Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s so great is you don’t need someone from VA with set views. You can get a designer from Milan, Paris, Berlin, Prague, Mexico City. You get much much higher end design and far more unique.
No offense, but I didn't see anything special in the links. What am I missing? Is there an amazing picture I didn't see in the links? A designer's portfolio you'd recommend? Honestly asking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's fine for you to send a text at 7:45pm on a Friday evening and also think it's fine for her to wait to respond until working hours Monday morning. She's not even doing that to you - she's saying she'll send you the revised contract Saturday morning. Get over yourself. 40 hours of work is very small beans.
I agree with everything you said above but I found the “I ask that you please respect my family time over the weekend” unnecessarily chastising- like in what way is she expecting me to invade her space this weekend?
This. She didn't need to say that unless OP demanded a response that weekend. That said, if I email or text a professional on a Friday evening or weekend, I make it clear I don't expect them to see it or respond until the work week. Sometimes the only time I have to respond is when they aren't working.
Also, for that much money an hour I do expect stellar service and good communication. I don't expect to hear from them on weekends, but if I am signing a contract, I want to know you are on the ball and not flaky. OP< I would move on.
Anonymous wrote:What’s so great is you don’t need someone from VA with set views. You can get a designer from Milan, Paris, Berlin, Prague, Mexico City. You get much much higher end design and far more unique.
Anonymous wrote:If you had emailed instead of texted she could have waited until Monday to respond. That’s the issue with texting professionals - it mixes casual friendly expectations with professional norms.
It sounds like you may be coming off as a demanding client who wants to spend the bare minimum. If you have a proposal and a rough idea of the cost of your project, you can absolutely scrap her and move on to someone new. However I think that would be rude now that you’ve asked her to invest more time on the 2nd proposal. If you part ways I’d at least pay for her time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a massive rip off. Go on instagram. There are these fantastic European and Australian interior designers with proper architecture degrees. It’s a one time fee, they go over your floor plan and solve everything. Don’t let some botox primadonna sell you Visual Comfort made in PRC rubbish
Ahh it's you again. Hello! Welcome back! You are so lovely and we are glad you've made it to this thread.
Convince me that you add value. I have had horrible experiences with the local ones. The recommendation were so pedestrian.
+1. Not to mention you can easily find the Schumacher or Quadrille wallpaper you’d like on IG and order some “for the trade” highland house furniture from a company in NC
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t want to give away my architect but they are brilliant and Australian and it will cost you less than 10 hrs of Ms. $400 interior decorator to redo the whole floor plan and pick stuff out.
Google it. Interior design is overpriced in the US. It’s also very formulaic. Just like the kitchens: Poggenpohl or Boffi are a fraction of what we pay here in Europe. On the mass market end of things, my bespoke room is one out of the UK but there are amazing young architects all over the world
This poster is so full of shit.