This fall, Sister Parish teamed up with students at The New School’s Parsons School of Design to explore sustainability and heritage through textile design.
Amid our national reckoning with racial inequality, designers and brands are stepping up to create scholarships and internship programs aimed at diversifying the industry.
A wave of designers are turning their business savvy into online courses, creating broad fanbases and a steady source of income during uncertain times.
BOH has gathered a list of speakers, workshops, consultants and training programs that work with various organizations to educate and strategize around inclusion in the professional sphere.
In Business of Home’s latest Community Discussion, editor in chief Kaitlin Petersen speaks with Crans Baldwin, founder of Crans Baldwin & Associates, interior designer Chuck Chewning, and textile and interior designer Marika Meyer about best practices for navigating client relationships right now.
In Business of Home’s latest Community Discussion, editor in chief Kaitlin Petersen speaks with Holly Howard, founder of business consultancy Ask Holly How, about why now is the time to invest in yourself and your business—and why that doesn’t (or shouldn’t) mean the same thing.
In Business of Home’s latest Community Discussion, editor in chief Kaitlin Petersen speaks with Laura Bindloss, founder of PR and social media agency Nylon Consulting, and Joseph Aldrich, founder of integrated marketing firm The Cypress Group, about why it’s important to invest in marketing right now—and how to make your outreach count.
In Business of Home's latest community discussion, editor in chief Kaitlin Petersen speaks with Timur Yumusaklar, CEO of Schumacher, and Kate Temple Reynolds, founder of Temple Studio, for insight into how the textile industry is being affected by COVID-19—and what they’re learning from it.
In the newest episode of the BOH podcast, host Dennis Scully catches up with IIDA CEO Cheryl Durst on the hot-button issues faced by designers today, and why Instagram will never “give us life” the way IRL design does.
In a climate-controlled room in Bethpage, Long Island, sits a wonder of the modern design world: Kravet’s 35,000-piece archive of textiles from around the globe. Now, for the first time, selections from the archive will be on display to the public, in an exhibit at the New York School of Interior Design.