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    Design Notes

    Why Pinterest Isn’t a Design Plan

    Inspiration is helpful. Strategy is everything.

    Pinterest is wonderful. It’s where ideas spark, where you discover what you’re drawn to, where you start to realize, “Oh… I like warmth. I like restraint. I like quiet luxury more than loud trends.”

    What Pinterest is not… is a design plan.

    And confusing the two is one of the fastest ways to end up with a house that feels chaotic, dated, or inexplicably “off.”

    Why Pinterest feels so convincing

    Pinterest works because it shows you finished rooms. Beautiful rooms. Perfectly lit rooms. Rooms styled for a photograph — not real life.

    You scroll and think: “I love that. I want that. I’ll just do this… and that… and that…”

    But here’s the part no one tells you: those rooms were never designed in isolation. They were created inside a larger architectural, material, and lighting strategy — one you don’t see when you save a single photo.

    You’re seeing the result, not the reasoning.

    What Pinterest actually gives you

    Pinterest is amazing at helping you identify aesthetic leanings (modern vs traditional, warm vs cool, minimal vs layered), elements you’re drawn to (arched doorways, unlacquered brass, creamy whites, moody lighting), and vibe (European, coastal, collected, editorial, classic).

    That’s valuable. It helps me understand your taste. It helps us speak the same visual language.

    But that’s where its role ends.

    Why saved images don’t translate to real homes

    A room on Pinterest is not a formula you can copy.

    It exists within a specific ceiling height, a specific window placement, a specific floor tone, a specific orientation to sunlight, a specific architecture style, a specific climate, a specific budget, and a specific scale.

    Change any of those — and the entire design has to shift.

    Two white kitchens can look nothing alike depending on natural light, cabinet depth, floor color, countertop, hardware finish, wall texture, and ceiling height.

    Pinterest doesn’t show you that complexity. Design has to account for it.

    What a real design plan does

    A real design plan doesn’t start with pretty pictures.

    It starts with architecture, flow, light, how you move through the home, how the house is used, where the sun hits at 3pm, how materials will age, and how everything feels together.

    Pinterest says, “I like this room.” A designer says, “Here’s how we create that feeling in your house.”

    Those are not the same thing.

    The danger of designing by collage

    When people try to build a home by pulling from Pinterest, what they’re really doing is creating a visual scrapbook — not a cohesive environment.

    That’s how you end up with a kitchen that fights the living room, finishes that don’t relate, and spaces that look good individually but feel strange together.

    Good design is not about individual moments. It’s about the conversation between every surface, every room, every transition.

    Pinterest shows moments. Design creates continuity.

    So, what should Pinterest be?

    Pinterest is a starting point — not a roadmap.

    Bring me your boards. Bring me your screenshots. Bring me the images that make you feel something.

    Then let me do what you hired me to do: translate your taste into a material strategy, a lighting plan, a color story, a spatial experience, and a home that feels intentional instead of assembled.

    That’s the difference between inspiration and design.

    And that’s why Pinterest isn’t the plan. It’s just the spark. ✨

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