Interior Design and Human Behavior

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Yet even this most unfashionable of arts was swept in the middle of the last century by the same Bauhaus-derived tastes that made post-WWII modernist buildings so tedious. Only recently has golf course architecture begun to revive the styles and values of its golden age in the 1920s.

Hidden in plain sight, golf courses are among the few works of art readily visible from airliners; a golf architecture aficionado can often identify a course's designer from 35,000 feet, I know I can. Assuming an average of a quarter square mile apiece, America's 15,000 golf courses cover almost as much land as Delaware and Rhode Island combined.

Golf architecture philosophy isn't terribly elaborate compared to the thickets of theory that entangle most museum arts, but one thing all golf designers assert is that their courses look "natural." Growing up in arid Western Washington, however, where the indigenous landscape is impenetrable hillsides of evergreen trees, I never quite understood what was so natural about fairways of verdant, closely-mown grass, but I loved them all the same.


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Many of us are quite reluctant to become an interior designer and there are different reasons. These reasons affect the capability of any person and they need to choose any other career. Things have changed a lot in the past few years. It is very important to see what is happening around us and what measures we need to take to stay in the game. Let's see what the common misconceptions, that haunt and tie us, are.

1. Beginners think that it is not a rewarding career 2. They will not be able to continue it for a long time 3. They don't have much respect in the society 4. Their work is not appreciated 5. No proper institutes for learning 6. Difficulty in securing a job

A few misconceptions have been listed above that most of the designers have in their mind. Actually most of them are not alarming anymore. Designer and artists have many things in common and they portray certain characteristics that are different from engineers and doctors. You can just tell them they are destined to become an artist or a designer. Now, let's have a look at the points raised above and how they actually don't even exist.


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A science or an art

Do you think of interior design as a science or an art? Well, it might be a quiet difficult question; but in fact a combination of both. Interior design can be defined as an applied art where creativity skills and technical knowledge provide solutions. These solutions are applied to achieve a more convenient habitat.

Interior design provides answers that are both functional and attractive and enhance the quality of life. Interior design reflects and interacts with the cultural background and traditional heritage of the occupants.

The design process itself runs through a systematic and interactive methodology to create an innovative and functional design solution whereby the needs and resources of the occupants are satisfied.

To achieve a well designed environment many elements contribute together thus innovating the overall theme e.g. color, light, texture...etc. interior design provides solutions for residential, commercial, educational, healthcare, office and hospitality projects consequently affecting our daily way of living or in other words; our behavior.


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