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Caveat Designer: A Few Words to the Wise by Shaye
Eller
It's a strange life, being an interior designer.
Don't
get me wrong. Working in the interior design field is incredibly
rewarding. Design is never boring, it's fast-paced, and incredibly varied.
It is an aesthetic, intellectual, and often a scientific challenge.
Interior design has a direct and tangible output - in other words, you can
see the results of your work. This is a world where drawing, shopping,
conferencing and art converge. Wonders are constructed out of thin air at
your behest. Then there is the tactile side of design, with wood,
concrete, wool, silk, vellum paper, polished chrome all being just part of
the job. Design is wonderful, and it will probably take over your
life.
On the other hand, it will probably take over your
life.
I was not prepared for my transformation into Interior Design
Geek once I entered school. It was a bit strange, and a lot confusing. I
wasn't sure if it was supposed to be this way. Well, I'm here to
assure you that the way your life changes as an interior designer is
completely normal, and that you're not alone.
Television- and
film-viewing will be forever changed once you take up interior design. I
can't count the number of times I've been watching one of my favorite
television shows and lost track of the storyline because of the production
design. A fight takes place onscreen, and rather than rooting for one side
or the other, I'm sitting in my living room whimpering at the couch shot
full of bullets holes and shouting, "Not the sofa!" On one of my favorite
science fiction programs, the hero was captured by the villain and held
prisoner in a room with modified Gothic detailing. Rather than being
engrossed by the tense psychological situation, I'm marveling at the
clever overlapping of pointed arches and trying to remember the correct
word for quadrefoil.
Your personal relationships will probably be
affected as well. Your friends will eventually get used to your odd
behavior. They won't all think it's strange if you walk into their house
and immediately start rearranging their furniture because you suddenly
realized what's wrong with their living room's space planning. If you're
lucky, they'll regard you with amusement when you start trying to give
away their old, ugly recliner. However, complete strangers may not be
quite so tolerant. Pointing out the quoining on an old building downtown
will most likely be seen as a bit strange by people who have no idea what
you're talking about, nor are they likely to care. The more you learn
about interior design, the more frequently these things will happen. Of
course, at that point you probably won't mind. You'll be too busy thinking
about design.
The way others treat you may also change once you
begin your interior design education. Inevitably, roughly one quarter of
the people who discover that you are a designer will squeal with delight
and say something along the lines of, "You can come do my house!" These
are generally not serious job offers, but rather people who assume you'd
be delighted to "practice" on their homes for free. Sometimes they're
sincere; sometimes it merely seems the polite thing to say. The way I
always handled this was to smile and answer, "You have no idea how many
people say that to me." You're bound to find your own way of dealing with
these potential freeloaders, but don't completely discount them. If
someone really wants you to give them some advice, a little pro bono work
never hurt anyone's portfolio.
If you do choose to give someone a
little free design time in exchange for a little free exposure, make sure
to finish the job. My mother still complains about the half-papered spare
bathroom I never finished. Of course, I use the excuse that I didn't
know the sheetrock hadn't been properly sealed when I started
tearing off the old wallpaper, and that it was no use to finish papering
the walls once my sister got hair dye all over the new stuff I'd just put
up. I recommended that she have the walls retaped, sealed, and textured,
and then to just paint, but as of now, the spare bathroom at my parents'
house remains a tribute to deconstructionist art. I generally choose to
leave out that little detail when I'm talking to clients.
I think
my mother got back at me by assuming that I do this as a hobby. At the
beginning of my last year of design school, my mother told my kindergarten
teacher that I would come up and give them a color consultation on their
kitchen. When asked how much I'd charge, she insisted that I'd never think
of charging them! I'm still wondering where she got that idea.
Dutifully, I took my color deck, gave some sage advice, and told them not
to worry about it when they asked about paying me. The truth was, I'd have
felt bad about taking money after they were told that I wouldn't. However,
the next time my mom tried to give my expertise away for free, we had to
have a talk. Thinking back, it probably would have been a good idea to
have that serious talk as a kind of preemptive strike. Some parents, of
course, won't have these tendencies, but if you think there's the remotest
possibility that one of your relatives will try to give your work away for
free, sit them down and explain that this is what you do (or will do) for
a living, and that very expensive education of yours shouldn't go
to waste.
Another pitfall you might experience is probably a matter
of pride. If a quarter of the people who find out you're a designer try to
get something for free, half of them fall into one of three categories.
They'll either mention Frank Lloyd Wright (a bit of a sore spot for me),
reference that man who wears dresses and makes canopy beds with sticks and
a hot glue gun on cable tv, or they'll refer to you as a "decorator."
You'd think more people would mention "Designing Women" or "Will &
Grace," but so far that hasn't come up much. I've spent many hours trying
to pull my hair out as a result of these misconceptions, but in the end,
it's not worth it. The public doesn't care about the difference between a
decorator and a designer, nor that you can read blueprints and recognize
code violations in addition to picking out paint colors. Save your energy
for something more important.
Speaking of code violations,
depending on how much you hate memorizing codes, you might turn into
something of a vigilante inspector. This is another area where the people
around you will generally look at you funny: pointing out means of egress
and other code violations. I always hated memorizing codes, and even I
complain about flights of stairs that violate standard 7-11 ratios. "These
stairs are definitely not code!" actually feels pretty good to say while
trudging up a too-steep flight, whether anyone else cares or not. There's
always the silent implication that you, as an infinitely superior
designer, would never have designed something so difficult to
use.
Not to say that all of the changes you experience will be so
fraught with complications. The other one quarter of the people who
discover you're an interior designer will view this as unspeakably urbane,
sophisticated, and cool. Don't think too hard about this, even if your job
is frustrating you at the time (as all jobs inevitably will on occasion).
Just bask in the glow of someone else's admiration.
One last word
to the wise: if your doctor, after discussing your career, ever tells you
that s/he really wanted to be an interior designer, but, you know, "I'd
already done through med school..." do not hesitate. Run. Find another
doctor. He or she will probably spend more time redecorating the lobby of
their office than paying attention to their patients. And yes, I speak
from experience in this as well.
What it all comes down to, I
suppose, is that the phrase "I'm an interior designer" is quite an
effective ice breaker. Unfortunately, you never know which way the
glacier's going to float.
© Shaye Eller
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MORE 'GO TO SCHOOL' ARTICLES:
So
You Want To Go To Design School But How Do You Choose One?
"Frank
Lloyd Wrong" How to Be an Opinionated Student and Get Away With
It
Caveat
Designer: A Few Words to the Wise
Giving
The Final Presentation
Presenting
Your Work Professionally: Construction

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