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Tiaki Objects Conservation
About
What We Do
Our Community
Blog
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Tiaki Objects Conservation
About
What We Do
Our Community
Blog
Contact
About
What We Do
Our Community
Blog
Contact
“Ka mau tonu ngA tAonga tapu o ngA matua tipuna
Koinei ngA tAonga tuku iho”

“Hold fast to the treasures of the ancestors, for they are the treasures that have been handed down to us”

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The Blog
View fullsize ✨ 10 YEARS IN PRIVATE PRACTICE ✨

This month marks 10 years since I took a deep breath, threw caution to the wind, and backed myself.

On 15 February 2016, I had my ABN ready to go, registered my business name, “activated” my website, and
View fullsize Gratitude, reflection, and a full-circle moment.
Ten years on, we’re deeply thankful to the Australian Sports Museum - our very first client at Tiaki Objects Conservation.
That first project sparked an enduring relationship and entrusted us wit
View fullsize Established in 1913, the Edward de Courcy Clarke Earth Science Collection is a living record of more than a century of geological research, teaching, and discovery in Western Australia.
As part of the Community Heritage Grants (CHG) program, we were
View fullsize Te Rā is an oceanic sprit sail - the only remaining historic Māori sail in the world. Woven from harakeke, it carries ancestral knowledge of voyaging, innovation, and connection that first brought people to Aotearoa.

The return of Te Rā to Aotearoa
View fullsize Over the years, our private clients are among those we value most. Kanohi-ki-te-kanohi - face to face - matters. It’s where trust is built, stories are shared, and care begins.
many treasured taonga have come into our care, from heirloom toys a
View fullsize As communities across Victoria face the ongoing impacts of bushfires, our thoughts are with everyone affected - families, volunteers, and the local organisations working to protect people, places, and histories under incredibly difficult conditions.
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We acknowledge the traditional custodians of the lands where we work and live, and whose cultures and customs continue to flow through the lands and waters, nurturing community, and all peoples who stand here with us. May we pay our respects to past and present Elders, whose memories, stories, and knowledges continue to hold the hopes of generations to come.