INTERIOR DESIGN I 6/2017 Strands and Standards

Similar documents
Multiple Category Scope and Sequence: Scope and Sequence Report For Course Standards and Objectives, Content, Skills, Vocabulary

Decorating Living Space

elements and principles of interior design space line shape texture light color pattern scale & proportion balance rhythm emphasis harmony

Color. Paint. Prepared by Mrs. Leslie Parkertaken from Housing and Interior Design Picture from various sources and are not my own

Design II CRAFTS SUPPLEMENT

What are the Elements of Design?

Interior Design Handbook

Design Expressions: Fact Sheet 1. Color Basics

Building blocks of a design. Pieces work together to create visually pleasing affects. The tools for designers. ELEMENTS OF DESIGN

Interior Design and Decorating FACS

ROLE OF COLOR IN HOUSING AND DESIGN

With colours you can set a mood, attract attention, or make a statement. You can use colour to energise, or to cool down. By selecting the right

E L E M E N T S O F D E S I G N

TOPICS The Color Wheel Color Terms Lighting and Ambiance Color Harmonies. Decorating

Structural and Decorative Design

Elements of Design. Taken from Housing and Interior Design By: Evelyn Lewis and Carolyn Turner

4-H Interior Design Contest Packet

Home Studies & Home Design. Junior Certificate Home Economics

Landscape Design Principles, Elements and Process

THE PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN. By C. Kohn Agricultural Sciences Waterford, WI

Interior Design 30 (PAA) Distance Education

Friday, March 8, 13. Furniture Arrangement & Traffic Patterns

How to choose. Color. Common uses of color Simple color guidelines for your projects How light affects color The basics of color

4-H Fabrics & Fashions Home & Personal Living Space Room Anatomy

Freshmen Year Trimester 2

Interior Design 30 (PAA) Distance Education

Home Staging Report. Page

Lesson A Elements and Principles of Design

Chapter 11. Exterior Design Factors. Introduction. House design does not stop once room arrangements are determined

DRAFTING III- ARCHITECTURAL

COLOUR SCHEMES. 2 - Choosing colour

ARCHITECTURAL ANALYSIS

Sometimes we show colors in a wheel. Here you can see: the PRIMARY colors... red, yellow, blue the SECONDARY colors... orange, green, purple You can a

Elements of Landscape Design

Elements of Landscape Design. By C. Kohn Agricultural Sciences Waterford WI

Color Consultations Decomplexified

5 E lements Elements o f of Art Art Color Line Form Texture re Scale

Principles and Elements of Design Applied to Architecture

Design Applied to Architecture

Soothing and welcoming, pastels add ambiance and a gentle

ANNIVERSARY

PANTONE colour pallets 2018 Trendwatch by. Team UK

Principles of Design. Floral Design

Scope & Sequence. 175 Periods 7,875 Minutes Hours* # of Class Periods* (assumes 45- minute periods) Total minutes per unit

DIPLOMA IN DIPL INTERIOR DESIGN

Teacher: Core Housing & Interior Design Year: Course: Housing & Interior Design

Architecture of Massachusetts. By: Danny Surujdeo and Mara Yella Architecture P1

Interior Design. 4-H Interior Design lets you: Use your imagination and creativity. Take a glimpse into new career opportunities

Lecture 8 OPENINGS &ORGANIZATION OF FORM AND SPACE

Color Guide to Interior Decorating

CITY COTTAGE 2017 AIA INDIANAPOLIS DESIGN AWARDS

CYPRESS 1228 Q01 LOT WIDTH 12.5M+ LOT DEPTH 28M+ TOTAL AREA 179.4m 2

Getting Started. Two Types of Container Gardens. Advantages Disadvantages Advantages Disadvantages

Picture Perfect Peldon Colchester Essex

4362 Chuka Drive - Model Home Over 1900 sq. ft.

jennifer cederstam CV + PORTFOLIO

67 Crest Drive Charm, Beauty, Location

Principles of Landscaping

R e s i d e n t i a l P l a n n i n g P r o g r a m

Town Center Design Guidelines

INTERIOR DESIGN. What You Will Do in Interior DesignE. Use your imagination and creativity. Take a glimpse into new career opportunities..

CALADENIA 1228 Q02 LOT WIDTH 12.5M+ LOT DEPTH 28M+ TOTAL AREA 239.6m 2

drastic makeovers! trends 60 + reno tips CANADIAN ipad subscriptions $10,000 * giveaway living room CANADA S HOME DÉCOR & LIFESTYLE MAGAZINE

The objective of an interior deigning is to decorate to achieve beauty, expressiveness, and functionalism.

Shah s Residence, Bharuch. Dipen Gada & Associates. Client: Mr. Vinay Shah Area: 6856 Sq. Ft. Photo Credits: Mr. Tejas Shah Year Of Completion: 2015

WRITTEN BY: MEGAN ANN OSWALD PHOTOGRAPHED BY: BUTCH IRELAND

88 ANGUS ROAD, SCONE, PH2 6RB

1350 Birchcliff Drive, Oakville, Ontario

BEECHWOOD 1228 SERIES

Design Elements & Principles. Landscape Curb Appeal Principles & Elements of Design COLOR. Elements Color Form Texture Line

The Village. Chapter 3. Mixed Use Development Plan SPECIFIC PLAN

Lighting Concepts: Residential

LANDSCAPE DESIGN AND INSTALLATION Lesson 20: DESIGN PROCESS

Lindsey Beane. Executive Summary

Happy Home with HEART

Tortolita Preserve - Home Site 8

Discover Design Elements. Featured at Fiber and Fabric Camp November 2005 By Ann Torbert, Youth Specialist

KEY MAP DEVELOPMENT PERMIT AREA MAP. Sunnymede North Sub-Area Plan

Once you ve decided on the floor plan, let s look for the interior decoration theme you ll like.

PLANNING MAKES PERFECT

HOME ENVIRONMENT - State Fair Exhibit

本カタログのオリジナル版は 中文版です 本英語版PDFは ELENESSA

the Classics Embracing Calming colors and rustic finishes complement a fresh take on farmhouse style.

ARGYLE 1028 Q01 LOT WIDTH 10M+ LOT DEPTH 28M+ TOTAL AREA 135m 2

What Do Interiorscapers Do? They promote health and extended keeping quality of ornamental plants under interior conditions.

INTERIOR APPLICATION GUIDE - December 2016 Brand Stores - Networks Division

Contents. Principle. Ceiling Design Signal Fixtures. Interior. Hall Design. Observation Cars NEXIEZ - MRL Only. Materials and Colors

Target: Observes and identifies plant parts and characteristics. Criteria: Describes shapes and patterns in leaves, stems, seeds, and flowers.

DESIGN. ELEGANCE. STYLE. Plus: ARCHITECTs & BUILDERs HOMES

Proudly Presenting Dewdney Road

Welcome family and friends into your home with guest rooms that

FILE - LIVING ROOM ACCENT WALL DOCUMENT

K I L L A R N E Y 2 6

SATINASH 1028 SERIES LOT WIDTH 10M+^ TOTAL AREA 135.1m m sq 15.14sq VISION FAÇADE

Getting Started. Gather Ideas. Visit our Showroom. What s next? Page 1 of 7

Pre-Visit Lesson Plan

Landscape Design The Design Process

14 Rubislaw Park Crescent, Aberdeen, AB15 8BT

ABOUT THE OWNER: How many years do you plan to live in this home? Which architectural styles are you attracted to?

Motor City Re-Store Design Guidelines

Transcription:

INTERIOR DESIGN I 6/2017 Strands and Standards Levels: Grades 9-12 Units of Credit: 0.50 Core Code: 34-01-00-00-210 CE Core Code 34.01.00.13.210 Prerequisite: Interior Design I for Interior Design II Skill Test: # 330 Test Weight 0.5 COURSE DESCRIPTION This course explores the field of interior design through engaging learning activities. Identification and use of the elements and principles of design are emphasized. Other topics are furniture arrangement, floor plan evaluation, space planning and design related careers. Skills learned can be applied to current living environments and future career options. This course will strengthen comprehension of concepts and standards outlined in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) education. FCCLA may be an integral part of this course. CORE STRANDS, STANDARDS, AND INDICATORS Performance Objective #1: Complete FCCLA Step One. http://www.uen.org/cte/facs_cabinet/facs_cabinet10.shtml STRAND 1 Students will demonstrate professional design presentation techniques Standard 1: Students will practice various methods of interior design presentation. A. Demonstrate proficiency of professional lettering and labeling, such as block/architectural lettering (i.e. simple, hand-printed capital letters), legends or keys (i.e. a rectangular space on a project used to reference symbols, materials, or placement of project parts), etc. B. Use professional mounting techniques (i.e. professionally presenting pictures, samples or other information in an orderly manner) for assignments and presentation boards. 1. Straight edge, 90* angles, ¼ border, clean & neat (STEM Math) Performance Objective #2: Demonstrate proficiency in professional lettering and mounting techniques. STRAND 2 Students will identify the two basic types of design. Standard 1: Identify structural design - simple lines, no ornamentation, cannot be separated without destroying the object A. Explain the meaning of form follows function - the form should reflect its intended use and fulfill its intended purpose. The first priority in a design is its function, which dictates the shape or form of a design. Example: a chair must still function as a place to sit regardless of design or ornamentation. Standard 2: Identify decorative design - applied ornamentation to an object, can be separated without destroying the object A. Naturalistic/realistic- reproduces a motif from nature in its natural form, looks photographic B. Conventional/stylized- uses designs from nature in a simplified or adapted way C. Geometric- decoration is made up of geometric shapes or stripes D. Abstract- departs from nature inspiration for the design is not recognizable Interior Design I Page 1 of 8

Naturalistic Conventional Geometric Abstract STRAND 3 Students will identify and explain the basic elements of design or tools used to create a design: line, shape, form, space, texture, pattern, light and color. (STEM: Math, Science) Standard 1: Identify, explain, and use the basic elements of design A. Identify and create examples of line and identify the feelings created by each. 1. Vertical Lines -lines that run up and down. Create feelings of height, strength and formality. 2. Horizontal Lines - lines that run from left to right (across the horizon). Creates the feelings of being restful and informal 3. Curved Lines - a line that deviates from straightness in a smooth, continuous fashion. Creates feelings of softness, playfulness and serenity. 4. Diagonal Lines - Straight line that is neither horizontal nor vertical. Creates feelings of action, movement and excitement. B. Differentiate between shape and form. 1. Shape- The 2-dimensional outline of an object (e.g. square, circle, triangle, rectangle) 2. Form- A 3-dimensional object (e.g. cones, cylinders, spheres, cubes, prism, etc.) C. Identify and explain the use of space - the area with which the designer works 1. To expand use light & cool colors, mirrors, smooth textures, smaller scale & less furniture. 2. To enclose use dark & warm colors, rough textures, larger scale furniture & accessories. 3. Positive space is filled space. 4. Negative space is empty space D. Identify and explain the effect of texture - the surface quality of objects. It can be both seen (visual) and felt (tactile) as used in interior design. 1. Rough Texture- absorbs light, informal, can be both visually or tactilely rough. 2. Smooth Texture- reflects light, formal, can be both visually or tactilely smooth. E. Identify pattern - The repetition of color, lines, shape or design across a surface to create visual interest. F. Describe light - Makes things visible through illumination by nature (sun, moon, fire) or electrical devices (incandescent, fluorescent, halogen, LED) G. Identify color - the visible spectrum of light that enables us to see hues. Also the pigment in paints or dyes to create hue. Performance Objective #3: Present visual examples of the elements of design and explain each concept in writing. (STEM: Math, Science, Technology) STRAND 4 Identify the terms associated with the color wheel and the major color schemes. (STEM: Math, Science) Standard 1: Identify and explain the use of color or hue. Hue is the name of a color on the color wheel A. Identify a color wheel and explain that it is a way to organize color B. Understand that primary colors cannot be mixed from other pigments. (red, yellow, blue) C. Understand that secondary colors are made by mixing equal amounts of two primary colors. (orange, green, violet) D. Understand that six tertiary colors are made by mixing an equal amount of a primary and a secondary color. (e.g. Red-violet) Note the primary color is always listed first. Standard 2: Identify and explain the use of warm and cool colors on the color wheel. A. Warm colors generally tend to close in space; advance and create feelings of warmth, activity and excitement. (red-violet, red, red-orange, orange, yellow-orange, yellow) B. Cool colors generally tend to expand space; recede and create cool, calm, and relaxed feelings. (violet, blue-violet, blue, blue-green, green, yellow-green) Interior Design I Page 2 of 8

Performance Objective #4: Create a color wheel identifying primary, secondary and tertiary colors Standard 3: Explain how to distinguish between and create value and intensity. A. Value is the lightness or darkness of a hue created by adding black or white. 1. Shades - created by adding black to a color 2. Tints/pastels - created by adding white to color B. Intensity is the brightness or dullness of a hue. 1. Bright hues are pure color. 2. Dull a color by adding its complement or gray which creates a tone. Performance Objective #5: Create tints, tones and shades Standard 4: Identify, create or present visual examples of major color schemes (a planned combination of colors in specific positions anywhere on the color wheel) A. The major color schemes are: 1. monochromatic - a color scheme using the tints, tones and shades of one color 2. analogous - a color scheme using 3-5 colors directly next to each other on the color wheel 3. direct complement a color scheme using colors directly across from each other on the color wheel 4. split complement - a color scheme using a hue and the two colors directly next to its complement 5. double complement - uses four colors arranged into two complementary color pairs 6. triad - a color scheme using 3 colors equidistant on the color wheel 7. neutral - a color scheme using brown(s) or metallic(s) such as gold, silver, and bronze 8. accented neutral a color scheme using a neutral with only one accent of color 9. achromatic a color scheme using black, white, and/or gray B. Color is affected by: texture, artificial lighting (incandescent, fluorescent, halogen, LED, etc.), and natural lighting (light created by the sun, moon or fire). (STEM: Science) Performance Objective#6: Create or present visual examples of major color schemes. Interior Design I Page 3 of 8

Monochromatic Analogous Direct Complement Split Complement Double Complement Triad Neutral Accented Neutral Achromatic STRAND 5 Students will identify and explain the basic principles of design or rules /guidelines of design: scale, proportion, balance, rhythm, emphasis/focal point and harmony. (STEM: Math, Science) Standard 1: Identify and explain the basic principles of design. A. Discuss how scale relates to the size of a design in relation to other items or the surrounding area in which it is placed B. Understand that proportion is the ratio/fraction - parts of an object in comparison to the whole object. 1. Golden Mean determines the effectiveness of a ratio - the division of a line or space between one-half and one-third of its total length. The most effective ratios: 2:3, 5:8 etc. The most ineffective proportion is 1:2. C. Devised by the Greeks thousands of years ago Explain the types of balance - the placement of objects so that is creates visual equilibrium 1. symmetrical/formal balance - mirror-image of parts on each side of a center point, 2. asymmetrical/informal balance -different objects on either side of a central point, 3. radial balance - balance created from a central point, radiating outward. D. Identify examples of rhythm - continuous movement, the path the eye follows: 1. repetition - shapes, forms, lines, or colors that are repeated in a design 2. gradation - sizes of shapes go from large to small or color values go from light to dark 3. radiation - objects radiate out in nearly every direction from a central point Interior Design I Page 4 of 8

4. opposition - abrupt change in any of the elements 5. transition - a subtle, visual flow often indicated by a curved line that leads the eye from one point or area to another Repetition Gradation Radiation Opposition Transition E. Explain emphasis/focal point - dominant item(s) in the room that draw your attention 1. to create emphasis - furniture groupings, lines, color, accessories, pattern, architectural features (e.g. fireplace), lighting, and size. F. Explain how harmony is achieved when unity and variety are effectively combined. 1. Unity - created by repetition or similarity of objects, style or theme 2. Variety - what is done outside of the theme or style to provide relief from sameness Performance Objective #7: Present visual examples of the principles of design and explain each concept in writing. STRAND 6 Students will explain the design and function of interior space. Standard 1: Evaluate the components of floor plans (a scale diagram of the arrangement of rooms in a building): (STEM: Math) A. Discuss the three basic living zones: 1. living/social - The area of the home used for activities and entertainment living room, dining room, family room, etc. 2. sleeping/private - The area of the home that provides quiet, comfortable areas for sleeping and relaxing, as well as privacy bedrooms, bathrooms, closets Interior Design I Page 5 of 8

3. service/work - The area where household work is done kitchen, laundry room, utility room, basement, garage B. Discuss and identify the circulation patterns of family, guests, work and service. 1. Family all rooms 2. Guest entry, living, dining room, powder room 3. Work and Service kitchen, garage, utility room i. easy access from entry to other parts of home 4. rooms should not be cut in half 5. bathrooms located next to bedrooms 6. kitchen near the garage/service entrance C. Identify and evaluate an open floor plan verses a closed floor plan. 1. Closed floor plans separate rooms, enclosing them with walls and an entry door for noise reduction and privacy. 2. Open floor plans have few walls, save on costs of building materials, and home tends to appear more spacious. D. Elements of a well- designed home 1. adequate storage - should be 10-15% of total sq. footage 2. convenient circulation patterns 3. little wasted space 4. connected spaces garage to kitchen, closet to entry, stairs to central hall, etc. Performance Objective #8: Label a floor plan with the three living zones, and indicate the functions of each zone. Standard 2: Identify and label common floor plan symbols - characters used to represent architectural, electrical, and plumbing features on a floor plan. A. Identify common floor plan symbols: a. doors b. windows c. sinks d. upper and lower cabinets e. range f. refrigerator g. tub/shower h. toilet i. fireplace j. stairs k. light switch l. 110 outlet m. 220 outlets n. ceiling light B. Scale for residential housing is ¼ = 1 foot. (*STEM: Math) Interior Design I Page 6 of 8

Performance Objective #9: Identify and label common floor plan symbols Standard 3: Evaluate basic kitchen design and function A. Identify the work triangle - measurement from center of sink, to center of refrigerator and back to center of range/stove and should measure 12-26 ft. in length. Helps evaluate kitchen efficiency. B. Identify basic kitchen shapes: 1. corridor/galley 2. L-shape 3. one wall - most economical/least expensive 4. U-shape - most efficient/least steps 5. island 6. peninsula corridor/galley L-shape One wall U-shape Island Peninsula Standard 4: Apply the guidelines of furniture arrangement A. Discuss basic guidelines of furniture arrangement - function, scale, proportion focal point, activity grouping (combining furniture that is appropriate for a specific function or activity), balance, location of outlets, circulation patterns, arrangement of furniture and clearances. Group furniture around a focal point. B. Discuss differences between primary seating area (seating for many people; the ideal diameter should not exceed 8-10 ft.) and secondary seating areas (Seating for 1-3 people). Performance Objective #10: Using a floor plan, create a furniture arrangement incorporating principles and elements of design and space planning. 1. FACS- Family and Consumer Science 2. FCCLA- Family, Career and Community Leaders of America, Student FACS national organization Skill Certificate Test Points by Strand Test Name Test # Number of Test Points by Strand Total Points Total Questions 1 2 3 4 5 6 Interior Design I 330 2 4 18 19 15 13 71 61 Interior Design I Page 7 of 8

Performance Objectives http://www.schools.utah.gov/cte/skill/tests/facs/330/330pd.aspx FCCLA Integration into Interior Design I: STAR Events: Career Investigation, Entrepreneurship, Illustrated Talk, Interpersonal Communications, Job Interview, Life Event Planning, Recycle and Redesign, Chapter Service Project Display, Chapter Service Project Portfolio, National Programs in Action, Interior Design. Skill Demonstration Events: Interior Design Sketch, Technology in Teaching, Science in FACS. National Programs: Career Connection, Financial Fitness, Power of One. Interior Design I Page 8 of 8