Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of interior designers are using the term improperly so check. The majority are home decorators or interior decorators. Big distinction. Interior designers went to school for it. Interior decorators are usually bored women that have a knack for decorating.
I swear there is one person on this board who paid for an interior design degree but this absolutely does not matter. Nobody cares whether you call yourself one or another. If you’re hiring someone and you feel a degree is called for, check for one. This term distinction is not real.
The term distinction is actually 100% real. My firm would never hire a decorator and it absolutely means something if you work for a firm that does legitimate work. A decorator usually has no understanding of architectural drawings/details, finish schedules, codes, MEP requirements, project management etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of interior designers are using the term improperly so check. The majority are home decorators or interior decorators. Big distinction. Interior designers went to school for it. Interior decorators are usually bored women that have a knack for decorating.
I swear there is one person on this board who paid for an interior design degree but this absolutely does not matter. Nobody cares whether you call yourself one or another. If you’re hiring someone and you feel a degree is called for, check for one. This term distinction is not real.
Anonymous wrote:Disrupt The Disorder
IG: @disrupt.the.disorder
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand how the in store ones are work.
Do they only tell you what fits from their store, so you end up with a house that looks straight out of their catalogue?
Anonymous wrote:A lot of interior designers are using the term improperly so check. The majority are home decorators or interior decorators. Big distinction. Interior designers went to school for it. Interior decorators are usually bored women that have a knack for decorating.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand how the in store ones are work.
Do they only tell you what fits from their store, so you end up with a house that looks straight out of their catalogue?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.1970dogwoodstreet.com/
I haven’t actually used them, but one of the founders is a friend of a friend. So I keep looking at their site and thinking that I should try. I think they work with a lot of the things people already have?
I am dying over the picture that shows someone's feet/legs. That's some attention to detail, right there.
https://www.1970dogwoodstreet.com/design/yet-another-kids-bedroom/
It’s supposed to be an ugly “before” picture
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're wrapping up an engagement with Havenly and it's gone pretty well. There are different tiers but we select the option that costs about $150 or so per room.
I don't want to share more than what folks are interested in but I'm Happy to answer questions about the experience.
Did you go in with the intent of purchasing everything they suggested (and did you)? Did they work to incorporate your specific floor plan and any existing pieces?
I received a gift of a Havenly design package and what I really need is inspiration for a cohesive vision in my bedroom, with suggestions for things like lighting, area rug, some additional pieces and layout with my existing bed, things like that, but not an overhaul of everything out of the box. But I like the idea of looking for some of what I want on my own because I like vintage and antique furniture, one-of-a-kind art, etc. The site doesn't give you a great sense for what the process is like, even from reading the reviews.