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Designing a room is like putting a puzzle together. From optimal rug sizing to how high to hang lights, here are formulas for living rooms None of these pointers are etched in parquet, but even experienced designers largely stick to them. And they’ll help you map out a great living room. When laying out seatingContinue Reading The post THE RIGHT WAY TO LAY OUT YOUR LIVING ROOM: THE 7 RULES first appeared on Melissa Penfold. The post THE RIGHT WAY TO LAY OUT YOUR LIVING ROOM: THE 7 RULES appeared first on Melissa Penfold.
over a year ago

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More from Melissa Penfold

HAVE YOU PREORDERED YOUR COPY OF MELISSA’S NEW BOOK YET?

In her best-selling book, Living Well By Design, Melissa Penfold addressed the basics of interior decorating.  Now she turns her attention to demonstrating what a powerful force design can be in boosting our physical and emotional well-being in her newest book, ‘Natural Living By Design’, Vendome Press, launches in April and available for Preorder now,  Continue Reading The post HAVE YOU PREORDERED YOUR COPY OF MELISSA’S NEW BOOK YET? first appeared on Melissa Penfold. The post HAVE YOU PREORDERED YOUR COPY OF MELISSA’S NEW BOOK YET? appeared first on Melissa Penfold.

5 months ago 51 votes
20 Interior Design Trends That Will Define 2025

Among the predictions in the annual decor trend report: Sprawling sectional sofas will yield to tidier seating, pastel hues to rich earthy shades. Oh, and…make way for murals. There will be a greater sense of playfulness and a push towards individualism. Limited budgets and a desire to move away from homogeneous high-street collections will meanContinue Reading The post 20 Interior Design Trends That Will Define 2025 first appeared on Melissa Penfold. The post 20 Interior Design Trends That Will Define 2025 appeared first on Melissa Penfold.

6 months ago 63 votes
THE MOST DEFINING PIECES OF FURNITURE FROM THE LAST 100 YEARS

How do we define furniture? It might seem like a silly question, but it’s one that kept coming up in October of last year, when, in a conference room on the 15th floor of The New York Times building, six experts — the architects and interior designers Rafael de Cárdenas and Daniel Romualdez; the Museum of Modern Art’sContinue Reading The post THE MOST DEFINING PIECES OF FURNITURE FROM THE LAST 100 YEARS first appeared on Melissa Penfold. The post THE MOST DEFINING PIECES OF FURNITURE FROM THE LAST 100 YEARS appeared first on Melissa Penfold.

7 months ago 63 votes
THE THINGS YOUR WEDDING GUESTS SECRETLY DESPISE

There’s a fairly well-established list of the things that wedding guests detest. Overly long ceremonies. Overly long toasts. Cash bars. A bachelor or bachelorette trip that sends its attendees into credit-card debt. A destination wedding in a remote locale that the couple has zero relationship to and that plunges its guests into further bankruptcy. But what about allContinue Reading The post THE THINGS YOUR WEDDING GUESTS SECRETLY DESPISE first appeared on Melissa Penfold. The post THE THINGS YOUR WEDDING GUESTS SECRETLY DESPISE appeared first on Melissa Penfold.

7 months ago 72 votes
THE MOST THOUGHTFUL GIFTS THAT NO ONE ELSE WILL GIVE

We’re always here to help you find gifts that elicit “you really know me!” enthusiasm, even from the normally taciturn. This year, we aimed higher, aspiring to choose items with such eternal appeal, and of such high quality, that some might become heirlooms—used and loved by both your giftees and subsequent generations. Find our updated,Continue Reading The post THE MOST THOUGHTFUL GIFTS THAT NO ONE ELSE WILL GIVE first appeared on Melissa Penfold. The post THE MOST THOUGHTFUL GIFTS THAT NO ONE ELSE WILL GIVE appeared first on Melissa Penfold.

8 months ago 53 votes

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Doing (and Directing) Great Design Requires Detail Obsession

Every great design has one organizing detail that unlocks everything else, and the best design leaders never stop looking for it. Every good piece of design has at least one detail that is the “key” to unlocking an understanding of how it works. Good designers will notice that detail right away, while most people will respond to it subconsciously, sometimes never recognizing it for what it is or what it does. These key details are the organizing principles that make everything else possible. They’re rarely the most obvious elements — not the largest headline or the brightest color — but rather the subtle choices that create hierarchy, guide attention, and establish the invisible structure that holds a design together. Sometimes those key details fall into place right away; they may be essential components of how an idea takes its form, or how function shapes a thing. But just as often, these keys are discovered as a designer works through iterations with extremely subtle differences. Sometimes moving elements around in a layout, perhaps even by a matter of pixels, enables a key to do its work, if not reveal itself entirely. Without these organizing details, even technically proficient design falls flat. Elements feel arbitrary rather than purposeful. Visual hierarchy becomes muddy. The viewer’s eye wanders without direction. What separates good design from mediocre design is often nothing more than recognizing which detail needs to be the key — and having the skill to execute it properly and the discipline to clear its path. Seeing the Key in Action Recently, a designer on my team and I reviewed layouts for a series of advertisements in a digital campaign. We’ve enjoyed working with this particular client — an industrial design firm specializing in audio equipment — because their design team is sophisticated and their high standards not only challenge us, but inspire us. (It may seem counter-intuitive, but it’s easier to produce good design for good designers. When your client understands what you do, they may push you harder, but they’ll also know what you need in order to deliver what they want.) The designer had produced a set of ads that visually articulated the idea of choice — an essential psychological element for the customer profile of high-end audio technology — in a simple and elegant way. Two arrows ran in parallel until they diverged, curving in different directions. They bisected the ad space asymmetrically, with one arrow rendered in color veering off toward the left and the other, rendered in white, passing it before turning toward the right. This white arrow was the key. It overpowered the bold, colored arrow by pushing further into the ad space, while creating a clear arc that drew the eye down toward the ad’s copy and call to action. It’s a perfect example of old-school graphic design; it will do its work without being understood by most viewers, but its function is unmistakable once you see it. In reviewing this piece, I saw the key right away. I saw how it worked — what it unlocked. And I also recognized that the designer who made it saw it, too. I could tell based upon his choices of color, the way he positioned the arrows — the only shapes, other than text, in the entire ad — and even the way he had used the curve radius to subtly reference the distinct, skewed and rotated “o” in the brand’s logotype. This kind of sophisticated thinking, where every element serves multiple purposes and connects to larger brand systems, separates competent design from exceptional design. The white arrow wasn’t just directing attention; it was reinforcing brand identity and creating a sense of forward momentum that aligned with the client’s messaging about innovation and choice. The Maturity Trap I’ve often heard it said that as a designer’s career matures, the distance between their responsibility and functional details grows — that design leadership is wielded in service of the “big picture,” unencumbered by the travails of implementation so that it can maintain a purity of service to ideas and strategy. I couldn’t disagree with this more. While it’s true that senior designers must think strategically and guide teams rather than execute every detail personally, this doesn’t mean they should lose touch with the craft itself. The ability to recognize and create key details doesn’t become less important as careers advance — it becomes more crucial for developing teams and ensuring quality across projects. A design director who can’t spot the organizing principle in a layout, or who dismisses pixel-level adjustments as beneath their concern, has lost touch with the foundation of what makes design work. They may be able to talk about brand strategy and user experience in broad strokes, but they can’t guide their teams toward the specific choices that will make those strategies successful. No Big Picture Without Details My perspective is that no idea can be meaningful without being synchronized with reality — as informed by it as it is influential upon it. There is no “big picture” without detail. The grandest strategic vision fails when it’s not supported by countless small decisions made with precision and purpose. No matter how one’s career matures, a designer must at least retain access to the details, if not a regular, direct experience of them. This doesn’t mean micromanaging or doing work that others should be doing. It means maintaining the ability to see how abstract concepts become concrete solutions, to recognize when something is working and when it isn’t, and to guide others toward the key details that will make their work succeed. Without that connection to craft, we become blind to the keys at work — we lock ourselves out of an understanding of the work that could help us develop our teams or ourselves. We lose the ability to distinguish between design that looks impressive and design that actually functions. We can no longer teach what we once knew. The best design leaders I’ve known maintain a hand in the craft throughout their careers. They may delegate execution, but they never lose their eye for the detail that makes everything else work. They understand that leadership in design isn’t about rising above the details — it’s about seeing them more clearly and helping others see them too. Great design has always been about the details. The only thing that changes as we advance in our careers is our responsibility for ensuring those details exist in the work of others. That’s a responsibility we can only fulfill if we never stop looking for the keys ourselves.

a week ago 17 votes
TSUNRISE Incense Sticks by One Studio There

In the brand visual system of the online incense brand “TSUNRISE,” we employ a top-and-bottom zoning design approach to create...

a week ago 13 votes
The Timmy Trap

This is Part 2 of my LLM series. In Part 1, I discussed how in just a few short years, we went from the childlike joy of creating “Pirate Poetry” to the despair that our jobs would disappear. My main message was to relax a bit, as companies abuse the hype cycle to distort what […]

a week ago 22 votes
Albertson’s Reserve by Harcus Design

Albertson’s Reserve offers a range of wines packaged in 4 Litre casks, carefully crafted for everyday convenience. Sourced from South...

2 weeks ago 18 votes