The ability to choose begins long before the moment of choice.
It starts with what you absorb each day—often unconsciously—through observation.
When I work with people to design the home they dream of, I never begin by asking what style they prefer. Instead, I ask:
What places make you feel good?
What materials feel like home to you?
What memories do you have of spaces where you felt safe, free, or inspired?
Because the real foundation of a home lies in our mental snapshots—those instinctive, emotional images we carry with us. And a truly personal space doesn’t arise from copying a style, but from recognizing and reassembling those inner archetypes.
Sometimes it’s the arch of a childhood doorway. A shaft of golden light from a past journey. A wall of books. Or simply a feeling that returns—familiar, grounding, true.
If you want a home that feels deeply yours, start by paying closer attention to what surrounds you.
Observe how certain materials, colors, shapes, or lighting affect your senses. Notice what draws you in, and mentally collect it.
This is how you train your design vision.
Not through rules, but through emotional literacy. Not by trends, but by resonance.
That’s what we do at Raremood: offer you daily, gentle training for your inner gaze.
Every object we select is part of a vocabulary of beauty and meaning.
We’re not here to dictate—we’re here to help you see.
Because before learning to choose, you must first learn to recognize.