Designer vs Decorator: Choosing what’s right for your project
- Feb 17
- 3 min read
Updated: Feb 19
Demystifying Your Home Design Series - Part 1
Designer vs Decorator: Choosing What’s Right for Your Project
When I was young, long before I reached my double digits, I had no concept of the interior design or decorating industry. What I did know was that I adored my Laura Ashley wallpaper, a delicate pattern of pale blue flowers that felt like the prettiest thing in my world. I had no inkling that decades later, in my fifties, I would step into this field as a profession.
Looking back, I realise that in those days the decorator was the pinnacle of design flair. We spoke of decorators, never interior designers. Their rooms did more than look beautiful. They signalled identity and shaped culture in a way I only came to understand much later.
I grew up in South Africa with a front row seat to that tradition, although I did not recognise it at the time. My grandmother, confident in her taste, hired Iris Hamman, a sought after South African decorator. Years later, my parents were gifted Iris’s guidance when they built our first home from the ground up.

What stayed with me was the comfort and beauty Iris created through a discipline of equal parts intuition, deep know-how, and the kind of rigorous follow through that defines truly thoughtful decoration.
As formal design education expanded, schools drew a firmer line between designer and decorator. Somewhere along the way, the word decorator lost some of its shine, too often reduced to hobbyists who simply “have an eye”. The blurred lines did not help. They created a gap for the casual enthusiast to fill.
Happily, the tide is turning. More trained interior designers, myself included, are choosing to specialise in the decorative arts. Colour, textiles, furnishings, art, and the layered finishing touches that make a space sing. Not as an add on, but as an expert, end to end service.
Designer vs Decorator, Why the Difference Matters
Here is the truth.
This profession is not only about making beauty. In my work, the creative concept might be twenty to thirty percent. The rest is space planning, logistics, coordination, procurement, sampling, lead time management, installation sequencing, and quality control. It is professional, complex, and demands deep knowledge of fabrics, furniture forms, performance, provenance, sustainability, comfort, and scale.
This is why extending a designer’s scope on a remodel or new build to also do furnishings may or may not deliver peak value. Many full scope designers are superb generalists across architecture, construction, and joinery. Yet by the time decorative goods are specified, the process can slip into plug and play, items chosen to fit a plan rather than forming a truly considered final layer.
A specialist focused solely on furnishings and finishing details brings different momentum. Fresh eyes, deep product knowledge, and the patience to curate.
Ultimately, your choice is contextual. In some cases , one studio managing every detail makes a lot of sense, especially for high-end ground up new builds or extensive remodels projects whereby you have built a long-standing and extremely positive relationship with your designer. For others, bringing in a finishing design specialist could yield a better outcome, financially and aesthetically. Maybe you you take a financial pause between building and furnishing a home.
There is no one size fits all. There is only the scope that serves you best.
And that is where I come in. Whether you call me a designer or a decorator, my value lies in carrying your vision from concept to completion with clarity, intention, and none of the overwhelm.
What's next in the series
As you think about the type of support your project may require, the next part in this series will look at why hiring the right expert is genuinely worth the investment.
This series, the full Demystifying Your Home Design Series, is aimed to serve you whenever the time feels right. You might also choose to share it with a friend or colleague who is thinking about making changes to their home.
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This post is the first in my 8-part series:
Demystifying Your Home Design Series: A Behind-the-Scenes Series for Design-Loving Homeowners & Renters
Topic: Designer vs decorator, understanding the difference
Series: Demystifying Your Home Design – Part 1
Focus: Clarifying the distinction between interior designer and decorator, and explaining the value of a finishing design specialist
Key themes: Designer vs decorator, decorative arts, furnishings and finishing touches, project scope, professional design expertise, cohesive interiors
Audience: Homeowners planning a remodel, new build, or furnishing project who want clarity before hiring a design professional
Location relevance: Dallas interior designer services, specialising in furnishings and finishing design, available virtually across the United States


Before I learned more about this profession, I did not yet appreciate how much logistics were involved, but you are totally right! I am so amazed by what you do- all the measuring, space vizualizing ect- incredible!
I am about to make an offer for long term renting an apartment, and lay awake last night thinking of all the aspects I must first be sure the landlord is prepared to provide. It is an old build, and I didn’t for instance see many wall plug points. I’ll be furnishing it from scratch but with no plan or idea of what and where items will be placed, where do I place the power points … I realise I need a plan and guidance,