful data in the public domain. It might be used to draw comparison with earlier or later surveys to see differences over

time, or to gain closer insights into different educational experiences – and educational inequalities. It will also give us insights into areas such as wellbeing. Then there is the impact of Covid – never far from the surface in any current debate. “All of the children who will participate will have lived through Covid,” says Jules Allen. “Although we can’t compare Covid with past studies,

we can look at outcomes and differences.” In a world of ‘pop’ surveys, such carefully gathered study results will surely be worth the time and effort involved. In a little over five years’ time, findings will shine a light on the longer-term impact of pandemic restrictions on our children. This will inform future thinking on how to manage both ingrained inequality and events that impact young people’s access to school. A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

PANDEMIC FOCUS.indd 127

127

19/01/2024 14:10


AD ROSEMEAD PREP.indd 128

19/01/2024 14:10


EDUCATION • STUDENT LIFE

Day in the life Flora and Imani, joint Head Girls of Channing School, talk us through a day in their lives

Flora 7:00 – Wake up and make

12:25

sure I have anything I need for school, including my sketchbook!

– Lunchtime! The first 35 minutes are just for eating, socialising and winding down.

7:50 – Walk to school. I

13:00 – It’s Gallery Girls,

could leave later but enjoy spending time with my friends before lessons – maybe finish last-minute homework or do a bit of vocab revision.

8:25 – Form time. Catch up

with the year belows and how they’re feeling, share advice, answer weekly questions and complete our activities. It's time to check in with our form teacher, who is our rock.

8:50

– Off to Spanish to practise speaking, revise the topics we’re learning and play a few games.

10:25 – Break time. Grab a quick snack and meet the Officer team to catch up on upcoming events and any new ideas they would like to implement.

10:45 – Up to the art rooms

to work on my paintings.

my History of Art club where we discuss important questions in the world of Art History.

13:40 – Off to the National Gallery to see one of the paintings we’re studying. One of the great things about going to school in London is all the incredible places right on our doorstep.

15:55

– Rush back for Spanish Debating where we’re discussing the morality of bullfighting.

16:30 – Musical rehearsal

and this year we’re doing Chicago. Lots of singing and dancing – quite the workout!

18:00

– Home for a snack before homework and dinner.

21:30

– Finished everything on my list for today, so I head to the sitting room to watch some TV with my siblings before bed.

Imani 7:15

– Get up and pack my bag. Most important item is special Channing stay-hot mug so I can take advantage of the sixth form centre coffee maker.

Clueless and talk about how it subverts the male gaze.

12:25

– Lunch on the grass looking out over London.

7:50 – Time to set off for school. 13:00 – Time to run the KS3 Feminist Society session – we cover internet-based misogyny, 8:25 – Assembly: we throw

ourselves into 'Jubilate', everyone’s favourite hymn, though sometimes we struggle to get our claps in the right places.

8:50

–English Literature and The Duchess of Malfi, a cracking Jacobean tragedy. Corruption, deception and death – what’s not to love?

10:25 – Grab a bit of coveted flapjack and head to a meeting about whole school reading.

10:45

a bleak but pertinent topic.

13:40 – Maths makes a nice change from essay writing, and we discuss old bands with our teacher in between taxing bits of trigonometry.

15:10

– PE, I opted for yoga this term. After challenging stretches, the last ten minutes are spent in guided meditation.

15:55

– Off to help KS3 pupils at Maths Drop-In – a great avenue for different year groups to interact and get along.

– Free period: I only have two per week so make the most of them! Channing is surrounded by coffee shops, so I head to one to work or read.

– Tea and a biscuit before starting homework.

11:35

20:30 – I stop work

– Enrichment. I opted for Cultural Theory and today we watch a bit of

17:30

to read and watch some comfort TV before bed. A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

DAY IN THE LIFE.indd 129

129

19/01/2024 14:10


EDUCATION FOR TODAY AND TOMORROW

LONDON’S MOST PROGRESSIVE SCHOOL

- Private Education Awards 2023

11+ AND 16+ SCHOLARSHIPS AND BURSARIES AVAILABLE Find out more about life at St Dunstan’s at one of our upcoming open events in the spring. To find out more, please visit www.stdunstans.org.uk Stanstead Road, London, SE6 4TY

AD ST DUNSTANS.indd 130 1 SE Absolutely February 2024.indd

19/01/2024 14:10 19/01/2024 12:33:59


EDUCATION • PARTNERSHIP

Young learners St Philip's School is set to expand its offering into early years

E

xciting times abound for Philip’s School in Kensington. Currently a school for boys aged seven to 13, it has announced its intention to become a school for boys aged four to 13 from September 2024. Not one to shout about its achievements, of which there are many, the expansion into early years has been made by the integration of an existing school building directly opposite the School. For a diminutive Catholic prep school of around 100 boys founded in 1934, St Philip’s reputation belies its size. It is one of the few remaining schools to operate as an independent charitable trust, which is all the more unusual in an independent school market that is increasingly dominated by large commercial organisations. Rather than chasing a return for investors, St Philip’s puts the provision of a firstclass education for the benefit of its pupils at the fore of all its decisions. Remarkably, and reflecting the charitable ethos perfectly, financing for the costly new initiative was achieved solely through the generosity of the St Philip’s community under the guidance of expert development director James Underhill. James’ work spans many a well-known school development project and he believes this success hinged on the singular parent body. "Not only is St Philip's a remarkable school with true character, but it is nurtured and loved by a community of motivated and inspiring parents." St Philip’s is clearly very keen on its independence, and rightly so. That said, perhaps its greatest triumph is its exceptionally rare ability to combine an ambitious curriculum – unashamedly classical, liberal, and challenging in scope

ABOVE AND BELOW: BOYS AT ST PHILIP'S SCHOOL

“Almost half of the very happy leavers since 2019 moved onto Eton, Harrow, City of London or Dulwich ” and style – in central London with an atmosphere that is light, optimistic and refreshingly fun. The results speak for themselves, with almost half of the very happy leavers since 2019 moving onto Eton, Harrow, City of London or Dulwich. ‘We understand boys and we want to give them the room they need to play, stretch, and grow. We have 30 acres of wellmaintained fields by the River Thames for lots of football, rugby, hockey, cricket, tennis and athletics, and we keep the atmosphere

upbeat and lighthearted. This allows us to be a real academic dynamo; knowing the boys are happy and feel secure, we can be ambitious in the classroom and are able to challenge them to truly explore their capabilities. The boys do well and enjoy a proper childhood along the way.' The future is clearly a bright one for this confident, optimistic, and well-adjusted school. stpschool.co.uk A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AVTL_ST PHILLIPS SCHO_FEBRUARY 2024_ABSOLUTELY LONDON.indd 131

131

19/01/2024 17:22


SIXTH FORM

2:0

Times are changing, and so are 16+ priorities. Sixth Forms are responding with innovations in learning spaces and ambiance. We speak to two London schools

S

ixth form used to be more of the same, only harder. There was the odd concession, such as a common room where you could culture mould in unwashed coffee cups and a general easing of the ‘eyes front’ classroom approach. Something truly radical has emerged in recent years, as schools respond to Gen Z’s needs and future work and life ambitions. At Emanuel School in Battersea, the newly extended Sixth Form Centre reflects increased student numbers over the past five years. But there’s a bigger evolution, says Head of Sixth Form Julia Johnson. “We seek to cater to the interests and passions of this diverse, bright and ambitious group of young people.” The new building, opened in October 2022, is a three-storey space overlooking the playing fields. It’s for the sole use of sixth formers, which is an “an important privilege”. She says much thought went into the design. There’s a lecture space for talks by

students and visiting speakers, quiet areas for private study, seminar spaces in which groups hold meetings. The building also houses key staff offices, including the Director of Higher Education and Head of Careers and Employability. Unique touches include a huge abstract mural in the café painted by a recent leaver. “This embodies for me the importance of our students having ownership of the space,” says Julia Johnson. Students were involved during redevelopment and afterwards, with the sixth form council meeting staff regularly to provide feedback on décor and layout. The council also worked to develop a code of conduct for all who use the spaces. “Students have also enjoyed putting forward bids for items to enhance their enjoyment of the space, from the easily achieved (pot plants and a board games corner) to the rather less practical (darts boards and a full-size snooker table),” says Julia Johnson. She says students were clear about what they wanted, with comfort and quiet top of the agenda, along with space for collaboration. Resulting designs, such as the cushioned

JULIA JOHNSON WITH EMANUEL SCHOOL STUDENTS

study booths for four students, have proved very popular, as have the ‘boardroom’ type tables, portable flip charts and whiteboards. “These were in constant use as the A levels approached and students wanted to explain concepts and test each other during their revision.” It goes without saying that the new building has lots of sockets and excellent wireless connectivity. Light and location are both critical and, informed by World Health Organization findings on how green space improves mental health, each floor has sofas beside the floor-to-ceiling windows that overlook the playing fields and common beyond. The café is located at the heart of the ground floor and is a hub. “It has a crucial pastoral role,” says

132 A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

SIXTH FORM.indd 132

19/01/2024 14:13


X X X X / X• X XXXX EDUCATION FEATURE

“Emanuel sixth formers have enjoyed putting forward bids for items to enhance their space, from the easily achieved (pot plants) to rather less practical (full-size snooker table)”

Julia Johnson. The fact that the Sixth Form Centre offers work, eating and social spaces is important – so too the direct access to careers advice. Head of Careers and Employability Eloise Maclean believes its vital. “It has enabled me to provide every pupil in the lower sixth with a one-to-one careers meeting and to offer a drop-in service,” she says. There’s a board where she publicises internship and other opportunities, while the lecture space is also useful for the school’s extensive programme of HE and careers events. Emanuel’s Sixth Form Centre adds up to a thoroughly forward-looking space, helping young people work hard, stay social and be prepared for the onward journey. Eaton Square Sixth Form – part of the wider London Park Schools group within

the Dukes Education family – has been deliberately designed as a transition between school and university. It feels more adult and with additional freedoms, but also plenty of ongoing pastoral care. Head of Sixth Nathan Mountford says the design reflects emerging trends in contemporary workplaces and university settings, with “dynamic breakout areas” throughout to give flexibility in learning and meeting. “Central to our academic environment is the library, which, aside from being a sanctuary for quiet study, doubles as a venue for students to receive academic mentoring,” he adds. Spaces have been designed to encourage group working – it’s all part of a much wider mission to use every part of this wonderful A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

SIXTH FORM.indd 133

133

19/01/2024 14:13


KGPS - Absolutely Education - half page - v2.pdf 2 16/01/2024 17:00:44

C

M

Y

CM

MY

CY

CMY

K

Find your future at Alleyn's Co-educational excellence for children aged 4-11

#AllWeCanBe

alleyns.org.uk

100504-Alleyns-Junior-School-Advert-190x134.indd 1

AD KEW GREEN - ALLEYNS JNR.indd 134

12/01/2024 15:36

19/01/2024 14:14


EDUCATION • FEATURE

EATON SQUARE SIXTH FORM OFFERS SPACES FOR COLLABORATION AND DISCUSSION

“At Eaton Square Sixth Form, the ‘Ideation Room’ is a student favourite – with whiteboard desks, state-of-the-art digital tools, and specially designed zones for brainstorming” Georgian building to enhance learning for students and fire up their ability to collaborate. “A favourite of our students is the ‘Ideation Room’,” says Nathan Mountford. “This cutting-edge space boasts whiteboard desks, state-of-the-art digital tools, and specially designed zones for brainstorming.” Cleverly, this is seamlessly integrated with the university and HE advisory section. He says student feedback has been and remains crucial. “We rely on pupil voice to adapt and refine our facilities, ensuring they align with their needs and aspirations.” The ‘Ideation Room’ was one of their suggestions. They have also voted to green up the spaces, resulting in many more plants throughout to make the environment healthier and homelier. “Investing not only in academic facilities but also in wellbeing enhancements, such as the integration of greenery, underscores our commitment to holistic

student welfare. In short, while we draw from contemporary trends, it’s our students’ insights that shape our facilities’ evolution.” All teaching spaces are designed to prepare students at Eaton Square Sixth Form for what comes next, with rooms that enable seminar-style working – these are small-scale for personalised and bespoke learning. Breakout spaces are also utilised for teaching, says Nathan Mountford. “Here, students can delve into more nuanced discussions, mimicking the seminar-like sessions they’ll encounter at university.” Technology is never far from any modern sixth form environment and digital resources are much in evidence, along with smart boards and dedicated projection areas to foster more dynamic sessions. The trusty common room space is here – a place for social and down time and seen as critical for student independence

and wellbeing. “This space isn’t merely an area to relax; it’s pivotal for students’ mental health, allowing them to unwind, bond, and build relationships outside the confines of a classroom,” says Nathan Mountford. There’s a student-led common room committee to keep things on track with facilities, layout and standards, he adds, “truly making it their own”. Students at Eaton Square have access to playing fields and also a local gym. But, says Nathan Mountford, the social connectivity element is seen as even more critical. “They frequently organise movie nights and wellbeing evenings, fostering a sense of community.” There are regular coffee mornings and lunches to act as a bridge between Year 12 and Year 13 students. “These gatherings aren’t just for the students – they also provide an invaluable opportunity for senior staff to engage with them in a relaxed setting.” With bespoke facilities at schools such as Emanuel and Eaton Square, the sixth form feels like it has come of age. This has to be good for both the wellbeing and success of an age group that faced more social deprivation than most during the pandemic and will encounter so many challenges in the rapidly shifting landscape of higher education and workplace. A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

SIXTH FORM.indd 135

135

19/01/2024 14:13


Leading Independent School for Girls aged 4 -18

Leading Independent School for Girls aged 11-18

Open Events 2024 Open Events 2024 Junior School Open Morning Tuesday 19th March Senior School Open Mornings Thursday 14th March Wednesday 19th April Wednesday 19th June

Senior School Open Mornings Tuesday 12th March Wednesday 1st May

To book 4+ and 11+ open events, please scan here:

To book 11+ open events, please scan here:

registrar@fhs-sw1.org.uk

registrar@fhs-nw1.org.uk

www.fhs-sw1.org.uk

www.fhs-nw1.org.uk

020 7730 2971

AD FRANCIS HOLLAND - HALCYON.indd 136

020 7723 0176

registrar@fhs-nw1.org.uk

020 7723 0176 www.fhs-nw1.org.uk

19/01/2024 14:14


AD BASSETT - SCHOOL RHYT.indd 137

19/01/2024 14:14


INTERNATIONAL | COEDUCATIONAL | DAY AND BOARDING SCHOOL | AGES 3-18

ACHIEVE

Our tailored approach to learning is designed to unlock enthusiasm, skills, and potential.

Academic success Bilingualism & soft skills Global opportunities Sign up to an open day to discover our bilingual school in London: www.cfbl.org.uk

OPEN MORNING MARCH 16, 9:30 a.m. DISCOVER MORE: TASISENGLAND.ORG | UKADMISSIONS@TASISENGLAND.ORG | +44 (0) 1932 582316

Find your future at Alleyn's Co-educational excellence for children aged 11-18 We offer scholarships and bursaries

#AllWeCanBe

alleyns.org.uk

100505-Alleyns-Senior-School-Advert-190x134.indd 1

AD TASIS - CFBL - ALLEYNS SNR.indd 138

12/01/2024 15:31

19/01/2024 14:14


RPPS - Absolutely Education - half page - v2.pdf 3 16/01/2024 17:01:14

C

M

Y

CM

MY

CY

CMY

K

AD RAVENCOURT - PANGBOURNE.indd 139

19/01/2024 14:14


AD CALA HOMES.indd 140

19/01/2024 14:15


PROPERTY

SINCLAIR ROAD, LONDON W14 ASKING PRICE

£1,200,000

his newly renovated, stunning 1,016 sq. ft.

maisonette in the Brook Green T split-level Conservation Area offers an exquisite blend of classic elegance and modern comfort. Featuring high ceilings, Victorian bay windows and ornate cornicing, the décor is light pastel walls, sleek wood floors and original Victorian tiles. There are two generously sized bedrooms and two bathrooms, plus a 30-foot garden at the rear.

THE PROPERTY MOMS

020 8106 9646 thepropertymoms.co.uk

A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

PROPERTY OPENER.indd 141

141

19/01/2024 14:15


AD DEXTER FLETCHERS.indd 142

19/01/2024 14:27


AD DEXTER FLETCHERS.indd 143

19/01/2024 14:27


Experience exceptional customer service that exceeds your expectations with Robbin & Celine, your personal property consultants. We empower you with sound advice and bespoke, multi-channel marketing to significantly increase your exposure to potential buyers.

FOR SALE

Sinclair Road, W14

£1,200,000

Newly renovated stunning 1,016 sq ft split-level 2 bedroom, 2 bath Victorian terraced maisonette with 30ft private garden. Share of Freehold.

SALES 0208 106 9646

AD PROPERTY MOMS.indd 144

TO RENT

Havilland Mews, W12

£6,500 pm

Exceptional 5 bedroom, 5 bath modern 2,500 sq ft townhouse with two parking spaces in award-winning gated mews Berkeley Homes development. Fully Furnished.

LETTINGS

SEARCH

Get Your FREE Valuation today!

hello@thepropertymoms.co.uk

www.thepropertymoms.co.uk

19/01/2024 14:27


PROPERTY • PARTNERSHIP

L I V I N G

W E LL How later living at Auriens in Chelsea brings health benefits

S

ince opening in September 2021, Auriens Chelsea, the collection of luxury later living residences now available to buy in the heart of Chelsea, has been redefining later living with its exquisitely designed properties and unparalleled services helping to enrich the lives of its residents. Auriens’ pioneering holistic health and wellness facilities includes a MediSpa, swimming pool, gym, fitness studios and sauna while its restaurant, Culford’s, offers a menu of the freshest seasonal ingredients. Auriens offers a bespoke 12-month wellness programme which results in significant health benefits to residents. A recent study of 20 Auriens residents aged 65 and over revealed more than three quarters (79%) reported a reduction of visceral fat, while 71% also reduced their waist circumference. Designed to address the underlying causes of any issues rather than simply treating the symptoms, the individualised

wellness programme also resulted in 64% of residents increasing their skeletal muscle mass, 50% reducing their fat mass and 40% recording a reduction of cellular stress. Following an in-depth consultation, each resident at Auriens was given a personalised nutrition and supplement plan, as well as a tailor-made activity programme including physiotherapy and massage, all of which was designed to fit alongside their day-to-day lives and help promote their optimum health and wellbeing. Auriens works with the innovative Kyros Project, a team of highly respected experts in the fields of exercise, nutrition, and human performance. Under careful guidance,

“Unparalleled services help to enrich residents' lives”

residents were regularly monitored throughout the 52-week programme, with innovative point of care testing of a range of biomarkers important for optimising healthspan, such as cellular stress and inflammation, internal (visceral fat) and waist circumference, lean mass and lifestyle, metabolic and nutrition assessments. Gideon Remfry, director of wellness at Auriens, said: “One of the elements that really sets Auriens apart is our world-class health and wellness programmes, and these exceptional results clearly demonstrate how a bespoke and forward-thinking approach to wellness is able to tackle some of the health issues associated with the ever-increasing ageing population within the UK." Alongside market-leading health and wellness facilities, the collection of 56 luxury residences on London’s Kings Road, also offers a wine cellar, salon and barbers, speakeasy bar, library, and 12-seater cinema. auriens.com A B S O L U T E LY m a g a z i n e s

AVTL_AURINS.indd 145

145

19/01/2024 14:17


www.robertholmes.co.uk

Atherton Drive, Wimbledon Common

£5,950,000

Queensmere Road, Wimbledon

£3,650,000

A unique and charming detached 1920’s house on a plot of 0.6 acre with planning permission granted for a separate 2 storey detached dwelling Reception/dining hall, drawing room, sitting room, conservatory/dining room, kitchen/breakfast room, chapel style study, 6 bedrooms, 4 bath/ shower rooms, extensive parking ER/F

A well modernised house with great lateral space and a large secluded Southerly garden Open plan double reception room and dining room, family room, kitchen/breakfast room, annexe/bedroom 6/gymnasium, 5 bedrooms, 3 bath/shower rooms, OSP and garden storage ER/C

Arthur Road, Wimbledon

St Mary’s Road, Wimbledon

£5,750,000

A substantial and elegant classically styled house with far reaching views in a convenient location Double reception room, 2nd floor family/TV room, study/bedroom 5, kitchen/breakfast room, 4 bedrooms, 4 bath/shower rooms, formal garden, double garage, OSP ER/D

£3,149,000

Newly built contemporary house built to a high specification in a highly regarded road Reception room, kitchen/dining/family room, cinema room, gym, study/ bedroom 6, 5 bedrooms, 5 bath/shower rooms, garden, OSP ER/B

Wimbledon Village Office Sales: 020 8947 9833 Lettings: 020 8879 9669 AD ROBERT HOLMES.indd 146

19/01/2024 14:18


Drew Pritchard THE COLLECTION

© Eleri Griffiths Photography

AUCTION | NEWBURY | 5 & 6 MARCH Enquiries: housesales@dreweatts.com 01635 553 553

dreweatts.com NEWBURY | LONDON

IBC NORTH DREWEATTS.indd 240205 - Absolutely London - Full 150 Page - Pritchard.indd 1

19/01/2024 18/01/2024 14:18 11:52


Co-ed Independent Senior School

I WAS MAIDA

ARTIST THE MAIDA DIFFERENCE

An innovative and nurturing environment where every child is encouraged to find and fulfil their potential.

Gardener Schools Group, one family, one vision, four schools

MAIDA_VALE_FP_ABS_FEB2024.indd 1 Absolutely North Magazine Spring 24 - DESIGNER.indd 2

www.maidavaleschool.com

19/01/2024 12/01/2024 15:53 16:23


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.