How Can Interior Design Affect Human Behavior Kdadesignology
You walk into a room and feel tired before you even sit down. That’s not your imagination. That’s design working (whether) anyone meant it to or not.
You walk into a room and feel tired before you even sit down. That’s not your imagination. That’s design working (whether) anyone meant it to or not.
You’re staring at three client emails. Two material spec sheets need finalizing. The deadline is tomorrow. Sound familiar? I’ve been there.
You’re standing in a room that looks perfect on Instagram. But it feels cold. Empty. Like you walked into someone else’s life.
You walk in. And something shifts. Not because it’s loud or flashy (but) because the light lands just right. Because the wall feels warm under your hand.
You’re standing in the room. Empty. Or cluttered. Or both. You know it’s not right (but) you don’t know where to start. Not because you lack taste.
You’ve stared at Pinterest for three hours. And still don’t know where to start. That’s not your fault. It’s the system failing you.
You’re standing in your living room again. Staring at three different mood boards.
You’re standing in an empty room. Staring at four bare walls. Feeling like every piece of advice you’ve read contradicts the last. I’ve been there.
That room feels wrong. You spent money on good furniture. You picked colors you liked. But something’s off. It’s not the sofa. It’s not the rug.
You’ve seen it before. A design team spends months building something that looks slick in a pitch deck. Then users ignore it. Or worse. They complain.