
This visually stunning chandelier would probably not be the best centrepiece for most living rooms…there wouldn’t be that much room to manoeuvre around it for most of us!

Passionate About Fabrics

This visually stunning chandelier would probably not be the best centrepiece for most living rooms…there wouldn’t be that much room to manoeuvre around it for most of us!

Orange, Black and red colourful upholstery velvets from Annabel Hall Design (formerly of PrivateLives). Whilst this might not suit everyone’s individual taste (what does) we can only admire the way everything is brought together from the details of the wall image to consistency of circular imagery. Great.

OK, this is proper faux leather upholstery in brown. Fantastic attention to detail on an otherwise classic design. NO attention to detail is spared – look at the rear of the chairs. How often will that be seen? Rarely. But with an attention to detail you think about the times when it will matter. Great stuff.

We love this green upholstery velvet chaise. Finely and scrupulously upholstered with perfect attention to detail. Slightly ornate and unusual design perfect for rooms that emphasize classic curves.

Alidad Child Bed Delight. Great bed design that any child would love; built into their own den.

Astounding Interiors designed this special London bar. We like the detail on the tiles and the vertical bar front – interesting combinations of hard, geometric textures.
Great green lighting and of course the obligatory faux leather covered stools in the seating area to the rear.

We love the textured upholstery fabrics in Area Squared’s office space Gallery.

Top London designer APRIL RUSSELL has the lusciously fluffy chair and cushion in her BESPOKE collection. Ask for the BIANCA.
Interior designers are a visual bunch. At least they deal with stuff that is inherently visual, with the end product being an eminently visual thing.
Clients, too, are fundamentally concerned about the aesthetics of what they are buying.
So, anyway, it seems strange to me that many of us in the industry have a rather limited portfolio of images of ‘the stuff we do’. Maybe you have parts of your portfolio on your web site or Houzz or somewhere else.
Yet there is probably more we can do with imagery to generate some ‘buzz’ around our services (or products in our case).
Let me talk a LITTLE about pinterest for those of you who don’t already know. Basically pinterest is a way to ‘copy’ images from most websites and put them onto boards that YOU create for yourself within the pinterest website. You can keep those boards secret OR you can share with the wider world AND you can let other people add to your boards if you want to. You can put your own images there too.
Here are some examples of what we use pinterest for.
So that’s how we have used it. As an interior designer, however, you might use it for these purposes:
So those are some ideas of what you might use pinterest for. Now here are some of the technical ways of making this happen. To make them work properly you will need to convert your pinterest account to a free business account. Then use the tools that you can access through the pinterest menu at the top left hand corner of the screen.
You will see at the end of each of the posts on this blog there is a pinterest icon. You click it to save to your pinterest board
Invite people to follow you on Pinterest from your site like this:You can then use the pinterest website to get ‘widgets’ (bits of html code) that you can put on your site so that a nice image is displayed and that images links to either: a specific pin; a specific board; or to your profile. If. for example, any of those change (eg you add a new image to a board) then the image that you put on your wessite will be automatically updated. So it could, for example, display your 30 latest project images.
:
I’m very nervous about using third part site like Houzz or Pinterest to store content. Their whole raison d’etre is to get traffic on THEIR site not yours. So by incorporating their functionality on your web site your risk a potential client clicking away from your site and going onto pinterest. So be nervous about that.
On the other hand it would be a great way to share images with clients or for research or personal storage type applications for your business ie ones that are not involved in (pre-) sales & marketing.