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The woman who helped usher the interior design industry into full flower in the United States was prolific in putting out ideas that will help freshen up today's interior design business. Look at our latest Designer Monthly, Interior Design: Look Forward by Looking Back to Dorothy Draper.

Did you ever have a problem designing small spaces?  Take a look at how top interior designers solved this common problem in our latest Designer Monthly, How to Design Small Spaces at the Kips Bay Decorator Show House.

 

 

 

 

Entries by Jay Johnson (148)

Friday
Mar292013

Here's How to Make Your Own Creative Inspiration "Aspire List"

What I love about working in the creative arts is that we're constantly surrounded by inspiration! Everywhere you look, there are beautiful interiors, phenomenal jewelry pieces, clever feng shui room arrangements, and gorgeous weddings. And if they're not in real life, then they're in the pages of magazines or online.

As someone who is creative, I'd like to give you a suggestion. Yes, you, dear reader! You're here on our site because you're either a student taking one of our creative adult distance learning courses, or you have a passion for one or more of the creative arts. 

Now that I have your attention, I'd like to suggest that you make an Aspire List ... or an Aspire File... or both.

The foundation for all creative pursuits is to be an excellent looker. You must observe all things in life through the critical perspective of your creative interests. If you aspire (there's that word!) to be an interior designer or to design your own interiors, then you must get in the habit of noticing every interior you encounter. If you aspire to be a jewelry designer or to design your own jewelry, then you must get in the habit of noticing every jewelry item you encounter. And so on.

And as you're actively looking, you need to be "working" (see Pablo Picasso's quote on inspiration, above). Take photos, make a sketch, or take notes - but look at what inspires you, record it, and begin to analyze it. That's the work you need to begin doing to help invite inspiration to come to you.

The Aspire List and the Aspire File is part of this process. But rather than merely responding to things you encounter during your daily movements, like walking down the street or eating at a restaurant, you're actively seeking out great things to look at that will help provide you with the seeds for future creative inspiration. Here's how to proceed.

  1. Research and make a list of 10 amazing professionals in your area of creative interest, e.g., 10 wonderful interior designers, 10 astounding jewelry designers, 10 incredible wedding planners.
  2. Include in your list the names of the professionals to which you aspire to be like (!), their website addresses, and their blog addresses.
  3. To begin, your Aspire List should have one blank page devoted to each person. Your job is to start to fill each page, then continue adding pages. Fill them with what? With your creative, critical thoughts regarding each person on your aspire list and her or his work. 

Example: You love Ms. A's interior design work. Start making a list entitled What I Love, then begin to make a numbered list. Ms. A's love of abstract art. Her use of exotic woods in her wall treatments and furniture choices. The way she ignores minimalism and packs her interiors with tons of visual details. And so on. To make this list, of course, requires that you haunt Ms. A's website and blog, you do online searches for her work, and you seek out her work in interior design magazines. 

 

Your Aspire List for each inspirational person should get you thinking creatively and critically of the elements you love/like/aspire to. But it could also contain some critical thoughts in the vein of, "I love the way Ms. A uses color, but instead of going bold primary colors in most of her rooms, I prefer combinations of startling complementary colors, with one color popping against the other." Or "I'm not a fan of the bed in this bedroom that Ms. A designed. I'd go with a four poster, made of metal, with an overall Paul Evans sculpted steel to go with the industrial edge of the rest of the room."

Observe the work of the people on your Aspire List, but think critically and insert your own observations. What if you were fascinated by jewelry design, and you had Canadian designer Ezra Satok-Wolman on your list. You made note of his stunning Mandarin ring (below). What would you do the same? What would you change? How would you improve it overall? What twists of your own would you like to make?

Practice looking at the work of professionals, combined with critical thinking and your own creative reactions, can help you approach your own work from a fresh perspective. Go back to your Aspire List often, and seek out your chosen pros and their work on a regular basis - and maybe add others you can follow to the list. You'll find yourself being inspired, brimming with creative ideas, and developing a stronger sense of discernment.

And what's an Aspire File? It's like an Aspire List, only it's with items you find in magazine articles, in color ads, in brochures, in catalogs, and other resources you can clip and file away for future reference. Attach a large sticky note with your observations of each item in your file, including what you love, what you might do differently, and even what you don't like.  

Have fun looking. Have fun creating. And have fun being critical and thoughtful about the creative work of others!

 

Sheffield School began as an Interior Design school in 1985, and then expanded our course offerings to train people in other design-related fields, including Feng ShuiWedding and Event Planning, and Jewelry Design. With thousands of active students and more than 50,000 graduates, Sheffield has trained more design professionals than any school in the world.

  • Request a free Sheffield School catalog describing our distance education courses.
  • Subscribe to the Sheffield Designer newsletter.
  • Tuesday
    Mar192013

    Wedding Planning Details: Drinks at the Reception

    The Sheffield School's Complete Course in Wedding and Event Planning gives us a great excuse to keep researching the latest trends in weddings. I'm noticing that many weddings are starting to feature one or more "house cocktails" that guests can indulge in at the reception. The venue is usually well stocked with serving stations that contain signage explaining the drink choices and attractive displays of ready-to-serve selections. It's easy, convenient, and gives the wedding planner an opportunity to tie in the overall wedding theme with the beverages. Example: a Mexican-themed wedding gets an assortment of South of the Border cocktails.

    From our friends at 100 Layer Cake, the top wedding and inspiration blog, I've selected a few reception drinks tables that illustrate this trend. Remember that today's weddings are all about good styling and details, and even drink signs will carry out the details found in signage, invitations, and other print throughout the wedding and reception venue. Click on each photograph to see more photos from the wedding.



    Thanks to 100 Layer Cake for their beautiful photographs, posts, and wedding and event inspiration. 100 Layer Cake is a unique, comprehensive wedding and event planning resource for and by thoughtful, crafty modern women. Their vendors, projects, weddings, resources, sponsors, and marketplace are hand-picked and thoroughly researched with the hope that every single one is a truly unique addition to both your wedding and your planning process. Visit the 100 Layer Cake website today.

     

    If you're interested in learning more about wedding planning and decor, we encourage you to explore the Sheffield School, New York, NY. Sheffield began as an Interior Design school in 1985, and then expanded our course offerings to train people in other design-related fields, including Feng ShuiWedding and Event Planning, and Jewelry Design. With thousands of active students and more than 50,000 graduates, Sheffield has trained more design professionals than any school in the world.

  • Request a free Sheffield School catalog describing our distance education courses.
  • Subscribe to the Sheffield Designer newsletter.
  • Monday
    Mar182013

    Have a Creative Business or Hobby? George Lois Has Some Advice for You ...

    An interior designer friend of mine shared a book with me that he said "changed my life," and I feel it's my duty to tell every Sheffield student - and everyone in a creative profession or with a creative hobby - to pick up a copy of Damn Good Advice (for people with talent!) by George Lois. Mr. Lois was the ad guy behind the rise of popular brands like MTV, Tommy Hilfiger, and VW, and his graphic design background (think the classic covers of Esquire magazine that are in MOMA's collection).

    The book is wonderfully simple and jarring, with 120 great tips that are actually mini wake-up calls to become more creative and to work better and smarter with our talents. Here are a few nuggets.

    • Most people work at keeping their job, rather than doing a good job. If you're the former, you're leading a meaningless life. If you're the latter, keep up the good work. 
    • When you're presenting a Big Idea, be prepared to answer dumb questions. There's usually somebody in every meeting that just doesn't get it. Before the last word comes out of their lips, tear their doubts to shreds.
    • You can be Cautious or you can be Creative (but there's no such thing as a Cautious Creative). A creative thinker must be fearless. If you're more tentative than decisive, if you're more cautious than creative, you'll never be an innovative business leader, and certainly not a great visual communicator. A Cautious Creative is an oxymoron.

    If you're pursuing a creative hobby or a creative profession, you need the inspiration of books like this one to help give you a jolt and replenish your "juciness." Lois, whom many refer to as the original Mad Man (as in the TV show Mad Men), rankles at the comparison because he believes in a much better work and personal ethic than shown in the TV show. I highly recommend this book. You'll come away inspired and ready to create great work!

     

    If you're interested in learning more about creative pathways for hobbyists and professionals, we encourage you to explore the Sheffield School, New York, NY. Sheffield began as an Interior Design school in 1985, and then expanded our course offerings to train people in other design-related fields, including Feng ShuiWedding and Event Planning, and Jewelry Design. With thousands of active students and more than 50,000 graduates, Sheffield has trained more design professionals than any school in the world.

  • Request a free Sheffield School catalog describing our distance education courses.
  • Subscribe to the Sheffield Designer newsletter
  • Tuesday
    Mar122013

    What Well-Dressed Beds Are Wearing: Divine Duvets

    In our last post, you heard that Sheffield has completely redone and updated the six Unit DVDs for The Complete Course in Interior Design. There are hours and hours of visits with top interior designers - to learn their tips and secrets, of course - and a host of trips to antique dealers, furniture and accessory showrooms, and lots of surprises. One of our trips was to the luxury bedding experts at Casa del Bianco, and they told us some great ways to dress a bed. The duvet is key to a beautiful bed, but you can vary the way you style bedding with a duvet quite a bit. Here are just a few of the many bed dressing and linen quality tips we learned.

    • It's preferable to keep bed linens white or off-white, with a border or embroidery adding a pop of color that coordinates with the bedroom decor. Look at the Lamu duvet and sham set from Serena and Lily in the top photo. The duvet and its coordinating sham add bold coral notes to the room. But note that there's only a hint of color at the edging of the coordinating pillow case and top sheet. That's because sheets require more frequent washings, usually once a week. A duvet is laundered much less frequently, and the duvet and shams are more apt to keep their colors vibrant and unfaded over time.
    • There are a number of ways to display your duvet (hey, that rhymes!). As in the photo above, you can use the duvet as a traditional American bedspread and pull it up most of the way to the head of the bed. Go all the way for a look that hides the sheets but emphasizes bed pillows, shams, and throw pillows.

    • You can be less "tidy" with your duvet placement for a more casual look, as in the loose half-way-up-the-bed folding of the Caroline duvet from Serena and Lily in this bedroom for two teenage girls. In the background, there's the more relaxed bunching (for beds without a headboard, the effect is neater, with the duvet folded down in half or in thirds and draping over the end of the bed, just below the mattress/box springs assembly). The bed in the foreground shows the duvet pulled up to the head of the bed, revealing one side of the duvet to full effect and presenting an alternative appearance. When a duvet is folded in halves or thirds, however, you can also get a crisp look by neat folds - in the photo above, the duvet is folded in a way that maximizes the showiness of a two-sided/reversible duvet, so if your duvet has two coordinating patterns, folding and draping is a great way to show them off.

    • A more tailored, European approach to the duvet is to tuck the sides neatly under the mattress and box springs assembly as shown in the photo above. Here, West Elm's beautiful Lotus Pink Linen Cotton Blend duvet is tucked in a stylish way, with a jaunty angle to the top fold. This is a great approach for platform beds, beds with tall footboards, and more traditional and antique beds, like four-posters. A good variation: tuck in only the bottom edge of the duvet and let the ends drape over the sides of the bed. 
    • Be sure to always carefully measure your mattress width and the height of your mattress/box springs assembly so you can purchase a duvet that's large enough to drape or tuck over the sides of the bed. The last think you want is for your duvet to look like it's a little napkin stuck on top of the bed, barely covering it.
    • A final treatment (not pictured here) is rolling the duvet up and having the rolled fabric at the bottom of the bed. 
    • Hate duvets? This works for bedspreads and quilts, too, or try layering quilts under a duvet for plays of texture, pattern, and color. Have fun dressing your bed!

     

    If you're interested in learning more about wedding planning and decor, we encourage you to explore the Sheffield School, New York, NY. Sheffield began as an Interior Design school in 1985, and then expanded our course offerings to train people in other design-related fields, including Feng ShuiWedding and Event Planning, and Jewelry Design. With thousands of active students and more than 50,000 graduates, Sheffield has trained more design professionals than any school in the world.

  • Request a free Sheffield School catalog describing our distance education courses.
  • Subscribe to the Sheffield Designer newsletter. 
  • Tuesday
    Feb262013

    NJ Wedding Photographer's Best Proposal Ever Contest

    Photograph by Je Revele Fine Art Photography

    Wedding time is in the air. I just received a clever promotional email from Je Revele Fine Art Photography in New Jersey, and to help promote their Facebook page and increase their "Likes," they're running a fun contest: What's the Best Marriage Proposal Ever? The Je Revele folks remind us that more engagements happen in the period between Thanksgiving and Valentine's Day, and they're running this contest to help us take advantage of all the proposals from family and friends that we have fresh in mind. Here's what the contest is all about, and note that to see the full rules, you need to click on the photographer's Facebook link and "Like" them. (Hey, it's good to show a little "Like love" for such a fun contest!)

    Photograph by Je Revele Fine Art PhotographyFIRST. Submit the story of your proposal or a friend's story with a photo (any photo) to info@jerevele.com. Don't forget, to qualify, they need (1) your story, and (2) any photo of the couple emailed to info@jerevele.com. They could be married 50 years, 10 years, or newly engaged. No restrictions there.

    SECOND. Je Revele will narrow submissions down to a few nominees.
     
    THIRD. Now, they'd like you to vote on your favorite proposal. Ask your family and friends, to vote too. The more, the merrier.  For the couple with the most votes (LIKES), the winning client shall receive a $500 studio credit at Je Revele.
     
    Click here for contest details. 
    To submit your story, email info@jerevele.com 

    Voting will end on Midnight, February 28, 2013.

     

     

    Sheffield School began as an Interior Design school in 1985, and then expanded our course offerings to train people in other design-related fields, including Feng ShuiWedding and Event Planning, and Jewelry Design. With thousands of active students and more than 50,000 graduates, Sheffield has trained more design professionals than any school in the world.

  • Request a free Sheffield School catalog describing our distance education courses.
  • Subscribe to the Sheffield Designer newsletter.
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