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Should You Hire a Designer or a Decorator?

“Should I hire an interior designer or an interior decorator?”

That’s where we left off in the last post. Here’s the deal, you have to decide what type of professional you’ll need based on your individual project requirements. That might not sound very helpful, but here’s what you don’t want to happen:

You don’t want to hire someone and find out half way through the project that they don’t possess the specific skills needed to complete your project to your expectations.

This doesn’t mean that you have to know how it should be designed (that’s why you’re hiring someone). But you do need to have a pretty good idea of what the final outcome will be. Not exactly what it will look like, but how you anticipate your room will feel and function.

For example,

  • Do you need help picking materials and colors? Or deciding on drapes and accessories?
  • Is your entire room or house in need of a complete overhaul?
  • Is it strictly a cosmetic overhaul?
  • Will it require some demolition, construction, electrical, or plumbing work?

You have to determine your needs beforehand so that you can make a good hiring decision. If your project requires other professionals (like an architect, contractor, plumber, etc…) then you need to know that the person you hire to design your project understands how to navigate that entire collaborative process. You will need a designer.

You will NOT be able to determine if a person is a “designer” based on what they call themself OR their services!

Let’s face it, people don’t know what they don’t know. This is true in all industries, but especially in Interior Design, because there’s so much confusion about the difference between design and decorating. Even amongst professionals.

Many people who exclusively provide decorating services don’t even know that’s not really design. They think that what they do, decorate, is ALL there is to design. That they are the same thing.

They don’t know there’s an entire design process and that they are just providing the last step of that process. Therefore they innocently continue to refer to themselves as designers.

To complicate things further, many actual designers, those who know and employ the process, often take on decorating projects but they still call themselves “designers” and their services “design.”

For whatever reason, they do not draw any kind of distinction between the two, confusing the issue even more. This is probably because it’s so hard to articulate the subtle difference between the terms. Obviously – as evidenced here by my ramblings!

It’s my hope, that if you get only one thing out of these ramblings it’s this:

Not all projects require the entire design process. Sometimes they just require the last step…decoration.

If that’s the case, then a person’s title really doesn’t matter. A designer or a decorator could get the job done. Without your own understanding of your project needs, you will not be able to assess your potential designer’s ability to complete your project.

If you determine that your project does require a designer, be sure to ask your candidates about their process…this should tell you everything you need to know! If they don’t have one, or much of one, they’re NOT you’re guy!

Of course you’ll also want to carefully consider your candidates’ credentials and previous work, but the most important factor is how well you connect with the person you ultimately end up hiring.

The journey is just as important as the destination.

And speaking of credentials…you might be wondering if it’s important to hire a design professional that has the 3E’s (Education, Experience, Examination)?

Again, it depends on your project, but all other things being equal, I’d recommend choosing the 3E’s every time!

I don’t know about you but I’m ready to move on to a new topic! Like maybe the actual design process itself…

If you’d like to get more interior design REVelations, leave your email above! Not to mention that you’ll get a FREE outline of the REVdesign Process…can’t beat that!

REV-Up! -Kim

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Designer vs. Decorator – Yes, There IS a Difference

After all that differentiating between the terms design and decorating, we’re still left with the questions:

“Is there a difference between an Interior Designer and an Interior Decorator?

And if so, which one should I hire?”

Since we determined that there is in fact a difference between design and decorating, I think it’s safe to say that “yes” there is also a difference between a designer and a decorator.

In an earlier post I stated that:

Designers design and decorators decorate.

But now that we’ve thoroughly explored the difference between design and decoration, I think it makes more sense to say:

Designers design AND decorate, while decorators just decorate.

When we defined design, we said it’s a process and that decorating is the final step in that process.

Given this, I would define a designer as someone who engages in that process and concentrates on the project as a whole. Someone who is equally concerned with the functional aspect as well as the look of the entire space.

Through the use of concept, floor plans, elevations, photos, samples, details, renderings, etc…A designer will present you with a complete vision and a plan to achieve that vision (subject to your approval) before your project ever even begins.

A decorator would be someone who concentrates on applying products and materials to the room and is pulling it all together as they go, taking it one piece at a time.

In other words, they’ve not gone through the design process and are not operating from a cohesive plan. They are more concerned with the individual elements of a room and how they look.

Let me just say for the record:

There is nothing wrong with this approach IF, as the client, you are comfortable with it. Your project might not require all the steps of the design process. That’s up to you to decide.

So should you hire a designer or a decorator? We’ll wade into that next time. So stay tuned!

Or better yet – sign up with your email above to have all posts delivered straight to your inbox!

REV-Up! Kim

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Sharing Design Philosophy

I would like to interrupt my regularly scheduled THREAD to share a very interesting article from Fast Company, entitled

Pinterest’s Founding Designer Shares His Dead-Simple Design Philosophy” by Sahil Lavingia.

I know this is not the post that I promised this week, however I believe that Lavingia’s insights about design dovetail nicely with what we have been discussing the past few weeks.

Although my views are specific to interior design, and his come from a web design perspective, Lavingia hits several of the same points that I have been trying to convey about design in general. You can read the whole article here (and I highly recommend that you do).

The following are snipets from the article that I consider most relevant to our discussion:

  • “Design shouldn’t be designated a specific function or industry.”
  • “Design is shrinking the gap between what a product does and why it exists.”
  • “Stop thinking about design in terms of …visual style; it is about the product as a whole. Designing is figuring out the purpose of your product and how you orient everything else around it.”

[For our purposes, the “product” is our interior space].

  • “Good design is using reason to make decisions and to solve problems.”
  • “Every man-made object you use in real life is designed, from forks and desks to keyboards and grocery bags and are the culminations of many hours of thinking and many more hours of trial and error.” [Emphasis mine]

Remember in my previous post I talked about design, as a verb, being a thoughtful (aka thinking) process which culminates in the design, as a noun, of a space].

There is also a really great point made in the “Comments” section below the article that states:

“Good design is something you don’t see but miss when it’s not there.” by Juleeane Zett

Well said…I couldn’t agree more!

I hope you’ll take the time to read the entire article for its really insightful perspective on design. Next week Wednesday* I’ll resume with our current THREAD and attemp to answer what’s the difference between a designer and a decorator…I have a feeling I’ll be referring to this article!

*NOTE: This was originally posted Wednesday, Mar. 14, 2012 on my old blog.

 

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Design or Decorate – The Sequel

Can the terms “Design” and “Decorate” be used interchangeably?  We’ve already established that they are, all the time.

Should the terms be used interchangeably?…I say no.

Last week I explained the difference between the two when used in the verb tense.  Today let’s take a look at the difference when being used as nouns, which is even more elusive.

Take these two statements:

I love the design of that room!

OR

I love the decoration of that room!

They seem pretty much the same right?  Both terms are referring to the final outcome of that room. But there is a slight difference in that design really means the culmination of the entire design process. Whereas decoration is more reflective of the individual products, finishes, and materials that have been applied to the room.

But let’s face it, nobody (including me) is going to take the time to analyze which of these two things they’re really trying to say. In noun form the difference is so minimal that it’s almost non-existent anyway. Plus you would have to know if there was even a design process involved to begin with.

It is possible to decorate a room, on the fly, without going through any real design process at all…I wouldn’t recommend it. It’s the harder way to do things. But it’s possible.

So what have we learned?…

Design (v.) is the BIG Picture process of planning that results in the overall design (n.) of a completed space.

Decorating (v.) is the final step of the design process. It is the physical execution of the details as specified by that process. The application of individual products, finishes, and materials to a space results in its decoration (n.).

The difference between the terms is very subtle, but different none the less!

Which leads us to our next big question:

“So then what is the difference between interior designers and interior decorators?”

Check out the next post as I attempt to answer. And be sure to sign up with your email above so you don’t miss a thing!

REV-Up! Kim

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Finally Explained…The Difference Between Design & Decoration

Can the terms “Design” and “Decorate” be used interchangeably?

Well they are, ALL the time. So a better question to ask is,

Should the terms be used interchangeably?”

In my youth my answer was definitely NO, but that’s because I defined the 2 terms as people “designer/decorator“, and my definition of a designer was someone who possessed the 3-E’s (education, experience, examination), and a decorator was someone who did not.

So according to this limited view, only designers designed.  Decorators decorated. End of story.

However, as I’ve gotten older and wiser, I’ve realized that this is a very narrow-minded stance of the interior design profession. So what’s my answer now?…

It’s still NO, but for completely different reasons. As I mentioned in my last post, in order to really understand the difference between the terms,

We must first understand the “what” as opposed to the “whom”.

Let’s dissect:

Both words can be used as nouns AND verbs. The verb decorate changes form to decoration or decor when used as a noun. However, the word design stays the same in either case which only adds to the confusion because the word design is often improperly substituted for both the verb and noun tense.

So let’s look at the verb tense first. You could say:

I am going to design my kitchen.

OR

I am going to decorate my kitchen.

Both make sense, but they do not mean the same thing. In both, the words represent the action that will take place, but it’s that action that’s different.

To design is to engage in the creative, thoughtful process of planning.

This process includes, but is not limited to, such actions as:

  • dreaming
  • brainstorming
  • measuring
  • inventorying
  • surveying
  • analyzing
  • drawing
  • detailing
  • specifying
  • budgeting
  • researching
  • shopping
  • purchasing
  • bidding
  • scheduling
  • building (or hiring someone to build) and believe it or not…
  • decorating!

If you are designing something you are performing most, if not all of these tasks. So the term design is never an adequate substitute for any of these actions individually.

To decorate is to actually implement the final details of that plan, completing the design process. It is the last phase where someone is physically placing items or applying finishes and materials in a room.

You could decorate a pillow by sewing beads on it – applying the beads to the pillow. Assuming that you bought that pillow at a store, you did not design that pillow. You decorated it. You might have even designed the decoration (noun) that you applied to the pillow. But you still didn’t design the pillow.

The same premise holds true when dealing with a room. If you actually engage in the process of planning out your entire room and making decisions beforehand, you are designing. If you just start with shopping and then applying the things you bought or picked out, you are strictly decorating.

Make sense?…maybe. But now that you have a better understanding of the difference between the terms as verbs, it will be easier to grasp the even more elusive difference as nouns.

Be sure to catch the next post in this series as I attempt to explain…and after that we’ll tackle the difference between the “whom” – designers vs. decorators.

REV-Up! Kim

 

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Designer vs. Decorator – Is There A Difference?

A designer is someone who designs.

A decorator is someone who decorates.

Isn’t that clear as mud? If it were that easy then I wouldn’t need to write this post!

The reason the difference is so hard to explain is because everybody has a different definition of what interior design really is! And most of the time we are trying to describe the two terms as “people” (designer or decorator) which as we’ve already discovered is not easily done.

We interior designers tend to fall back on the explanation that a “designer” is someone who possesses the 3E’s (education, experience, examination) and a “decorator” is someone who does not. But guess what?…

Most “decorators” do not agree with that premise!

So we can’t just go around making this claim without any concrete evidence to back it up. That’s why the definition of “Interior Design” becomes so important. Even if you asked a 3E designer what services they provide, many would describe them exactly the same way as a non-3E/decorator would.

Just because a person went to design school doesn’t change the fact that they may be practicing the exact same way as someone who didn’t.

Sure, they elevated their credentials and increased their capabilities, but they also made the CHOICE to focus their practice on providing services that don’t necessarily require those capabilities.

Don’t get me wrong…as a 3E designer myself, I am not saying that our credentials don’t mean anything, because they most certainly do! All I’m saying is that –

The 3E’s alone do not give us exclusive rights over the entire profession known as “Interior Design”.

But they should give us the ability to distinguish ourselves, differentiate our services, and allow us to practice to the fullest extent of our capabilities — Capabilities that actually have some crossover into the practice of architecture.

I’ve come to realize over the years…

The terms “designer” and “decorator” MUST be defined NOT by “who” but by “what”.

If you can make sense of the what, then the who becomes an entirely different discussion.

This whole “Design vs. Decorate” thread is about sorting through all of that confusion and trying to make sense out of the whole debate.

Now if you’re a casual interior design enthusiast, you might be reading this and asking yourself, “What confusion? What debate?” But keep reading and you’ll soon learn. There are all kinds of fights out there in this country concerning this very topic.

Interior Design legislation is being proposed and opposed in almost every state.

It’s an ugly argument for sure, but one that I personally think is just a BIG misunderstanding! So hopefully you’ll stick with me as I try to paint the BIGGER picture of what “Interior Design” truly is and how it actually affects to you.

At the end of the day I believe that “Interior Design” is a HUGE arena and there’s room for us all!

Sign up with your email above to stay up to date with the latest discussions. And be sure to check out my next post…

“Design or Decorate – Which Is It?” – we’ll be discussing “what” design really means!

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What Is An Interior Design-ist?

I don’t know if you’ve ever noticed but interior designers get REALLY bent out of shape when you refer to them as “interior decorators” – oh the horror!

Early in my marriage and in my career I was at my Mother-In-Law’s house for some kind of get-together. She was introducing me to some of her guests and this is exactly what she said:

“This is my daughter-in-law, Kim.  She’s an Interior…oh what do you call it?…an Interior Designist?Is that right Kim?  (turning back to her guest) She doesn’t like to be called a decorator!”

Ha! It was in that moment that I realized I had been so adamant to my friends and family that I was a designer, NOT a decorator, that I had scared them into making up words! Not only that, but after trying to explain the difference countless times, they still, truly did not understand.

The problem was, and still is, that a good, succinct explanation of that difference does not exist.

Oh sure, you can find many definitions and explanations floating around out there, but absolutely NONE of them have ever been compelling enough to convince people outside of the design profession that there is indeed a difference.

The most popular argument seems to be that a designer is someone who possesses the 3E’s (Education, Experience, Examination). If you don’t have the 3E’s then you are NOT a designer, you’re a decorator.

But this position falls apart pretty quickly when challenged by non-3E designers who also refuse to be called decorators (as evidenced by the forced changes to existing ID legislation going on all over the country).

The fact is that there IS a difference, and unfortunately it is not as simple as just claiming the 3E’s! The lines are so blurred that it is going to take some serious unraveling to clear things up.

So let’s go ahead, jump right in, and start this conversation of “Design vs. Decorate”.  Buckle up!  Cuz it’s gonna be a bumpy ride!

REV-Up! Kim

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Wait A Minute…You Said There Are No Rules!

By this point you might be thinking: Wait a minute Kim!…

According to your own rules, there’s nothing that you ALWAYS have to do to make a room work. There are “no rules.” But now you’re saying that you ALWAYS have to use these Principles of Interior Design.

Wouldn’t that mean Principles are really just Rules?

No.  And here’s why…

Because a “rule” is a definitive action or non-action, like you must “always DO something” or you should “never DO something.”

The Principles of Interior Design are not actions, they’re feelings.

Feelings that are created through design. Feelings that can vary slightly or greatly between people and cultures. There are no set-in-stone rules for creating these feelings.

However there are several tools that are used in many different ways to evoke them.

These “tools” are better known as “elements” and there are infinite ways to incorporate and combine these elements in order to design a successful space. I’m sure that you are familiar with them, but just in case…

Elements of Interior Design:

Line, Space, Shape, Texture & Value, Color & Light

(We’ll revisit these Elements in more detail in future posts).

Another important tool in the design process, perhaps the most important tool, is the CONCEPT.

You see in a design project, all of the Principles will exist to some degree, but they will not exist equally. You must choose which ones to emphasize and which elements you will use to achieve that emphasis. All of your choices and design decisions should be determined by your conceptwhich simply put, is the main idea for your space.

When dealing with your personal home,

Your Concept = Your Style.

So the very first thing you should do BEFORE starting any design project is to determine your concept. Define your style!

I hope this all makes sense. What it really boils down to is that all well designed spaces have a sense of order to them. A purpose.

Order can only be achieved by emphasizing certain Principles, determined by your Concept or Style, using the Elements of Design.

The possibilities are endless! That is why I say there is nothing that you ALWAYS have to do, or should NEVER do.

Literally – There are NO RULES!!!

I hope you’ve enjoyed REV’s “Rules” of Interior Design series. Please check out our next series Design vs. Decoration…it’s a good one!

Or sign up with your email above to have new posts sent directly to your inbox. That way you won’t miss a thing! Thanks!

REV-Up! -Kim

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It’s ALL About Balance!

It really is ALL about balance – in design and in life! Think about it for a minute…

Can you think of anything where balance is not an important element?

It is essential in

  • Music
  • Food
  • Politics
  • Finances (you know – the dreaded balanced budget)
  • Art and Photography
  • Sports
  • Stories and Books
  • I could go on, but you get the point.

You always hear self-improvement gurus talking about balance in your life.

Balance between work and home, spiritual and physical, financial and social. You’ve probably experienced that guilty feeling when seeing these six spokes on the “wheel” of life and having to admit that you’re woefully out of balance in at least one of these areas (in my case more)!

Balance is also critical to our physical well-being. You know if you have an inner-ear imbalance it will make you feel dizzy or “off”. That’s why,

Balance is hands-down THE most important Principle of Interior Design.

Without it your room will just feel “off”.

Balance is an inherent quality within all of the other Principles of design in that they just don’t work without it.

For example:

We discussed that a successful room should have common elements to tie everything together (Unity) but in order for it to not be boring, you have to introduce something unexpected to liven it up (Variety). And that’s the trick – there has to be balance between Unity and Variety. Too much of either one is unsettling.

Every room needs a focal point, but it also needs a counter-point to balance it out. Otherwise the room will feel “heavy” on one side. If elements are arranged in such a way that they are out of balance, this will disrupt the rythm of the room as well. Your eye will get stuck on anything that’s out of balance, throwing off the sequence or flow of the room.

You’ve no doubt heard designers say that the scale or proportion of something isn’t right. That’s because there are two or more elements in the room that are not relating well to each other. They are not balanced.

In design, balance is all about “visual weight” and every item and element in your room has this weight.

Therefore, everything in your room needs to be arranged so that the visual weight is evenly distributed or balanced.

There’s a reason why you shouldn’t put a big, bulky, dark-colored sofa next to a petite, little, wooden, white chair. They are not in scale with one another and would feel unbalanced.

If the two are next to each other, assuming there are no other elements to help balance them out, your mind processes them like they are on a teeter-totter.

The visual heaviness of that sofa makes it feel like that little chair is about to be catapulted into outer-space. Not exactly a place you’re going to want to sit!

So, I hope I’ve given you a glimpse into how imperative Balance is to the design of your space.

Through this blog we will dive in deeper with more examples of how to achieve visual balance and we will explore the different kinds of balance: Symmetrical, Assymetrical, and Radial in future posts.

The next post will wrap up our series (for now anyway) on the “Rules” of Interior Design. But before we go there, I have a feeling that some of you might be thinking that I’ve totally contradicted myself!

On one hand I claim that there are no rules, and on the other I turn around and spout off all of these Principles saying they must be used to have a successfully designed room.

You’re probably wondering why I don’t consider these Principles to be “rules”. Especially if I’m saying that you must ALWAYS use them…

And didn’t I just have a whole post where I went-off on designers making ridiculous assertions that you must “always” do such-and-such?

Well yes I did…but of course I can explain why I seem to be saying two different things, and why Principles are not actually rules. So check out the next post where I explain it all. Until then…

REV-Up! -Kim

 

 

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Principles of Design – The Closest Things to Rules

Today I want to talk a little more about the Principles of Interior Design that I eluded to in my last post when I revealed my Top 5 Rules of Interior Design.

In case you’ve forgotten, here are the first three:

#1 – There are no rules!
#2 – Rules are meant to be broken.
#3 – The closest you’ll come to “rules” for interior design are the Principles of Design.

Let me back up a little here because while I don’t believe in any “Rules of Design”, I do believe in the certain “Truths” of design.

These truths are better known as “Principles of Design” and a space cannot be successful without them.

So given their importance, let’s discuss what these Principles are and what they mean. Depending on where you look, this list can vary slightly. For our purposes I will list the Principle and any other name that I’ve seen used to describe it.

  • Unity (Harmony) / Variety (Contrast)

I can give you a really bland definition of Unity like the “…arrangement of elements in an artistic work so that each contributes to the main theme“* but that’s not how I would actually explain it, or how you probably want to hear it. And I’m pretty sure that you basically already get what it means. But just in case, I’ll put it this way:

Unity means that there has to be something in your room (and/or your whole house) that ties everything together. Some sort of common element. (We will explore the various Elements of Interior Design in future posts).

However, even though it’s the opposite of Unity, Variety is also included in this Principle because without it your space will be BORING!!!

In other words, don’t make everything “matchy-matchy”!

  • Rhythm (Arrangement)

The way in which you arrange elements in a space should create some kind of rhythm, or sequence. Rhythm is most often achieved by repetition and contrast. Both will create movement. When done properly, they keep the eye moving throughout the space in a pleasing and rhythmic sort of way.

  • Emphasis (Focal Point, Hierarchy)

Now I know you’ve heard of that all-important “focal point”. Every room’s gotta have one! There can be more than one (especially if there’s more than one way to enter the room) but they should not compete with or take away from the main focal point. That’s where Hierarchy comes into play. Every element within a space has a certain level of importance which you dictate through your design decisions. I like this explanation:

“…hierarchy occurs throughout an arrangement and reflects a complex series of decisions, which grant the totality its character. Hierarchy grants the room its key moments of importance.“* Again, not how I would have put it, but much more eloquent!

  • Scale & Proportion

These two are by far the most complex Principles and although they are different, in interior design we often use the terms interchangeably. I think that’s okay because both are about comparing at least 2 objects. With Scale you are dealing more with comparing size, and with Proportion you are dealing with mathematical ratios…WAKE UP!

I know this is turning into a snooze fest! The important thing to remember is that objects in a space ARE going relate to each other. It’s up to you to make sure that they relate properly, and the best way I know to do that is through the Principle of Balance…

  • Balance

By far, this is my FAVORITE Principle, and I don’t think you can use any of the other Principles successfully without it.

That’s why it has its very own “Rule”:

Rule #4The MOST important Principle of Interior Design is BALANCE.

I will explain this in much more detail in my next post.

One more thought that I want to leave you with,

When you design your room, you are designing an experience. You are NOT designing for a photo shoot.

A room is not meant to be stared at from a fixed point. It is made to be experienced sequentially. You and your friends and family will be walking around in the space and viewing it from a variety of different angles. It’s important to remember this so that you create a pleasing atmosphere, not just a pretty vignette.

That right there is probably the biggest difference between Design vs. Decoration (click here to start exploring that difference).

I hope you’re enjoying this series for REV’s “Rules” of Interior Design. To have more Design REVelations delivered straight to your inbox, leave your e-mail above and receive your FREE printable of REVdesign’s 3 Stage | 6 Phase Process.

REV-Up! -Kim

*Quotes taken from “The Interior Dimension: A Theoretical Approach to Enclosed Space” by Joy Monice Malnar and Frank Vodvarka