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<title>Design Remote Jobs | Find Remote Graphic Designer Job Positions</title>
<link>https://www.designremotejobs.com</link>
<description>Find remote graphic design jobs worldwide. Browse hundreds of remote positions for graphic designers, UI/UX designers, and creative professionals. Work from anywhere.</description>
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<copyright>All rights reserved 2024, DesignRemoteJobs.com</copyright>
<category>Bitcoin News</category>
<item>
<title><![CDATA[25 Years in the Making: How a 'Crinkle Crankle' Brick Wall Reinvented the Serpentine Pavilion]]></title>
<link>https://www.designremotejobs.com/article/25-years-in-the-making-how-a-crinkle-crankle-brick-wall-reinvented-the-serpentine-pavilion</link>
<guid>25-years-in-the-making-how-a-crinkle-crankle-brick-wall-reinvented-the-serpentine-pavilion</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 18:00:48 GMT</pubDate>
<description><
*An aerial view shows the Lanza Atelier pavilion’s snakelike wall. Photograph: Iwan Baan, Courtesy Serpentine./© Lanza atelier*

*The bricks are set back to front which adds further textural interest. Photograph: Christian Sinibaldi/The Guardian*

*The structure is topped by a flat glass roof with fixed louvres that deflect the sun. Photograph: Christian Sinibaldi/The Guardian*]]></description>
<author>contact@designremotejobs.com (DesignRemoteJobs.com)</author>
<category>serpentinepavilion</category>
<category>lanzaatelier</category>
<category>brickarchitecture</category>
<category>crinkle-cranklewall</category>
<category>designtrends</category>
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<title><![CDATA[Flooring Trends 2026: What's Out and What's In for a Stylish Home]]></title>
<link>https://www.designremotejobs.com/article/flooring-trends-2026-whats-out-and-whats-in-for-a-stylish-home</link>
<guid>flooring-trends-2026-whats-out-and-whats-in-for-a-stylish-home</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 18:00:37 GMT</pubDate>
<description><![CDATA[In the world of interior design, certain flooring ideas have been trodden to death. Neutral colors provide a versatile base, but if the floor itself doesn't excite you, what's the point? We've consulted experts to find six recently-popular trends that are now out and seven new options to consider instead.
## Out: Cement and Encaustic Tile
Encaustic cement tiles are made from materials like marble dust, cement, sand, and natural pigments, resulting in Pinterest-worthy patterns. However, **their porous nature makes them stain easily**, and water marks are almost unavoidable. Lauren Lerner of Living with Lolo says, "Cement tile is one of those materials that looks beautiful in theory," but it underperforms once installed. Ongoing sealing requirements are a reality most homeowners aren't prepared for.
## Out: Polished Concrete Floors
Polished concrete brings a sleek, minimalist aesthetic but is prone to surface blemishes. "In real homes, they show every watermark, scratch, and footprint," says Lerner. Maintenance is high, and clients who have lived with them almost universally regret it.
## Out: Cool Gray Tile or Wood
Cool gray has been popular for a decade but is now visibly aging. **Gray undertones fight against warm finishes and natural materials** that are trending, making spaces feel stark and disjointed.
## Out: Large Format High-Gloss Floor Tile
High-gloss tiles look luxurious but are tough to maintain as flooring. "Gloss shows every scuff, every water spot, every dog paw," says Lerner. The glossy finish wears off, making porcelain beneath prone to damage.
## Out: Low-Quality Builder-Grade Luxury Vinyl Plank (LVP)
LVP is budget-friendly, but lower-quality versions feel plasticky and builder-grade. Craig Gritzen of Curated Style Collective advises looking for higher-quality products with richer textures and warmer tones for an elevated vibe.
## Out: Overly Bold Patterns in Floor Tiles
Full-room bold-patterned flooring is losing momentum. "When you live with them every day, they can quickly become extremely tiring to look at," says Gritzen. Homeowners are choosing timeless options with handmade texture and quieter patterns for better balance.
## In: Stone Inlay and Mixed Material Flooring
Homeowners are becoming more adventurous with custom floor detailing. Cara Woodhouse of Cara Woodhouse Interiors notes a rise in **expressive stone inlay and mixed material flooring**, combining different stones, subtle inlays, or oversized geometric layouts. "Flooring is becoming a focal point that adds personality and artistry to a space."
## In: Darker, Moodier Wood Tones
After years of lighter oak, there's a shift toward richer walnut tones, smoked finishes, and espresso stains. **Dark wood grounds a space and infuses it with warmth**, adding sophistication and natural texture.
## In: Unusual Plank Layouts in Hardwood Flooring
Rather than traditional straight planks, homeowners embrace customized approaches like oversized parquet, mixed plank widths, herringbone, and diagonal layouts. These bring movement and texture while feeling timeless.
## In: Tonal Layering Instead of High-Contrast Flooring
Kerrie Kelly of Kerrie Kelly Studio notes a move toward tonal flooring palettes—soft taupes, warm oaks, and honed stones. This creates a calm, cohesive foundation that supports the architecture rather than competing with it.
## In: Authentic Materials That Have Character and Texture
Authenticity is key: wood with natural grain or limestone with subtle movement. **Materiality does the storytelling**, grounding spaces in nature and reflecting personality.
## In: Matte and Honed Finishes
Matte finishes soften visual impact and perform well in busy households. They hide scratches and imperfections, are easier to maintain, and diffuse light for a relaxed, elevated environment.
## In: Continuous Flooring Across Spaces
Seamless flooring from room to room enhances flow and makes spaces feel larger. It's especially effective in open-plan areas and can connect indoor and outdoor living spaces, deepening the connection to nature.]]></description>
<author>contact@designremotejobs.com (DesignRemoteJobs.com)</author>
<category>flooringtrends</category>
<category>homedesign</category>
<category>interiordesign</category>
<category>2026trends</category>
<category>flooringideas</category>
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<title><![CDATA[Ferrari's First EV 'Luce' Divides Critics and Investors: Jony Ive's Design Under Fire]]></title>
<link>https://www.designremotejobs.com/article/ferraris-first-ev-luce-divides-critics-and-investors-jony-ives-design-under-fire</link>
<guid>ferraris-first-ev-luce-divides-critics-and-investors-jony-ives-design-under-fire</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 May 2026 18:00:41 GMT</pubDate>
<description><![CDATA[Ferrari has unveiled its first electric vehicle, the **Luce**, with a starting price of **$640,000**. The car features a minimalist design by former Apple design chief **Jony Ive**, but the look has proven divisive among analysts and fans, leading to a drop in Ferrari's share price.
The Luce boasts a range of **329 miles** on a **122 kWh battery**, with four motors accelerating from 0 to 100 km/h in **2.5 seconds** and a top speed over **310 km/h**. It is the first Ferrari with **five seats** and only the second with **four doors**, targeting wealthy families over sportscar enthusiasts.
CEO **Benedetto Vigna** stated: "We are convinced that a company demonstrates its leadership when it has the courage to dare and to take on the challenge of new technologies. Ferrari Luce was born precisely from this challenge, offering our unprecedented vision of electrification."
However, critics argue the design strays too far from Ferrari's heritage. Pierre-Olivier Essig of AIR Capital described the Luce as a "mix between a Honda Accord EV and Tesla 3," questioning the brand's new strategy.
The Luce was developed with **LoveFrom**, the studio Jony Ive founded after his tenure at Apple. Despite the electric powertrain, Ferrari includes a **motor sound played through speakers** to appeal to traditionalists.
Ferrari's share price fell up to **8%** on the day of the launch, reflecting investor uncertainty. The company has scaled back its electrification targets, now aiming for **40% internal combustion, 40% hybrid, and 20% electric** by 2030.]]></description>
<author>contact@designremotejobs.com (DesignRemoteJobs.com)</author>
<category>ferrari</category>
<category>electricvehicle</category>
<category>jonyive</category>
<category>design</category>
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<title><![CDATA[Tiny Home, Big Life: Expert Tips for Maximizing Small Spaces]]></title>
<link>https://www.designremotejobs.com/article/tiny-home-big-life-expert-tips-for-maximizing-small-spaces</link>
<guid>tiny-home-big-life-expert-tips-for-maximizing-small-spaces</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 20 May 2026 18:00:32 GMT</pubDate>
<description><![CDATA[In 2010, Colin Chee picked up the keys to his 37-square-meter off-the-plan apartment in Melbourne's city centre. "It was only then that I realised how shit it was." With no design experience and a limited budget, his quest for inspiration led to the birth of **Never Too Small**, a YouTube channel showcasing clever designs for small spaces, now with over 3 million subscribers.
A housing crisis and surge in apartment building mean more people are searching for ways to make the most of small-scale abodes. Three experts share their experiences of designing their own diminutive domiciles.
## Formulate Your Furnishings
When moving into a new space, the first instinct is to settle in quickly. But Chee cautions against hasty fit-outs in smaller spaces. He urges people to move in with whatever fits, then **take time to live in a space** before finding solutions. "People think a home needs to be finished instantly," Chee says. "But what I try to convey is that homes will never be perfect."
Small spaces take more time to understand, and we should regard our living spaces like a flatmate—with pros and cons, good days and bad.
To keep costs down, Chee furnished his apartment with a mix of **second-hand items and budget customisations**. In the kitchen, he placed a bar fridge and a separate small freezer to avoid bulk. He installed a DIY entryway shelf months after moving in, once clear on its purposes. He looked for **"skinny legs"** when sourcing furniture, which maximises visible floor space, giving an illusion of spaciousness. Instead of a coffee table, "maybe you just need a stool for your drink" that can double as a step ladder.
Tahj Rosmarin installed a piece of **multifunctional custom joinery** along the main wall of his living space. Measuring six metres long, it serves as storage, bench seating, shelving, and a TV cabinet—removing the need for any other furniture.
## Don't Default to an Open Plan
Rosmarin says 1960s walk-ups have great external features but inside, the trend was to box everything off, making things feel pokey. "What we tried to do is **connect the spaces a bit better** while still keeping that sense of separation, because that is especially important for small homes—you don't want to feel like you're in just one big room."
Rather than demolish the wall between kitchen and living areas, the couple knocked through a **cafeteria-style window**, creating visual connection while hiding mess. Demolishing load-bearing walls is expensive, so "creating these tactical openings" also helps with the budget.
Claire Scorpo and her husband transformed a badly renovated bedsit. In the tiny bathroom, they retained the bath and divided the space in half using a **fluted glass partition** that diffuses light, breaking the room into separate dressing and bathing areas.
The most sanity-saving design choices keep rooms usable for different purposes by two people at the same time. "We get lured into the idea that **open-plan living is the best** kind of design for small spaces but often that one big space can only do one thing at once."
## Make Use of Vertical Space
With just 23 square meters of floor space, Scorpo's first step was to downsize to a double bed. Rather than let it dominate, they created a **"nook" to conceal it**. As long as you don't have mobility issues, it makes sense to eliminate wasted bedside space, elevate the bed for storage (a washing machine, in their case), and climb in.
Chee says there are countless **DIY "hacks"** online that make bed elevation more affordable. With a $5,000 budget, he and his partner leaned into Ikea and Bunnings solutions that emulate custom options while being cheaper. They used an Ikea Elvarli modular shelving system with salvaged wood.
For apartments with standard ceiling heights, **raising shelving and curtain rods** as close as possible to the ceiling accentuates height. Painting ceilings with a glossy paint adds to the illusion too.]]></description>
<author>contact@designremotejobs.com (DesignRemoteJobs.com)</author>
<category>smallspacedesign</category>
<category>tinyhome</category>
<category>interiordesigntips</category>
<category>spacesaving</category>
<category>budgetdecor</category>
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<title><![CDATA[I Spent a Week with the reMarkable Paper Pro – Here’s Why It’s the Best Digital Notebook for Creatives]]></title>
<link>https://www.designremotejobs.com/article/i-spent-a-week-with-the-remarkable-paper-pro-heres-why-its-the-best-digital-notebook-for-creatives</link>
<guid>i-spent-a-week-with-the-remarkable-paper-pro-heres-why-its-the-best-digital-notebook-for-creatives</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 18 May 2026 18:00:30 GMT</pubDate>
<description><
My handwriting is poor at the best of times, but on iPad, it's abysmal. Writing with a stylus on glass just doesn't cut it. But here, I genuinely felt like I was writing in a notebook. The Marker Plus might not feature all of the bells and whistles of, say, the Apple Pencil Pro (although the erasing tip is cool), but combined with the **matte texture** of the tablet, it makes for the best digital writing experience I've encountered.

It was at this point that I started to see, well, the point. I realised that my experience of digital notebooks has been unfairly coloured by the suboptimal experience offered by devices that aren't dedicated solely to drawing and writing. Like a paper notebook (and unlike an iPad), the reMarkable tablet offers a **distraction-free** writing and drawing space.
But where it differs from ye olde paper notebook is **storage**. If you're somebody who either writes a lot or reads a lot, you've probably had to deal with reams of paper in your life. Paper that stacks up, takes up space and is easily lost or damaged.

And then there's the **editing tools**. As somebody who scrawls quicker than he can think, I'm always crossing out large swathes of text – which is one surefire way to fill a notebook with junk. The reMarkable solves this issue by easily letting the user circle text to select it, then erase (or move or resize).
Ultimately, the Paper Pure is an extremely simple device. It's nothing more than a digital e-ink notebook – this one doesn't even have keyboard support unlike previous models. But that's the beauty of it. It does **one thing extremely well**. But it offers just enough to make it worth considering over its analogue counterpart, the humble notebook. I'm sold.]]></description>
<author>contact@designremotejobs.com (DesignRemoteJobs.com)</author>
<category>remarkable</category>
<category>digitalnotebook</category>
<category>e-inktablet</category>
<category>note-taking</category>
<category>designtools</category>
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