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A client in Denver said my seam placement was 'old school' and should follow the light, not the door.

He argued it hides wear better in modern open floor plans. Has anyone else switched up their seam strategy recently?
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2 Comments
cameronschmidt
Actually, that logic feels backwards to me. Seams at the door are the natural break point where people expect them, so they just look right. Chasing sunlight sounds good in theory, but then you get a weird line cutting across a big open space for no clear reason.
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wrenh65
wrenh6511h ago
Consider how sunlight actually moves through a room all day. A seam that follows the light's path can make a space feel more alive and connected to the outside. That intentional flow often looks more thoughtful than just defaulting to a door frame.
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