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National members of the Interior Design Society were selected to share some of their High Point Market favorites from within IMC properties. Each designer has carefully curated products that he or she plans to use in an upcoming project or can’t stop swooning over (or maybe a bit of both)! This fall's featured designers are Alan Gravley, Beginning to End Interiors, Sarasota, FL; Jeremy Bauer & Jason Clifton, Bauer Clifton Interiors, Juneau, AK; Katharine Rhudy, Reed & Acanthus Antiques and Interiors, New Canaan, CT; Lisa Sorenson Floyd, Baker Design Group, Dallas, TX; Staci Steidley, Studio Steidley, Dallas, TX; and Tracy Davis, Urban Dwellings, Portland, ME.
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Would you or your chapter like to be featured on Hot Topics? Email Maddie Landers at mlanders@interiordesignsociety.org for more information.
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Join IDS or renew your membership during the month of October for your chance to win one of these tools that will help grow your business.
New Arkansas chapter coming soon!
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Did you hear that we have a new chapter starting in Arkansas? If you are interested in joining this, or our other new chapter in Northern Virginia, please contact Della Swider, our Membership Manager, at dswider@interiordesignsociety.org.

This event was a fundraiser to raise money for the Chicago chapter’s service project. This year they partnered with a community crisis center which provides emergency services - shelter, clothing, counseling - to women and children fleeing abusive situations. The IDS Chicago chapter will be fixing up their community room with new paint, furniture, and window treatments. The event included a silent auction, raffle, a CEU from Sherwin Williams and a presentation from ComfortTex. Sponsors included: Sherwin Williams, Shaw, Cambria, ComfortTex and OHI. There were around 35 people in attendance and the event raised close to $1500!
 Sallie Kjos, from South Riding, VA, is our September Member Spotlight! Read more about her design journey here.
“Growing up, I was always influenced by the design world, so much so, it blended into my life pretty seamlessly. My dad worked on restoring vintage cars & building houses. He would always quiz me on the color pallets used and how to get the perfect shade of whatever color I could imagine plus style of homes with detailed information. Pair that with my aunt’s store, named the English Cottage (my family is from England), and I was already half way to being a designer! It was here I would obsess over the antiques, home décor items, and whatever knick knacks I could get my hands on to make my own styled displays.”
“Victory!” and “Membership Momentum!” are words that spring to mind when asked why I joined the Interior Design Society (IDS). I also think of these words: “distinction, education, mentoring, networking, support, community service IMPACT,” and finally…. “Metamorphosis.” Here’s why.
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If you’ve been thinking about joining the Interior Design Society or renewing your membership, now is the time to do it!! For the month of October, IDS is offering the chance to win one of four spectacular prizes.
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Interested in writing for our blog? Fill out this quick form!
The Interior Design Society has announced that the exclusive IDS Buyers’ Guide
— the premier resource of relevant products and services for interior design professionals — is now
available at the IDS website at http://www.interiordesignersbuyersguide.com/.
If your company or business has not yet taken advantage of this exceptional opportunity to highlight
your products and services in the Guide, it is not too late! To learn more about advertising your products
or services in this exclusive Guide, please email ids-advertise@svmmedia.com or click here.
The New York Times
Hiring a high-profile architect used to be all it took to sell a new building. But now buyers want to see the interiors fully designed, as well.
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Forbes
Every year, paint companies and design industry experts come up with their annual color choices for our homes. Color authority Pantone chose Ultra Violet (Pantone 18-3838) as its 2018 color. Sherwin-Williams named blue-green Oceanside (SW 6496), and Benjamin Moore went another direction altogether with its spicy red Caliente (AF-290). You may paint your walls in one of those colors, or choose towels for your bathroom, but it’s less likely that you’ll buy Caliente cabinets for your master bath renovation or an Ultra Violet dual fuel range from Italy.
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By Michael J. Berens
In the previous two years, U.S. homeowners completed more than 43.7 million home improvement projects. That and other data related to recent home remodeling and renovation activity are part of the responses to the 2017 American Home Survey (AHS), released last month by the Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. The findings include information on the most common types of projects, amount spent, use of professional services, and activity by age and income groups.
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Metropolis
In a small, locked basement room in Newark, three tanks gurgle gently all in a row. Martina Decker, an associate professor and director of the Material Dynamics Lab at the New Jersey Institute of Technology, finds the right key on her chain and opens the door, releasing a slight organic smell, like the bulk beans-and-grains section of a grocery store. Up close, the vats bubble with mystery liquids—actually strains of cyanobacteria—each one a different shade of green, ranging from a young Japanese tea to pond scum in full bloom.
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The Globe and Mail
Rosalinda, one of Toronto’s newest vegan restaurants, was conceived to celebrate all things plant based. But as interior designers Brenda Bent and Karen Gable were coming up with the concept, they quickly learned that installing a functioning greenhouse in the space would be impossible.
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Realtor.com
Any designer will tell you there's an art — a science even — to arranging the perfect space. But that doesn't mean those same designers won't occasionally thumb their noses at “the rules,” those sacrosanct musts that too often get all the credit for a great room.
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The Independent
It has been the year of the collaboration. From IKEA X Adidas to Habitat X Shrimps, we have seen brands twist and fuse to create the most striking clothing, accessories and design items, bearing uncanny and delightful resemblances to each company involved.
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The Interior Design Society has joined The Interior Design Continuing Education Council (IDCEC), effective Jan. 1. Click here to learn more.
Information on CEU change for IDS Associate members
As of January 1, 2017, IDS Associate members must earn a minimum of 0.4 (4 hours) approved continuing education units (CEU) each year. Please make note of the following helpful information regarding CEUs and CEU filing to maintain your Associatel level membership in IDS.
IDS bylaws and policies require Professional and Associate members to meet the continuing education requirement. The IDS continuing education requirement is separate from any mandated continuing education requirement in your local jurisdiction. Check with your state regulatory board for requirements.
Filing CEUs
IDS members must utilize the Interior Design Continuing Education Council (IDCEC) registry to file CEUs. Each IDS member must create a free account through IDCEC. Once you have created your IDCEC account, you will receive a unique IDCEC number to login into the IDCEC website (your IDCEC number is different than your IDS member number). The IDCEC user registry allows you to upload and track your continuing education activity as well as store a record for you under your account. Check your IDCEC account regularly to ensure your records are up-to-date. At the end of each CEU cycle, you will be required to submit your IDCEC report to the IDS National office to verify that you have fulfilled your CEU requirement.
Special Circumstances
IDS may grant an adjustment to the requirement for individuals experiencing poor health, certified by a physician; a specific physical or mental disability, certified by an appropriate health care professional; extended duty with the armed forces; or for extreme hardship, which, in the board’s judgment, makes it impossible for the member to comply. Requests for an adjustment to the continuing education requirement must be made at least two months (by October 30) prior to the end of the current reporting period.
Noncompliance
At the end of a reporting period, members who have failed to meet the CEU requirements will be subject to a non-compliance fee ($10 per CEU). Any member who fails to comply with the continuing education requirement, including payment of the noncompliance fee, may be subject to devaluation of Professional membership.
Please call IDS Membership Manager, Della Swider at 336-884-4437 ext. 223 for information. If you are an active member of IDS National, join our closed Facebook group to connect with members across the country! Click here to join the group.
Concrete Decor magazine, the concrete industry's premier magazine for all things decorative concrete is offering IDS members the chance to subscribe free to their magazine. Click here to read their current issue that features an article about how decorative concrete is carving its way into the design community.
If you are interested in obtaining a membership certificate or replacement membership card, please email idsbenefits@interiordesignsociety.org or call 336-884-4437 ext. 223 (please note for all replacement membership cards, there will be a $10 fee payable in advance for each replacement card ordered).
To view benefits exclusively available to IDS members, visit the Member Benefits page on the IDS National website. Members must log in on the IDS website in order to take advantage of available discounts.
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 7701 Las Colinas Ridge, Ste. 800, Irving, TX 75063
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