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Showing posts from February, 2026

Pop Culture Inspired Interior Fashion and Design Fusion

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Films, OTT shows, music videos, and social media now shape taste faster than magazines or catalogues ever did. They influence color choices, silhouettes, textures, and moods long before those ideas reach studios, showrooms, or homes. Press enter or click to view image in full size #Pop Culture Inspired Interior Fashion and Design Fusion When the same cultural forces start guiding both clothing and interiors, designers describe it as pop culture inspired design. For fashion and interior students across India, learning to recognize and interpret this shift is no longer optional. It is part of becoming a designer who understands the world they are creating for. Why Pop Culture Shapes Design So Quickly Visual culture travels at extreme speed. A film aesthetic, a music video set, or a viral reel can reach millions within days. These images quietly reset expectations about what feels modern, luxurious, playful, or experimental. Fashion absorbs these signals first because garments are fast to...

Colour of 2026: Why Teal Is Taking Over Fashion and Interior Design

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  Colour forecasting is not guesswork. Designers, brands, and studios study social moods, lifestyle shifts, climate concerns, and cultural preferences long before a shade becomes mainstream. When multiple signals begin pointing toward the same hue, students should pay attention. One colour increasingly discussed in these circles is teal. Its rising presence across collections and interiors suggests it may become a defining colour of 2026, especially in markets like India where balance between calm and vibrancy matters. What Teal Communicates Today Teal sits between blue and green, two colours strongly linked with stability, renewal, and trust. In uncertain or fast-moving times, people often gravitate toward shades that feel grounding without being dull. In the Indian context, teal also adapts well to varied settings. It works in bright daylight, complements warm materials like wood and brass, and pairs easily with neutrals used in modern homes and retail spaces. This versatility ma...

What to track after switching to sustainable uniforms (simple metrics)

Switching to sustainable uniforms is an important step. Tracking the right outcomes after the switch is what turns that decision into long-term value. Many organisations move to ecofriendly uniforms with good intent, but struggle to answer a basic question six months later: Is this actually working for our business, people, and sustainability goals? The answer lies in tracking simple, meaningful metrics not complex sustainability dashboards. Here’s what you should be tracking once your sustainable work uniforms are in use. 1. Uniform Lifespan and Replacement Frequency Start with the simplest indicator: how long the uniforms last. Sustainable corporate uniforms are designed for durability. If your previous uniforms needed replacement every 6–8 months, track whether the new ones last longer. What to track Average lifespan per uniform Replacement cycle (in months) Number of damaged or worn-out units per quarter Why it matters Longer-lasting uniforms reduce procurement costs, operational d...

Introducing CyberAI: Built by DataNimbus in partnership with Databricks.

Introducing CyberAI: Built by DataNimbus in partnership with Databricks. - YouTube Traditional SIEMs can’t keep up with the scale, complexity, and costs of today’s cloud-native world. Security teams need more than log management — they need data intelligence at scale. With CyberAI, you can: Ask your logs in natural language Build and enrich cases with AI assistance Collaborate seamlessly across teams Reduce false positives and accelerate investigations Lower TCO with smarter cost controls This is the power of the Databricks Data Intelligence Platform for Cybersecurity — agility, intelligence, and cost efficiency, all in one. Watch the video  to see CyberAI in action.

Color and Texture in Interior Design for Warm and Balanced Environments

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  A well-designed interior is not defined by furniture alone. What truly shapes how a space feels is the relationship between color and texture. When used thoughtfully, these elements bring warmth, depth, and balance to a room. Understanding color and texture in interior design helps designers move beyond surface-level styling and create spaces that feel calm, functional, and emotionally engaging. Why Color and Texture Matter Together Color influences mood, while texture influences how a space feels physically and visually. When the two work together, interiors feel layered and intentional. A room with good color choices but flat surfaces can feel lifeless. On the other hand, heavy textures without a clear color direction can feel cluttered. Balance comes from using both with purpose. Designers today focus less on bold statements and more on creating environments that support daily living. Warm, balanced interiors are especially important in homes, workspaces, and learning environm...