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I have been in Brady's shop, and was quite impressed with how logical their bar space was. They divided the workspace into zones that lend themselves to waiting on customers quite well.
Lighting is crucial! Lighting helps set the mood, the vibe, of your shop. One of the buildings I am looking at as a possible location for my own shop has long fluorescent lights up high on a 14 ft ceiling. Not recommended, unless you want the room to look like a school cafeteria! I did some reading up on interior design, just because I am interested in how light, color, structure, etc, impact people. Some people like the "Starbucks-look" shop, some don't. Some people want their shop to look like a log cabin. I don't. I am going for high-style, glamorous Art Deco from the late 1920s to the 1930s. But that's me.
A trip to Italy sounds like a great source for inspiration!
Paul, great notes on the need for workspace zones and the importance of lighting. I also really like the theme you've chosen for your shop and how you're getting smart on interior design to make the most of the ambiance. Admittedly, I was entirely unfamiliar with the 'art deco' movement, but I did some poking around via google and it looks incredible. Be sure to post some pics!
Dennis, thank you for the warnings. In theory, I love the idea of dark woods along with some black/white tiles and dark granite countertops, but the upkeep is certainly a serious consideration. Green is associated with mold?? Is there some sort of color association handbook to reference for these sorts of things? I don't like the idea of jumping on the green/brown bandwagon as a way of opening up a SBucks franchise without the brand name, but since blue is supposed to be a depressing color, and red and yellow can be a bit abrasive if overused, there isn't a whole lot to choose from! You also made some good points about the theme driving your decision-making.
Paul, great notes on the need for workspace zones and the importance of lighting. I also really like the theme you've chosen for your shop and how you're getting smart on interior design to make the most of the ambiance. Admittedly, I was entirely unfamiliar with the 'art deco' movement, but I did some poking around via google and it looks incredible. Be sure to post some pics!
Dennis, thank you for the warnings. In theory, I love the idea of dark woods along with some black/white tiles and dark granite countertops, but the upkeep is certainly a serious consideration. Green is associated with mold?? Is there some sort of color association handbook to reference for these sorts of things? I don't like the idea of jumping on the green/brown bandwagon as a way of opening up a SBucks franchise without the brand name, but since blue is supposed to be a depressing color, and red and yellow can be a bit abrasive if overused, there isn't a whole lot to choose from! You also made some good points about the theme driving your decision-making.
Mike Morand said:Paul, great notes on the need for workspace zones and the importance of lighting. I also really like the theme you've chosen for your shop and how you're getting smart on interior design to make the most of the ambiance. Admittedly, I was entirely unfamiliar with the 'art deco' movement, but I did some poking around via google and it looks incredible. Be sure to post some pics!
Dennis, thank you for the warnings. In theory, I love the idea of dark woods along with some black/white tiles and dark granite countertops, but the upkeep is certainly a serious consideration. Green is associated with mold?? Is there some sort of color association handbook to reference for these sorts of things? I don't like the idea of jumping on the green/brown bandwagon as a way of opening up a SBucks franchise without the brand name, but since blue is supposed to be a depressing color, and red and yellow can be a bit abrasive if overused, there isn't a whole lot to choose from! You also made some good points about the theme driving your decision-making.
One idea would be to use a high quality wood-look vinyl. They sell them in "planks", and when installed they look almost indistinguishable from the real thing.
A caution with stone countertops is that you might have problems with ceramic breakage. Anyone run across this?
Dennis, thanks for letting me know that I should associate green with mold. I hadn't noticed this before, but will try to in the future :).
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