Documenting Design Direction
Learn how to document approved design direction, materials, and client preferences inside projects.
Written By Gemma DeMasi
Last updated About 1 month ago
Overview
The Design Direction section centralizes approved aesthetic direction, materials, finishes, and client preferences.
This reduces operational mistakes and preserves design continuity across the project lifecycle.
What the Design Direction Section Includes
The Design Direction area may include:
Design vision
Aesthetic descriptions
Approved colors
Paint codes
Locked materials
Approved finishes
Client rejections
Hard no’s
Documenting the Design Vision
Describe the overall aesthetic direction using concise operational language.
Example:
Warm contemporary
Transitional coastal
European modern restraint
Approved Colors and Paint Codes
Store:
Paint names
Manufacturer references
Hex codes
Approved palettes
This helps maintain design consistency.
Locked Materials and Finishes
Document approved:
Materials
Textures
Stone selections
Fabrics
Finish specifications
Tracking Client Rejections and Hard No’s
Documenting rejected directions helps teams avoid repeated mistakes.
Examples:
No brass finishes
Avoid cool gray tones
No open shelving
Best Practices
Keep Documentation Specific
Ambiguous design direction creates execution problems.
Update as Decisions Evolve
Design approvals may shift during the project lifecycle.