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Tag: dementia interior designer

Winning Announcement From The Care Home Interiors Co.

Winning Announcement From The Care Home Interiors Co.

The Care Home Interiors Co. has a big announcement to make. The company was awarded with the very impressive accolade of category winner at the Care Sector Supplier Awards in the furniture, furnishings and floor coverings category.

Held at the prestigious Hurlingham Club, London, the awards are a highlight in the care sector calendar with suppliers from all over the UK coming together in the hope of being recognised as one of the best suppliers to the sector.

Of special poignancy to The Care Home Interiors Co. is that the awards acknowledged and distinguished the company’s craftsmanship in its field of manufacturing furniture and furnishings.

Kerry Southern-Reason, Managing Director of The Care Home Interiors Co. says:
“I am so proud of the team. This award is theirs! We are lucky enough to have won design awards but this award is for our furnishings and furniture.

“Every item we make is to the highest standards; we take enjoyment in that and every lasting detail of our work. When we make a product by hand our customer is assured of the very highest quality workmanship and attention to detail. In a world where most products are mass-produced, it’s important that our customers can buy a product that is unique and it is so nice to have been recognised for this. Credit goes to our curtain makers, upholsterers, and cabinet makers. It really is their talent and their award. Thank you.”

The Care Home Interiors Co. has a proud heritage. Their workrooms have been manufacturing curtains and upholstery for over 40 years and over three generations from their rural Hampshire base.

The Butterfly is the company symbol, a mantra for change, transition, adaptation and growth to ensure they at the forefront of Care Home Interiors Co. A transformative interiors company, forever moving forward, the company seek new directions with one focus; to create safe but exciting care home interiors.

Dementia Design Myth Busting

Dementia Design Myth Busting

Designing Interiors for Dementia comes with a lot of myths, which is why The Care Home Interiors Co. share their company thinking, and design tips, in their very own dementia design myths and facts compendium compiled from their own experience.

The Care Home Interiors Co. motto: “To make a real difference and give people the respect and space they deserve as adults who have lived a lot of life.” A statement the company lives and works to, as they create practical-based designed interiors for people living with dementia.

Get to grips with the myths and facts of designing interiors for those living with dementia here:

  • Myth: painting everything in primary colours will help.
    Fact: using contrast rather than colour will.
  • Myth: individuals with dementia have regressed into a child-like reality.
    Fact: people with dementia want to be in an environment that is as normal to them as it can be.
  • Myth: normal artwork wouldn’t appeal to someone living with dementia.
    Fact: carefully chosen artwork can enhance how someone living with dementia processes their environment.

Top tips:

MAKE IT A HOME
People with dementia want to be in an environment that is as normal to them as possible.

REFLECT THE PURPOSE OF THE SPACE
A dining room should look like a dining room, so too a lounge, kitchen or bathroom.

SELECT APPROPRIATE FURNITURE & FURNISHINGS
Avoid patterns, shiny surfaces, overly colourful.

AVOID CHILDLIKE IN EVERY RESPECT
Create areas of interest for individuals.

EMBRACE THE USE OF ARTWORK
It creates a sense of the familiar and is useful for aiding memory loss.

We know designing the right interior for those living with dementia can and does have very positive outcomes for all who interact with that space.

Want to know more? Contact us.

Over the years, the Care Home Interiors Co. has become a pioneer in dementia interior design. In 2020 the team helped one client secure a Pinders Healthcare Design Award in the dementia design category. Using first-hand experience, coupled with best practice dementia advice, the company strives to create a comfortable environment for those living with dementia.

How design can bring meaningful life activities for those living with dementia.

How design can bring meaningful life activities for those living with dementia.

“To make a real difference and give people the respect and space they deserve as adults who have lived a lot of life.”

A motto the design team at Care Home Interiors Co. live and work to as they extol the virtues of their tried and tested practical-based designed interiors for people living with dementia.

If Covid-19 has taught us anything it’s that those living with dementia in care homes need a purpose and a reason to get up in the morning with meaningful tasks to engage within their living environment.

As designers, we need to make the space interactive like a normal home, a place to do tasks in a safe secure way. Why should a dementia care home be anything less than a well thought out and designed care home?

Sensory and tactile, pick up, and put down, thought-provoking, interesting, all our energy goes into this. I have seen the absolute fear on a person’s face when utter confusion takes over at the sight of a life-like mural depicting one of many realistic scenes that you can’t actually engage with. How confusing would that be to you when you are already wrestling with confusion, fear, frustration and loss of your memory?

Design should enhance and enable a person’s quality of life allowing them to take control however they can. For us, this is all in the detail. We create areas of interest for individuals. We call them activity displays. This could be a display of hats or flowers. Having the freedom to pick something up like this, maybe mooch along with it, or sit in a tactically placed chair positioned for contemplation of an object, encourages sensory interactions.

Finding joy in the little things like picking up a hat can lead to discovering a long lost memory about once wearing them, it’s real, it means something, and more to the point it doesn’t create confusion or distress, in fact, quite the opposite.

A few points to remember before embarking on designing or refurbishing your care home for those living with dementia.

Normal is best:
People with dementia want to be in an environment that is as normal to them as it can possibly be. They remember living in a domestic home, not a clinical institutional building, try to remember it’s their home.
Distinguish a room’s purpose:
Practical design is very important in alleviating confusion. Obvious references such as a fireplace in the living room, dining tables, cutlery and crockery in the dining room can avoid frustration and fear as they clearly define the space and its use.
Keep it real:
Fake items are not real. Why not create something that can be engaged with instead? A collection of hats, costume jewellery, books, or playing cards, keeping it real encourages interaction and prevents confusion.

Remember; make no assumptions when designing for people living with dementia. Instead, focus on making a comfortable and homely living environment.

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