Interior design + remodeling is where good taste meets good decisions. Here are best-practice principles that hold up whether you’re refreshing one room or gutting a whole place—organized so you can actually use them.
1. Start with function before style (always)
Pretty spaces that don’t work get old fast.
- Map how the space is actually used (traffic flow, storage needs, daily habits)
- Design around pain points first (poor lighting, cramped walkways, lack of outlets)
- Follow clearances:
- Walkways: 36–42 in
- Kitchen work aisles: 42 in (48 if two cooks)
- Door swings + drawer clearance checked early
Rule of thumb: If the layout is wrong, finishes won’t save it.
2. Design the layout on paper before demo
Most expensive mistakes happen here.
- Lock in:
- Wall moves
- Plumbing locations
- Electrical + lighting plan
- Avoid moving plumbing unless it adds real value (kitchens/baths only)
- Think resale even if it’s “forever”:
- Keep bedrooms near bathrooms
- Don’t eliminate closets
- Avoid oddly specific custom layouts
3. Choose a timeless base, layer personality
This protects your investment.
Timeless elements (don’t trend-chase):
- Flooring
- Cabinets
- Tile shapes (subway, zellige, large-format)
- Countertops (quartz, natural stone)
Personality layers (easy to change later):
- Paint
- Lighting fixtures
- Hardware
- Furniture
- Art + textiles
👉 Trendy backsplash + classic cabinets = smart
👉 Trendy cabinets + trendy counters = risky
4. Lighting is non-negotiable
Bad lighting ruins good design.
Use 3 layers in every main space:
- Ambient – recessed or ceiling fixtures
- Task – under-cabinet, vanity, desk lighting
- Accent – pendants, sconces, lamps
Best practices:
- Warm white: 2700K–3000K
- Dimmers everywhere
- No single ceiling light rooms (ever)
5. Material choices: spend where it matters
Not everything deserves luxury pricing.
Spend more on:
- Cabinets (construction > finish)
- Hardware (you touch it daily)
- Faucets & fixtures
- Flooring in high-traffic areas
Save on:
- Decorative tile
- Light fixtures (many great mid-range options)
- Paint (good prep > expensive paint)
6. Kitchens & bathrooms: follow proven rules
These sell houses and affect daily life most.
Kitchens
- Work triangle or work zones
- Upper cabinets to the ceiling (or intentional gap)
- Plenty of drawers (drawers > doors)
- Outlets everywhere (code + convenience)
Bathrooms
- Proper ventilation (quiet fan, vented outside)
- Large-format tile = fewer grout lines
- Wall-hung or floating vanities = visual space
- Niches over corner shelves in showers
7. Storage is design
Hidden storage = clean look.
- Built-ins where possible
- Toe-kick drawers in kitchens
- Medicine cabinets instead of mirrors
- Laundry storage planned early (not as an afterthought)
8. Don’t over-customize
Design for you, but not only you.
Avoid:
- Ultra-bold permanent finishes
- Removing tubs entirely in family homes
- Highly niche rooms (unless budget allows reversal)
Think: “Would someone else still love this?”
9. Plan the budget with a buffer
This is huge.
- Set aside 10–20% contingency
- Get detailed line-item quotes
- Assume delays
- Never spend the entire budget on finishes before construction starts
10. Work with pros strategically
You don’t need everyone—but you need the right ones.
- Designer: layout + materials = fewer mistakes
- Contractor: verify licenses + references
- Trades: hire specialists, not “one guy for everything”
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