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Friday, September 4, 2020

Interior Design Homeschool Unit

I don't know why this looks so blurry. But it will be better when you click to enlarge it.

What a year it has been! It has gone both fast and slow, as every year does. Everyone looks surprisingly young in the pictures a whole year ago. And now we're living in a different house than we were when the school year started! That move is actually the reason we thought of doing this unit on Interior Design in the first place. We knew we'd be moving in September (halfway through this unit, in fact) and we thought it might be nice to have some knowledge that could help us as we rearranged rooms and chose new furniture and so forth.


We watched some of the episodes from this cool Netflix show, The World's Most Extraordinary Homes.

Here are some of the other things we did:
We learned about design principles including the Golden Ratio and the Rule of Thirds. We made these visual representations of the Fibonacci Sequence.
Sam taught the kids about one- and two-point perspective for drawing interiors and exteriors.
 
We went on a field trip to IKEA to look at all the cute little display rooms. You can see lots of design principles in action there!
(Ziggy had to hug some doggies, of course)
We learned about color. We practiced mixing paint (primary and secondary colors) and making tints and shades of each color.
We also made color schemes with paint swatches (this is Junie's, featuring many pigs).
Teddy's color scheme
We learned about fabrics and textiles. I had a whole semester-long class on textiles in college! So I had lots of knowledge to share. :) We learned some differences between knits and wovens and made these weavings to talk about warp and weft.

Some related videos we liked:
• How cotton is made into fabric https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QHgNoSYlhYs
• Silk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqFm_7KyfHI
• Velvet: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DjmXWWsEszw
• Fibers to fabrics: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5qRhHKi8Pg8

We made to-scale diagrams of the children's rooms in the new house, along with scaled pieces of their furniture. Then they tried out different arrangements and chose their favorites. (This was a VERY USEFUL activity and saved us lots of time and effort moving actual furniture! Sam and I have often done this in our houses over the years, but we've never included the children in it, and it was fun for them, I think.) 

Of course, you can make these floor plans yourself on graph paper, and measure your own furniture to get custom sizes. That's what we've always done. But this time I bought a couple things that I thought it might save us time. It was nice to have the beds, etc., already drawn to scale, and ready to just punch out and use:



You can also use this idea when making and measuring for floor plans:
Your body can be used as a measuring tool when you don't have a measuring tape conveniently with you. Although it's a nonstandard unit of measurement, it's conveniently with you all the time. It might also help you remember the measurements, because you have to use parts of your body instead of inches, feet and yards. Below are examples of how various body parts are used for measuring. 
foot: It probably goes without saying that the unit foot was based on the length of a man’s foot. 
span: Stretch out your hand so that the tip of your thumb is as far away as possible from the tip of your pinky. That distance is called a “span,” which for most people is almost exactly half a cubit. 
handbreadth: The width of your four fingers where they meet the palm—usually about 4 inches—is a handbreadth or sometimes just a “hand.” The height of horses is usually expressed in hands. 
digit: The width of a finger, which tends to be about 2cm (about 13/16 of an inch). 
thumb: The width of a thumb, which was later used as the basis for the inch 
Your assignment:  Go home and measure your bedroom.  However DO NOT use a ruler, use your foot.  On the back of this paper draw a scale diagram of your bedroom be sure to include and identify the following:  Length, Width, Windows, Door, Closet (see example below) Extra Credit:  Calculate the area of your room in “Square Sneaker” units.
I…actually have no idea what Goldie has drawn here. It does not appear to be any actual furniture.

I found a bunch of other good ideas for an Interior Design Unit for older students on this post. For example, I thought this sounded fun, and if we do this unit again, I'd assign this to an older child:
Create a Design Portfolio
Each week, [my daughter] had to create a design plan in a portfolio notebook. (I purchased one that had 11" x 14" sheets so that she could sketch her designs on a separate sheet of art paper and then glue them into the notebook. This gave her the freedom to make a mistake without ruining the entire portfolio.)

Acting as a potential client, every Monday, I "hired" her to design a particular room in my house featuring a specific design aesthetic/mood, certain color schemes, and/or furniture features. (I even petitioned some blog readers for help in coming up with unique requests.) For instance:

"I'd like you to design a French Country style dining room. I prefer grey and purple hues. My great aunt gave me this beautiful pie cupboard that I'd like you to incorporate into the design. I do a lot of entertaining, so the table needs to seat a crowd. There's not a lot of natural light in that area of my house, but I'd like it to feel bright." 
Other times I just gave her a few keywords for inspiration.

Multi-purpose family room: mix of fabrics, pool table, western, storage space, no checkered prints 

With those parameters in mind, she created a 3-page plan for her proposal. Each proposal consisted of:

a planning page with paint chips, fabric swatches, and notes
a colored sketch of the completed room
an aerial layout of the room plotted on graph paper

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