Author: Jane Valentine
Ability Hearing and balance
24 24 October, 2021Sarah Mirowski talks to Foundry students
23 23 October, 2021Our Sarah Mirowski gave a wonderful talk to the Foundry students about entering the industry.
Sarah was inspiring, encouraging, and energetic in the way she delivered the talk, with fabulous feedback from the students about how they could really relate to her experience. Sarah related it to her own personal journey and emphasised how there is more than one way to enter into the design industry and the most important factor is to follow a career in something you really love doing.
The graduating class at Foundry, Hobart was taught by Jane Valentine and Claire Bramich. Jane made a few comments about the group before they graduated.
“I’m so proud of our Interior Design class about to complete their Foundry journey – inspired and industry-ready. They also inspire us as professionals on a daily basis. Look out for this talented, hard-working bunch of designers.”
Integrated design talk / Bentley Workspaces
23 23 October, 2021Evoking a sense of solidity
15 15 June, 2021Conforming to trends: You may as well just tick a bunch of boxes.
11 11 May, 2021Is design becoming a series of boxes to tick, where the way space is assembled responds not to its time and place but instead to dated conventions that no longer truly resonate with client needs? At what point did design simply become a matter of choosing a trend and ticking boxes, with no correlation or responsiveness to the context and the intended function. As designers, we must ask ourselves, have we applied our expert knowledge to its full potential? Have we paused and listened with an unbiased tone to what our clients need from us?
Of course, having constraints to work within is important, because it is within these that good design functions. But effective constraints are the ones that consider ergonomics and anthropometrics, they are the ones that consider inclusivity, spatial function, and the site, so that project delivers on all levels, not just superficially. Constraints should not be what inhibits us from designing, they must not be a series of boxes to tick, that reference trends rather than the key requirements given to us. We must learn to work within the scope of each project while also pushing ourselves and our designs to be more responsive to individual client needs, not wants.
Imagine designing without limitation by refusing to partake in trends, ones that are picked from a preconceived shelf of what a space should be as opposed to what it could be. Imagine always applying an integrative approach, one that values the opinions of key experts in the field, by allowing them to be present in the initial stage of the project so that questions can be asked, and solutions offered. Because only by pausing, adapting, and really listening to our client and individual experts can we create truly individual, meaningful, and compelling spaces.
Valentine interiors + design.