online design

Virtual Interior Design: The New Way to Decorate your Home

Virtual Interior Design: The New Way to Decorate your Home

With stay-at-home ordinances in full-effect, Interior Designers had to adapt and transition to working with clients remotely. How can an Interior Designer decorate your home without physically seeing your home in person? Virtual Interior Design allows you to work one-on-one with an interior designer remotely to professionally decorate your home. Whether you are located near or far, AMA Designs can work decorate your home, virtually anywhere. In this post, you will learn more about virtual interior design and how it works.

While Virtual Interior Design (aka E-design or Online Design) may not be a new concept, the e-design services have been gaining popularity, now more than ever. Before the idea of remote design became popular, I have been virtually designing interiors since 2015. It all started when a friend of mine moved across country and trusted me to design her new home remotely. Since then, I have added a variety of virtual interior design services to my list from consulting, accessorizing, to full-room design.

Virtual Design: Family Room Transformation in Oradell, NJ

Virtual Design: Family Room Transformation in Oradell, NJ

We recently had the pleasure of transforming a family room in Oradell, NJ through virtual design. The entire room was designed virtually and all project information, digital moodboards, 3-D renderings, floorplans, and furniture options were sent digitally through our user-friendly platform.

We start every project with a design consultation, in this case, it was a Virtual Consultation to learn more about her lifestyle, design aesthetic, and project details. As a busy mother of four children, their family lifestyle was very active and filled with entertaining and play dates.

When purchasing their home, the massive family room was a huge selling point but arranging the furniture in the room was a challenge. They have tried so many different layouts and moved the television to different walls, only to face the similar spatial issues.