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![]() Ellen Cantor * |
Interior designers work on projects as small as a one-hour consultation for paint color to as large as the building of a new homeand everything in between. A professionally trained interior designer can bring order to the project and help you focus your ideas. You will save time and money by eliminating costly mistakes and having access to state-of-the-art products and ideas for your home. It is our job to bring you unique ideas, unusual styles, and alternative sources that you may not know are available or do not know where to locate.
Interior designers no longer just choose furniture, fabrics, and wallpaper. Today's professionally trained interior designers have studied the equivalent of interior architecture. In addition to selection of fabrics, wallcoverings, furniture, flooring, window treatments, and accessories, we are experienced in drafting and drawing and offer services such as space planning, barrier-free design, kitchen and bath design, custom cabinets, furniture design, furniture plans, and lighting plans. Professionally trained interior designers have studied interior design at a FIDER (Foundation for Interior Design Education Research) accredited school and should be licensed or certified by the state in which they work. Additionally, many interior designers are members of a professional society, such as ASID, and have passed the NCIDQ exam. In some states, licensed or certified interior designers are allowed to obtain building permits.
Following are a few frequently asked questions about the interior design process:
The National Council of Interior Design Qualification (NCIDQ) is an independent organization created in the public interest to establish minimum standards for the qualification of professional interior designers. It has qualified over 10,000 interior designers since 1974.
The California Council for Interior Design Certification (CCIDC) qualifies applicants as Certified Interior Designers (CID). Applicants must pass certain educational requirements and/or have seven years of related business experience. In addition, the applicant must pass a three-hour exam in building and barrier-free codes administered by the NCIDQ. Other states have similar certification programs.
The architect designs the building and the contractor builds it. Somewhere in between, the homeowner needs to choose countertops, flooring, wall surfaces, fixtures, faucets, paint colors, and also make sure that the rooms are the correct size for furniture placement. A small adjustment in room size or location of doors and windows before construction begins can prevent many headaches when the homeowner begins to furnish his or her newly remodeled residence.
Hiring an interior designer to work with the architect at the onset of a job can save money in the long run and make the remodeling process go more smoothly. No longer will the contractor say, "We need the tile tomorrow. Have you picked it out?"
After completing the preplanning stage, the design phase begins. It's still not time to choose furniture, colors, or decide whether to buy the rug or the sofa. It is important to determine whether or not you want structural work. Upon completion of the structural plans, whether they be major or minor, the interior designer is ready to begin the furniture plan. Furniture placement must be determined before beginning any structural work or before making any purchases. There is nothing as frustrating as enlarging a room and finding out after construction that it should have been 2 feet longer to hold the grand piano.
After completing the furniture placement plan, your designer can begin to determine furniture styles and colors. This is where any pictures you have saved of items you like will be helpful. Now the designer is ready to shop. There are no steadfast rules on whether to start with the floor, the walls, or the furniture. But do remember never to make any purchases until you have selected all the fabrics, wallcoverings, flooring, and paint colors.
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