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Course Criteria
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1.50 Credits
Co-requisites: ID 115 and ID 133 An introductory course to basic drafting skills and concepts used in interior design. Students learn to use drafting materials and tools and to produce design drawings. Universal concepts of interior design drafting are addressed, including line weights and types, scale, and elevation.
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1.50 Credits
Prerequisite: ID 151 or ID 157 Develops skills in producing one-point and two-point perspective drawings for the visualization and communication of interior design solutions. Students learn to use different methods of generating perspective views to meet the needs of the interior design profession.
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1.50 Credits
1.5 credits; 1 Lecture and 1 STUDIO hours per week For Continuing Education students. Students focus on the principles of design and composition as influenced by the use of color and its application in the built environment; and the fundamentals of lighting design as they apply to the form, texture, and finish of interior space.
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2.50 Credits
2.5 credits; 1 Lecture and 3 STUDIO hours per week For students not majoring in Interior Design. Introduces the use of color as a design tool for both residential and contract interiors while analyzing the interrelationship of color and light.
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4.00 Credits
Prerequisites: ID 116 and ID 158 Co-requisites: ID 241 and ID 243 Problem-solving focuses on specific building types and user groups in areas which include corporate, retail, and institutional. Appropriate research methods and programming of client requirements are introduced as well as techniques of diagramming space to provide proper circulation and activity relationships. Design concept, image, color and finishes, graphics, building codes, and barrier-free design compliance are emphasized. Evaluations by practicing interior designers and architects highlight student presentations.
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4.00 Credits
Prerequisites: ID 212 and ID 243 Through research, design analysis, and problem-solving, students explore the user-groups and challenges associated with the multi-functional use of hospitality and residential spaces. Lighting, color finishes, materials and details, building code issues, and barrier-free applications are emphasized. Evaluations by practicing interior designers and architects highlight student presentations.
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2.00 Credits
Prerequisites: Completion of first-year AAS courses in Display and Exhibit Design, Fashion Design, or Interior Design and approval of the chairperson Extends interior design skills into areas of theatrical design through a series of design projects which acquaint the student with the fundamental techniques of designing settings for stage and television, including fashion show productions.
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2.50 Credits
2.5 credits; 2 Lecture and 1 STUDIO hours per week Traces the major period styles used in interior design in England, France, and the United States from the mid-17th to the mid-19th centuries, with an analysis of their evolution from concepts and forms developed in early classic civilizations.
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2.50 Credits
2.5 credits; 2 Lecture and 1 STUDIO hours per week Traces interior design and the evolution of modernism in Europe and the United States from the theory and practice of mid-19th century reformers to the modern movements of the early 20th century.
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1.50 Credits
Co-requisites: ID 212 and ID 243 Provides basic understanding of vision as affected by light, color, texture, and form. Introduces basic principles of lighting design including criteria, calculations, planning, and layout.
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