Western Living Magazine
Off-the-Grid Living: Exploring the Island Cabin near Desolation Sound, B.C.
It’s Always Happy Hour at These 7 Homes with Built-in Bars
Great Spaces: Vancouver’s Wildlight Kitchen and Bar Is a Natural Beauty
3 Parisian Bistro-Inspired Comfort Food Recipes to Bring a Taste of Paris Home
Recipe: Confit Lamb With Roasted Eggplant and Baby Potatoes
Recipe: Sausage With Aligot
The Maui Resort That’s Banking on Your Thoughtfulness
Your Ultimate Travel Itinerary: Brooklyn Like a Local
The 2024 Spring Road Trip Destination You Won’t Want To Miss
Trending for 2024: Top 10 Stylish Furniture and Home Design Picks to Revitalize Your Space
How to achieve kitchen perfection: luxury appliance brand Fisher & Paykel shares all
Editors’ Picks: The Best Books We Read in 2023
How Do I Enter the WL Designers of the Year People’s Choice Awards?
Introducing the Winners of Our First Annual WL Design 25 Awards
WL Design 25 Winners 2024: White Out
Our 2021 Designers of the Year dish out their biggest design gripes.
Our Designers of the Year winners are generally an amiable sort the type to modestly credit their clients as collaborators and hype up the talent surrounding them in the design community. But even the most demure designer has something that gets them fired up. We poked the bear and asked some of this year’s DOTY champs to share their biggest design pet peeves: diplomacy be damned!
Vallely Architecture, Vancouver
“Impatience. It often leads to unnecessary compromise. If It's worth designing, then It's worth designing right. Also, an unrealistic budget. It's better to make it clear early that you will get this for this and that for that. If that doesn't resonate, I politely step away. Finally, not recognizing the design skills youve honed over the years. If your doctor or lawyer suggests something, you will typically listen. That respect doesn't run as deep for the design profession. It often comes down to your opinion being just one voice among many, irrespective of your years of experience.“
McLeod Bovell Modern Houses, Vancouver
“Notches!” McLeod
“Meaningless ceiling drops.” Bovell
Vancouver
“Working on a computer.”
Donohoe Living Landscapes, Vancouver
“For landscape planning: freehand curves, tight curves in a small space and when a design lacks a consistent design language.”
READ MORE: 10 Designers Share The Childhood Moments That Hinted at Their Design Future
Amanda Evans Interiors, Vancouver
“Making decisions based on needing to have something ‘right now,’ versus not thinking about the long-term solution. Always invest in what you love, not the quick fix!”
Mtharu, Calgary
“Using minimalism as a facade for lack of rigour in design and process.”
Amanda Hamilton Interior Design, Calgary
“Matching furniture sets. Retailers do this to make it easy for customers, but it results in bedrooms, living rooms and dining rooms that lack personality. Pieces do not need to be identical in style, shape or material, they just need to speak the same design lingo and be thoughtfully curated to create a balanced, interesting space.”
READ MORE: The Most Perfectly Designed Objects, According to Designers
Are you over 18 years of age?