
The iDesign Lab Podcast | Where Design, Business, and Culture Shape How We Live and Build
Tiffany Woolley, Scott Woolley
<p>The iDesign Lab Podcast explores how intentional design influences far more than interiors—it shapes the way we think, build, lead, and experience the world.</p><p><br></p><p>Hosted by Scott Woolley and Tiffany Woolley, the show sits at the intersection of design, entrepreneurship, creativity, and human behavior. Each episode features in-depth conversations with designers, founders, creators, and innovators who are actively shaping industries and redefining how people engage with products, spaces, brands, media, and experiences.</p><p><br></p><p>From architecture and product design to branding, storytelling, hospitality, and technology, we uncover how design thinking drives emotion, identity, connection, and business success.</p><p><br></p><p>This is not a surface-level design show—it’s a conversation about how intentional creation impacts culture, decision-making, and the future of how we live.</p><p><br></p><p><b>We explore topics such as:</b><br> • How design influences behavior, emotion, and experience<br> • Building brands and businesses through intentional design<br> • The intersection of creativity, entrepreneurship, and innovation<br> • Storytelling, media, and the design of modern culture<br> • Reinvention, resilience, and the mindset behind creative success<br> • Behind-the-scenes insights from leaders shaping their industries</p><p><br></p><p>Whether you're a creative professional, entrepreneur, or simply curious about how design quietly shapes your world, The iDesign Lab offers meaningful conversations and actionable insights you can apply immediately.</p><p><br></p><p>New episodes weekly featuring conversations with leading voices in design, business, and creative innovation. </p><p><br></p><p> For more information about iDesign Lab and Tiffany & Scott Woolley, visit the website at www.twinteriors.com/podcast and ScottWoolley.com</p>
Recent Episodes
20 episodesInside a Top 200 Architect’s Mind: How Design Shapes the Way We Live | Jay Reinert
Send us Fan MailA beautiful house can still fail you on day one if there’s nowhere to put the trash can, nowhere to set the shampoo, and no plan for how you actually move through your morning. That’s where this conversation goes fast: past surface-level style and into the real mechanics of residential design that make a home feel effortless.We sit down with Jay Reinert, founder of J Reinert Architecture and a Forbes Top 200 residential architect, to talk about the uncommon advantage of being both architect and builder. Jay shares how a hands-on upbringing and years in design-build shaped his approach to renovations, additions, and new homes, especially in established historic towns where context matters. We get into historic preservation, zoning, and the “knockdown” dilemma, plus why replicas can make authentic architecture feel strangely cheap.Jay breaks down his process from pre-design through schematic design, and why generating clear alternatives helps clients spend with confidence. We also talk about integrating interior design early so furniture layouts, storage, and daily routines shape the architecture instead of fighting it later. Along the way, we dig into craftsmanship, sustainability, aging in place, what travel in the UK and Edinburgh reveals about building longevity, and how AI may push the industry toward “good enough” unless we protect the human side of design.If you care about renovation, residential architecture, historic homes, interior design collaboration, or simply building a house that works, hit play, subscribe, and share this with someone planning a remodel. After you listen, leave a review and tell us the one detail you think every architect should plan for first.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
How Your Environment Shapes Your Success - Annette Farha
Send us Fan MailYour home can be beautiful and still quietly drain you. That tension is what we unpack with Annette Farha, an intuitive design coach and the author of Finding My Way Home, as we explore how interior design, breathwork, and simple Feng Shui-informed principles can shift the way you feel in your own space.We start with the foundation: getting out of your head and into your body. Annette explains why breathing is not a “nice extra” but the fastest way to get clear on what you actually want, especially during life transitions like grief, divorce, empty nesting, remarriage, or a new career chapter. From there, we dig into practical tools you can use right away, including identifying your values, choosing a single “feel word” for your home, and noticing the instant signal your body gives you when you take the first step into a room.We also talk about clutter in a more useful way. Annette’s “juicers and zappers” framework helps you spot the objects that energize you versus the ones that subtly pull you backward, even if the room looks tidy. We get real about budgets, remodel phases, and couple dynamics, plus how to make hard choices without losing the story and warmth that makes a house feel like home.If you want a calmer nervous system, better flow, and a space that supports the life you’re building, you’ll take a lot from this conversation. Subscribe to iDesign Lab, share this with a friend who feels stuck at home, and leave a review telling us your feel word for the space you’re creating.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
How Virtual Interior Design Is Making Luxury Spaces More Accessible, Scalable, and Client-Driven
Send us Fan MailLuxury interior design sounds out of reach for a lot of people, but the real gap is often simpler: most homeowners know what they like, they just don’t know how to put it together without wasting money. We sit down with Kristy Salewsky, founder of Crew Collective Design in San Diego, to talk about the practical side of luxury and how virtual interior design has become a streamlined, accessible way to get professional results.We dig into what online design services look like behind the scenes: a clear contract and scope, an in-depth questionnaire, photos and measurements, Pinterest inspiration that gets translated into a real plan, plus mood boards, layouts, and product selections organized inside a platform like DesignFiles. Kristy also shares how she targets a fast turnaround, why 3D renderings matter for client confidence, and when it makes sense to outsource specialized work like photorealistic visuals.Money talk is front and center, too. We cover why a budget has to come first, how client education changes everything in a kitchen remodel or bathroom renovation, and how her flat-fee model stays clear with deliverables and timelines. We also compare full-service procurement to a link-based approach where clients handle purchasing and delivery, often using white glove delivery to keep things smooth.If you’ve been curious about hiring a virtual interior designer, scaling a design studio, or simply avoiding the “I hate it and now I have to redo it” moment, this conversation will help. Subscribe to iDesign Lab, share this with a friend planning a remodel, and leave a review with your biggest design question.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
How Architects Are Redefining Beauty Brands Through Design, Storytelling, and Intentional Restraint
Send us Fan MailWhat happens when two architects trade master plans for makeup counters and fragrance labs? We sit down with Bradley and Jonina Skaggs of Skaggs Creative to unpack how an agency born from architecture school, 3D CAD, and a NASA virtual tour evolved into a studio shaping some of beauty’s most memorable brands. From Estée Lauder to Diptyque and Charlotte Tilbury, they reveal the strategy behind packaging that feels inevitable and photography that turns a single object into a world.We dive into why differentiation beats imitation, especially in a market flooded with “clean” and “green” claims that no longer separate anyone. Their process starts with clarity: align positioning and messaging, surface what truly makes a product different, and translate that into a visual system that customers grasp in seconds. AI now accelerates research, but craft still rules—sketch before software, build prototypes, and use typography and hierarchy to direct the eye. The pair explains how they sell bold ideas by listening first, tying creative choices to client pain points, and presenting both what’s asked for and what’s actually needed.Their architectural mindset shows up everywhere: products treated like little buildings, light sculpting form in stills, and packaging engineered with the realities of materials, ink, and supply chains. We talk custom primary packaging, the value of staying small and fast, and why the right printer is a strategic partner, not a line item. Along the way, you’ll hear candid takes on social media’s pull toward sameness, the power of founder truth, and the patience required to build brands that outlast trends.If you care about brand identity, packaging design, product photography, and the intersection of AI with timeless craft, this conversation is a field guide to standing out without shouting. Enjoyed the episode? Follow, share with a creative friend, and leave a quick review to help more listeners find the show.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
How Brand Partnerships Influence Design, Shape Trust, and Drive Cultural Trends
Send us Fan MailTired of being told to “stay in your lane”? We dig into why collaboration has become the smartest path to real growth, trust, and relevance—especially in design, but also in beauty, tech, and beyond. From powerhouse pairings like Visual Comfort with Kelly Wearstler to Four Hands with Amber Lewis, we break down how a partner’s aesthetic, audience, and credibility can elevate a product line without diluting the host brand. The result is not just buzz; it’s a durable story that drives discovery, purchase, and loyalty.We also zoom out to cross-industry moves that prove the model travels. Aerin Lauder’s evolution from beauty into lifestyle and now a collaboration with Kohler shows how brand DNA can leap categories when it’s grounded in taste and heritage. That heritage matters. By drawing from archives and design history, partnerships teach consumers why details count—turning a fixture, a frame, or a tray into a daily ritual with meaning. In an era of fast content and AI shortcuts, substance sets you apart.On the practical side, we unpack how collaborations supercharge content and “scrollability” with behind-the-scenes stories, studio visits, and launch moments that feed TikTok and Instagram. Pop-ups add urgency and place, turning a two-week activation into a destination that sparks photos, FOMO, and measurable conversion. If you run a business, you’ll hear simple steps to start: define your value, find complementary partners, craft a shared content calendar, launch a capsule or pop-up, and measure more than likes—think email growth, footfall, and repeat buys.Have a dream collab or a partnership idea we should hear? Share it with us and join the conversation. If you enjoyed this episode, follow the show, leave a quick review, and pass it to a friend who’s ready to expand their lane.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
How Eastern Accents Built a Luxury Brand Through Craftsmanship, Design, and Legacy
Send us Fan MailWhat if the softest thing in your home was also the most ambitious? We sit down with Creative Director Louise Trafficanti to follow a thread from Dublin’s design studios to a humming Chicago factory, where Eastern Accents turns global textiles into everyday luxury—pillows, bedding, drapery, headboards, and custom pieces that actually ship on time.Louise shares how a visa lottery, grit, and a love for materials led her to a domestic workroom that still cuts and sews under one roof. We explore how fabrics are sourced from Italy, India, Turkey, China, and U.S. mills, then shaped through a monthly launch model that replaces glaze-over markets with steady, story-driven collections. Inside the process: building mood boards, balancing coordinates, crit-style reviews with sales, and price checks that keep beauty practical. Expect real talk on design psychology—why damask endures, why botanicals soothe, and why fruit prints can backfire in bedrooms—plus a debunking of thread count myths in favor of fiber quality and finishing.Craft takes center stage as we walk a pillow from roll to box: single-layer cuts for accuracy, overlocking, meticulous sewing, hand-applied details, and final QC with lint rollers and fill choices. Custom is a core muscle—NBA-length beds, airline seat sheets with embroidered IDs, storage benches, and headboards rendered online with fabrics, nailheads, and wood stains. We also step into Pandora’s Manor, the 1905 High Point landmark Louise helped restore into a six-room inn. Each bedroom carries a distinct designer vision, while the home’s soul—stained glass, woodwork, and an exhibition kitchen—welcomes guests, events, and the quiet awe that textiles can create.Looking ahead, Louise previews cordless, motorized Roman shades with full customization and smart controls, rounding out a portfolio built on responsiveness and respect for craft. If you’re a designer, maker, or anyone who loves the feel of a well-made bed, this story bridges the gap between mills, workrooms, and that first night under a new duvet. Subscribe, share with a friend who geeks out on fabrics, and leave a review to tell us your favorite textile moment.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
How Katia Rudnick Built a Purpose-Driven Jewelry Brand Through Intentional Design
Send us Fan MailA single glance across a yoga studio changed everything. Katia Rudnik saw a medallion bracelet, followed a quiet nudge, and uncovered a new medium, a message, and a patented idea that would shape Katia Designs into a purpose-driven jewelry brand people don’t just wear—they feel.We open with Katia’s journey from Soviet Moscow to Boston at sixteen, navigating a new language and a new life. Years later in Florida, after helping run medical spas and raising three daughters, she wanted work that felt like her. A metal clay class unlocked an organic, earthy-glam look; meditation and gratitude gave it a voice. She began stamping mantras—breathe, believe, keep going—into her pieces so the wearer could carry a reminder close to the heart. Then came the “aha”: a magnetic clasp that lets one necklace shift into many looks. She patented the mechanism, pairing utility with meaning to carve a distinct niche.We dig into the real mechanics of growth: pricing artistry when materials are brass and bronze, building early inventory for pop-ups, and turning DTC storytelling on Instagram and Facebook into momentum and over 10,000 five-star reviews. Katia explains why scarcity fuels collecting, how two new collections a month stay fresh without chaos, and what oxidized finishes do for detail and brand identity. She shares the team’s evolution from a garage to a Boca Raton studio, overseas components with local assembly, and the balance between creative impulse and operational discipline.As social platforms shift and acquisition costs climb, Katia is expanding beyond the feed. Nearly 200 boutiques now carry the line, and a first retail kiosk at Boca Town Center will invite shoppers to try, layer, and feel the difference in person. We also touch on thoughtful influencer partnerships, the “Goddess Shirt” and scarves that extend the look, and the daily habits—yoga, heavy lifts, mindset work—that keep creativity resilient. If you’re building a brand, reinventing at midlife, or craving design with purpose, you’ll find practical insights and a spark to follow your own whisper.If this story moved you, follow Katia Designs, share the episode with a friend who needs a nudge, and leave a review—what mantra would you wear tomorrow?Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
How The George Snow Scholarship Fund Is Transforming Lives Through Education and Opportunit
Send us Fan MailWhat if a scholarship didn’t stop at a check, but stood with a student for four years? We sit down with Tim Snow to unpack how the George Snow Scholarship Fund blends financial aid with real-life support—laptops, care packages, emergency funds, mentors, and Monday motivation—to help first-gen and high-need students thrive from day one to graduation.We trace the journey from a family’s tribute to a hands-on nonprofit serving thousands, fueled by a generous Boca Raton community and events that actually feel fun. Tim shares how the Cowboy Ball, a September golf tournament, and the sellout Boca’s Ballroom Battle turned fundraising into a movement, drawing new donors while keeping the spotlight on student success. You’ll hear what makes their model different: a high school to college transition program, multi-year commitments, and deep partnerships with FAU, Palm Beach State, and Florida Prepaid that stretch every dollar. We also explore workforce scholarships that back in-demand careers like nursing and skilled trades, reflecting a practical path to upward mobility.The conversation dives into selection rigor—3,000 applications, five reads each, trained reviewers—and why listening to students led to services like a clothing closet and technology grants. Tim breaks down the Broward County expansion, supported by the Frederick A. DeLuca Foundation, and how strategic planning helps scale without losing the personal touch. We talk career readiness, from etiquette dinners to internships, and the long-term goal of keeping talent in South Florida by connecting graduates to local opportunity.If you care about education access, community design, and turning generosity into measurable outcomes, this one’s for you. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves impact stories, and leave a review to help more people find the show.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
How Feng Shui, Color, and Intuitive Design Shape the Energy and Experience of Space
Send us Fan MailWhat if your home could lower your shoulders the moment you walk in? We sit down with interior designer and feng shui master teacher Lisa Morton to show how layout, color, and tiny daily rituals can soothe the nervous system, sharpen focus, and make everyday life feel lighter.Lisa takes us from her high-flying years designing private jets to the burnout that pushed her toward holistic design. She breaks down the real mechanics of feng shui—balancing yin and yang, working with the five elements, and mapping your floor plan with the Bagua—so it stops feeling mystical and starts feeling actionable. You’ll learn why command position matters for your desk and bed, how a single cactus can spike the vibe, and the reason the front door acts as the “mouth of qi” for new opportunities. We also tackle clutter with compassion, showing how releasing one emotionally loaded item can shift more energy than organizing ten bins.We get practical about color psychology and materials: where to invite water’s flow with blues and wavy lines, when to anchor with earth’s textures, and how metal’s pale palette boosts precision at work. Odd floor plans and concrete jungles aren’t deal-breakers; Lisa shares how to redirect attention with art, lighting, and plants. We even dip into tech stress and EMFs, from arranging sleep zones to trying grounding sheets for deeper rest. Her “nesterations” ritual—slow, loving touches like smoothing the duvet and adding weekly flowers—offers an easy way to infuse care into the home so it gives that care back.If you’ve ever felt a room lift you up or drag you down but couldn’t name why, this conversation gives you the language and tools to change it. Come away with simple shifts you can try tonight and a clearer plan for aligning your space with your goals and well-being. If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves design and wellness, and leave a review to tell us the first change you’re making at home.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
How Jackie Morocco Built a Personal Brand Through Transformation, Identity, and Storytelling
Send us Fan MailSmiles don’t just happen—they’re designed. We sit down with Dr. Jackie Morocco, South Florida’s go-to orthodontist, to unpack how art, engineering, and hospitality come together to create confident, custom results. From the first tour that feels like a home welcome to the final reveal, every moment in her Delray Beach practice is intentional: clear communication, thoughtful flow, and a color story rooted in local history. It’s a masterclass in patient experience and brand building—without the corporate gloss.We get practical about care, too. Dr. Jackie explains why the initial exam is everything for adults with TMJ, gum issues, or missing teeth, how she “builds the foundation” for restorative dentistry, and why there’s no perfect age for every child. She breaks down when braces beat aligners, when aligners shine, and why the best plan respects biology, lifestyle, and goals. She shares the tools that changed the game: intraoral scanners that ended messy molds and AI-assisted remote monitoring that lets patients scan from home while she reviews strict progress reports. Fewer unnecessary visits, more timely interventions, clearer feedback—this is modern orthodontics designed around real life.We also dig into entrepreneurship and community. Hear how a risky lease turned into a beloved local brand, why Delray was the right bet, and how sponsoring youth sports and telling team stories built trust over decades. Dr. Jackie’s philosophy is simple: elevate first and last impressions, keep promises, and never use a rubber stamp. Along the way, we trade notes on conferences, vendor noise, and the rising bar for patient-centered care. If you’re curious about orthodontics, practice design, or the blend of creativity and clinical precision, this conversation delivers insights you can use today.Enjoyed the conversation? Follow, share with a friend who’s smile-curious, and leave a quick review—your feedback helps more listeners find the show.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
From Stanley Cup Champion to Entrepreneur: How Brett Hedican Built a Business Beyond Hockey
Send us Fan MailWhat if a backpack could carry more than your stuff—what if it could carry your story? We sit down with Stanley Cup champion and two-time Olympian Brett Hedican to unpack Hedie Gear, his modular bag company that turns memories into design with durable, Velcro-backed embroidered patches. From national parks and miniature country flags to NHL and collegiate licenses, Brett shows how identity, travel, and achievement can live on the outside of your bag, ready to spark conversations anywhere.Brett brings a rare blend of grit and grace to entrepreneurship, borrowing the humility, routine, and relentless iteration that shaped his hockey career. He walks us through the spark—a fishing trip tradition where friends earned patches for milestones—and the hard work that followed: sourcing factories, engineering panels that lock patches in place, and navigating the complex world of licensing with the NHL, CLC, and Exemplar. We dig into the product roadmap too: six backpacks today, crossbodies and fanny packs next, plus duffel and guitar case prototypes ready for the right music retail partners. Think letter jacket meets guitar case, built for a life in motion.We also explore channel strategy and smart scaling: NIL ambassadors on campus, college bookstore rollouts, targeted social and marketplace presence, and how AI helps a lean team punch above its weight. Brett opens his own pack—“Dig In,” the 1994 Finals, Olympic pride, martial arts, family travel—to show how meaning stacks over time. Pricing stays accessible, custom orders turn around fast, and a growing limited-edition series hints at a vibrant collector community. The horizon is bold: multi-logo back-to-school displays, music and sport crossovers, and an Olympic bridge that brings numbers, roles, and mantras to the surface.Ready to start your own patch story? Subscribe, share this conversation with a friend, and leave a quick review to help others discover the show. Then visit hedygear.com to choose a bag, pick your first patches, and carry what matters next.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
How America’s Most Iconic Furniture Brands Are Built Through Design Legacy and Leadership
Send us Fan MailA fabric mill, a poker-legend origin story, and a furniture factory that almost never sleeps—until a global shutdown forced the lights off. We invited Alex Schuford III, CEO of Century Furniture and the Rock House Farm Family of Brands, to share how a third-generation leader protects legacy without freezing it in amber. From buying Hancock & Moore and Hickory Chair to keeping nine North Carolina factories humming, Alex opens the playbook on brand autonomy, storytelling, and the small details that separate timeless from forgettable.We dig into the retail lessons that shaped his operator’s eye—why asking for the order still matters, how factory utilization drives culture and profit, and what makes a showroom genuinely inspiring in a world trained by RH and Arhaus. Alex explains why conglomerates stumble when they homogenize identities, and how empowering presidents at Century, Hickory Chair, Highland House, Hancock & Moore, Jessica Charles, and Maitland-Smith keeps each brand sharp—even when they compete with each other. He also makes a compelling case for why interior designers are AI-proof: taste, empathy, and on-site orchestration can be augmented by tools, but not replaced.You’ll hear the story of a product review where Thomas O’Brien spotted a molding mistake from 25 feet away, and a crisis moment where the team found touchless thermometers in the baby aisle to legally restart operations—a tiny win that became cultural lore. The throughline is clear: craftsmanship lives in people, details compound into beauty, and trust is earned one consistent decision at a time. If you care about design, legacy brands, or how to lead through pressure, this conversation delivers practical wisdom and good company.If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a design-obsessed friend, and leave a quick review—what detail do you always notice first?Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
How Sustainable Design Turns Old Homes and Heirlooms Into Modern Beauty and Meaning
Send us Fan MailWhat if the most powerful design choice isn’t “new,” but “true”? We sit with HGTV’s Flea Market Flip champion and Funcycled founder, Sarah Trop, to explore how story, sustainability, and craft can elevate everyday spaces without erasing their past. From turning a roll-top desk into a showstopping bar to flipping arched cabinet doors for a shaker look, Sarah shows why preserving good bones often beats a full gut—and how a smart “kitchen facelift” can save serious money while keeping character intact.We unpack her journey from nap-time furniture repaints to a full-service studio and storefront, fueled by a faith-rooted, trauma-informed approach. Sarah reveals how she sells bold visions to clients who can’t “see” the final room yet, using AI tools like Midjourney alongside SketchUp and CAD to quickly communicate mood, proportion, and flow. We dig into the materials that matter—low VOC, water-based lacquers for durability without toxicity—and the sourcing strategies that transform heirlooms into modern anchors. Expect candid stories from HGTV’s pressure cooker, the art of selling with narrative, and the craftsmanship behind upcycling that feels intentional, not improvised.We also get real about building a business and a life. Sarah shares lessons from Entrepreneurs’ Organization on scaling, cash, and leadership—and the life-wheel exercise that prompted a radical health reset. Travel threads it all together, from Budapest rooftops to Parisian doors, inspiring palettes, patterns, and finishes that translate into timeless rooms. If you care about historic preservation, sustainable design, and client-first storytelling, this conversation will give you practical tactics and fresh courage to keep the soul in your spaces.If this resonates, follow and subscribe for more thoughtful design talks. Share with a friend who’s deciding between gut and keep-the-bones, and leave a quick review to help others find the show.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
Design With Heart: Elaine Schneider on Process, Vision Boards, and Personal Spaces
Send us Fan MailWhat if your home felt like a clear reflection of who you are—down to the curve of a chair and the rhythm of a hallway? We sit with designer Elaine Schneider, founder of Echo Environments, to unpack how a retail-architecture veteran who once designed Nordstrom’s flagship now crafts residential spaces that echo the lives inside them. The throughline is powerful and practical: a client-led vision board, five to seven guiding words, and a bulletproof process that protects every decision from concept to install.Elaine takes us inside the phases that make complex projects work. We explore how to translate feelings into form, why interior architecture should lead furniture, and how 3D modeling de-risks intricate rooms—from theaters with layered panels to touch-latch secret doors. She shares the discipline she carried from retail: sequence matters, documentation is nonnegotiable, and construction needs dictate design cadence. We talk flow, sightlines, focal walls, and the small choices that add up to spaces people love to use.We also go coast to coast: working remotely on historic homes, navigating review boards, and balancing one or two large builds with a few smaller ones to keep quality high. Elaine’s sourcing is project-driven, including standout finds at High Point—an artisan brass atelier and richly detailed upholstery—that spark unexpected solutions. Trends take a back seat to the client’s words; “loungy” can invite organic curves, while heritage settings call for layered detail and warm craft. If you care about homes that feel honest, human, and beautifully made, this conversation gives you a roadmap you can actually use.Enjoyed this story-driven deep dive into process and craft? Follow the show, share it with a friend who loves design, and leave a quick review—what word would define your dream home?Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
Inside POLYWOOD: Design, Durability, and a Circular Future with Lindsay Schleis
Send us Fan MailWhat if the best-looking thing on your patio was also the toughest and the most sustainable? We sit down with Lindsay Schleis, VP of Business Development at POLYWOOD, to trace how recycled HDPE becomes design-forward outdoor furniture that survives salt air, summer storms, and years of use—without sacrificing style or speed.Lindsay takes us from laser sorters and UV-stable pellets to CNC-milled “lumber” and an on-demand, just‑in‑time factory that ships most orders in 7–10 business days. We dig into finishes that move beyond the classic Adirondack look—vintage textures and woodlike select tones—plus a Designer Series with hidden hardware made for architects and interior designers. Collaborations get their moment too: Martha Stewart’s Chinoiserie collection pushed POLYWOOD to extrude 24-inch boards and laser-cut intricate backs, unlocking cast-metal detail in a recyclable material.We explore what matters most to coastal clients: real durability. From hurricane-tested testimonials to hospitality-grade testing that meets ASTM and BIFMA standards, the brand’s 20-year warranty is grounded in engineering and an in-house lab. You’ll hear how mixed materials—sling seats and woven accents—elevate comfort and silhouette, why the modern Edge collection is trending (with sectional options), and how the trade program streamlines specs, drop shipping, and soon COM cushions with new Sunbrella fabrics. Distribution spans DTC, retail, specialty dealers, the design trade, and hospitality worldwide, with U.S. manufacturing in Indiana and North Carolina reducing lead times.We also swap ideas for what’s next—outdoor bars, towel returns, and cabana storage that match the same sustainability and performance. If you’re designing by the coast, outfitting a boutique hotel, or refreshing a backyard to actually last, this conversation is your blueprint for durable, beautiful outdoor living.If you enjoyed this conversation, follow the show, share it with a design friend, and leave a quick review—then head to polywood.com to explore the Designer Program and sample what’s possible.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
From Belts to Brand: Hadley Pollet's Journey of Ethical Design
Send us Fan MailHow does a moment of personal tragedy transform into a thriving 20-year fashion legacy? For Hadley Pollet, it began with a simple belt made from vintage trims wrapped around a buckle—a design that caught the eye of five strangers at a Boston brewery who all asked the same question: "Where did you get that belt?"That serendipitous moment sparked the beginning of an accessories brand built on the radical notion that fashion should be personal, not disposable. With no formal fashion education but armed with innate creative talent and business savvy gained from publishing and PR careers, Hadley found herself at a crossroads after 9/11 claimed the life of her mother's husband. This profound loss became the catalyst for reinvention, pushing her to embrace design as both creative outlet and healing process.What sets the Hadley Pollet brand apart isn't just its vibrant colors or distinctive jacquard designs, but its deep commitment to ethical production and female empowerment. Hadley personally visits every factory partner, ensuring they're locally owned (preferably by women) and that female workers receive equal pay to men—sometimes having frank conversations with male owners about wage equity. This matriarchal business model extends to an artisan training program that teaches craftspeople in developing regions how to cross-pollinate techniques and reach global markets.While many designers chase department store distribution, Hadley deliberately shuns these channels, criticizing them for "building their business on the backs of creatives." Instead, she partners with small boutiques that create meaningful shopping experiences and understand the brand's unique value. As she explains, "There's too much sameness in the world"—a philosophy that's kept her brand vibrant while others struggle with unsold inventory and identity crises.Ready to discover accessories that speak to your authentic self? Explore the colorful world of Hadley Pollet and join a community of women who understand that true style comes from expressing who you really are, not following what everyone else is wearing.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
Dimmers, Kelvins, and Mood: Why Your Home Lighting Matters
Send us Fan MailDiscover the transformative power of proper lighting as we illuminate one of interior design's most overlooked yet impactful elements. Have you ever wondered why some spaces feel instantly inviting while others leave you feeling on edge? The secret might be hanging right above your head.We dive deep into the science of light temperature, revealing why professionals focus on Kelvins rather than watts. That harsh, headache-inducing light in your office? It's likely around 5,000 Kelvins – a clinical brightness that belongs in hospitals, not homes. For your living spaces, we recommend the warm, flattering glow of 2,700-3,000 Kelvins that instantly creates a cozy atmosphere. This seemingly small detail can dramatically transform how you feel in your space without changing a single piece of furniture.Beyond temperature, we explore the game-changing versatility of dimmers, the energy-efficient benefits of LED technology, and the revolutionary freedom of cordless lighting solutions. From creating consistent ambiance throughout your home to strategically placing lights for architectural interest, each tip helps you craft spaces that not only look beautiful but feel incredible to live in. We challenge traditional fixture placement rules and encourage creative approaches to layered lighting that express your personal style.Whether you're renovating, redecorating, or simply wanting to enhance your existing space, these practical lighting insights will elevate your home's design while positively affecting your mood and wellbeing. Take control of your environment by understanding how proper lighting sets the tone for everything that happens within your walls. Ready to see your home in a whole new light?Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
Why 3D Rendering Is Essential Before You Spend a Dime on Renovation
Send us Fan MailRenovating a home without falling into trend traps requires deliberate choices and a clear vision. Scott and I just purchased a mid-century modern house as an investment property, planning to renovate and sell it within six weeks. This process has sparked fascinating conversations about maintaining design integrity while creating broad appeal for unknown future owners.Walking through established neighborhoods reveals volumes about renovation history—you can immediately spot which houses were updated in the 80s, 90s, or 2000s because they bear the unmistakable marks of those era-specific trends. Our current project house has suffered this exact fate, with multiple owners making disjointed updates that ignored the home's original mid-century character. Some elements added "old world" vibes popular in the 90s while others introduced modern touches from later decades, creating a visual disconnect throughout the space.The revolutionary approach we're using involves comprehensive 3D visualization of the entire property before spending a dollar on actual renovations. This technology allows us to virtually walk through the transformed space, making critical budget decisions by seeing exactly how including or excluding specific elements will impact the final aesthetic. It's essentially "taking a photo in the future" of your finished space, eliminating the surprise factor that so often leads to disappointment in renovation projects. Whether you're planning a full home remodel or a simple kitchen update, investing in this visualization process saves time, prevents costly mistakes, and ensures your renovation honors your home's authentic character while thoughtfully updating it for contemporary living. Discover how you can apply these principles to your own projects by visiting twinteriors.com.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
Navigating Home Remodeling with Monika Zasada
Send us Fan MailEvery renovation has the potential to be a beautiful journey or a costly nightmare, and the difference often comes down to how the project is managed from day one. In this eye-opening episode, we welcome Monika Zasada, founder of D-Mazing and a true renovation curator whose mission is transforming chaotic remodeling projects into organized, transparent, and even joyful experiences.Monika's fascinating journey from communist Poland (where she studied American literature) to the Hamptons construction scene provides the foundation for her unique perspective. Growing up in a country where housing was scarce and personal ownership limited, she developed an almost spiritual connection to the concept of home as sanctuary. This passion eventually led her to construction, where she quickly recognized fundamental flaws in how renovation projects are typically managed.With refreshing candor, Monika dismantles the renovation myths that cause so many projects to go off the rails. She explains why competitive bidding actually works against homeowners, why budget transparency is essential, and why bringing your contractor into the process during the design phase—not after—can save both money and heartache. Her four-phase approach (design, pre-construction, construction, and closeout) creates a framework that keeps projects on track while maintaining the collaborative spirit essential for success.For homeowners unable to engage Monika's full services, her "Nailed It" online course delivers her methodology in an accessible format. As she tells us, "Most likely you will end up with a horror story on your hands. I am promising you a good action movie. It will not be perfect... but it will be worth it." Whether you're planning a kitchen refresh or a complete home transformation, this episode delivers invaluable wisdom that could save your renovation—and your sanity.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com
Furniture's Secret Weapon: How Trade Showrooms Empower Designers with Maria Mendoza
Send us Fan MailWhat does it take to build a thriving business that empowers interior designers at every stage of their projects? Maria Mendoza reveals the answer, drawing from her nearly four-decade journey through the design world.Starting with a foundation in architecture and interior design when drafting was still done by hand, Maria shares her fascinating evolution from custom furniture sales to running large-scale design projects in Venezuela. When political circumstances forced her family to relocate to Florida, her deep understanding of designers' needs led to a transformative business model at DRC Showrooms.Unlike typical furniture retailers, DRC operates exclusively to support design professionals. Maria has created a haven where designers can bring clients to a beautifully curated space with access to over 170 premium manufacturers. More than just a product showcase, the showroom functions as a working studio where designers can create presentations, select materials, and receive comprehensive support with purchasing, delivery coordination, and post-installation troubleshooting.Maria's passionate commitment to quality is evident throughout our conversation. She advocates for American-made furniture not only for its craftsmanship but for the reliability of manufacturers who stand behind their products. With refreshing candor, she explains why investing in quality pieces makes financial sense even for shorter-term use: "You want it to look new for those three years. You don't want to buy something and then in three months the thing is falling apart."The growth of DRC into multiple South Florida locations reflects the region's booming design scene, with Maria noting they welcome approximately three new designers daily who have relocated to the area. Her family-oriented approach to business (now including her daughter who handles digital operations) creates a warm, collaborative environment where designers feel supported and protected.Ready to discover how trade resources can elevate your design projects? Listen now and gain valuable insights from one of the industry's most experienced voices on creating lasting client relationships through exceptional quality and service.Support the showLearn more at:https://twinteriors.com/podcast/https://scottwoolley.com