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flatlanD Design Group
Let us create your
perfect home.
CREATING YOUR OWN SPACE
Interior design & decoration for residential projects
Interior design is all about how we experience spaces. It’s a powerful, essential part of our daily lives and affects how we live, work, play, and even heal. Comfortable homes, beautiful spaces—that’s interior design at work.
Furniture Selections
We work with you to provide a coordinated fuctional furniture design that achive your goals and taste!
Interior Decoration
We craft spaces that anticipate your needs and appeal to your emotions while pulling from a broad set of skills and technical knowledge.
Renovations
Our team works with contractors, architects, engineers, craftsmen, furniture dealers, and home owners. To be successful our designers, need a well-rounded education and the skills to work within many disciplines (architecture; graphic design; decorative arts; and textile, furniture, and lighting design).
IDEAS & INSPIRATION
OUR RECENT WORK
Scientists define energy as the ability to do work. Modern civilization is possible because people have learned how to change energy from one form to another and then use it to do work. That's how we approach design
TonyTHE VALUE OF COLOR Red makes the heart beat faster. You will frequently find this and other claims made for the effects of different colours on the human mind and body. But is there any scientific evidence and data to support such claims? The physiological mechanisms that underpin human colour vision have been understood for the best part of a century, but it is only in the last couple of decades that we have discovered and begun to understand a separate pathway for the non-visual effects of colour.
JeanineLight but not vision
The hypothalamus is a key part of the brain responsible for the secretion of a number of hormones which control many aspects of the body’s self-regulation, including temperature, sleep, hunger and circadian rhythms. Exposure to light in the morning, and blue/green light in particular, prompts the release of the hormone cortisol which stimulates and wakes us, and inhibits the release of melatonin. In the late evening as the amount of blue light in sunlight is reduced, melatonin is released into the bloodstream and we become drowsy.
The retinal cells that form the non-image-forming visual pathway between eye and hypothalamus are selectively sensitive to the short wavelengths (blue and green) of the visible spectrum. What this means is that there is clearly an established physiological mechanism through which colour and light can affect mood, heart rate, alertness, and impulsivity, to name but a few.
FDG