Wishes for Furniture among Persons in the Third Age: Interviews with Users in their Homes
(2010) The 7th Conference on Design & Emotion p.1-12- Abstract
- Designers’ work sometimes originates from a simplified view of human demands and needs, which may result in furniture that does not fulfill the user requirements. If we consider old people as one
group with fairly similar needs and demands rather than have realistic images of old people as a heterogeneous group there is a tendency that it will result in misguided efforts to design for wellbeing. The aim of the present study was to get understanding and insight in modern ageing and individual needs, wishes and aspirations for interiors and furniture, by thematic interviews of users in their homes. Eighteen persons aged 53-82 took part in the study. A thematic interview guide was used, covering themes such as comfort, pleasure,... (More) - Designers’ work sometimes originates from a simplified view of human demands and needs, which may result in furniture that does not fulfill the user requirements. If we consider old people as one
group with fairly similar needs and demands rather than have realistic images of old people as a heterogeneous group there is a tendency that it will result in misguided efforts to design for wellbeing. The aim of the present study was to get understanding and insight in modern ageing and individual needs, wishes and aspirations for interiors and furniture, by thematic interviews of users in their homes. Eighteen persons aged 53-82 took part in the study. A thematic interview guide was used, covering themes such as comfort, pleasure, interaction and ideas of improvement of furniture and interior design.
The results demonstrate that products perceived as comfortable, flexible and pleasurable leads to attachment and emotional experiences as dignity, meaningfulness and freedom. It is also the case that different kinds of relations to furniture and interior design are valued and prioritized differently depending on the situation and the individual’s preferences. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/4389023
- author
- Jonsson, Oskar
LU
and Sperling, Lena LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2010
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Furniture design, Interior design, Experience, Emotion, Ageing population
- host publication
- Proceedings for the 7th Conference on Design & Emotion
- pages
- 12 pages
- conference name
- The 7th Conference on Design & Emotion
- conference dates
- 2010-10-04
- project
- Development of the Swedish Wood and Furniture Industry for Consumer Oriented and Competitive PLUS-products
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 30df1895-00d0-4820-88cc-8aa005993cdd (old id 4389023)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 11:36:48
- date last changed
- 2020-06-01 12:35:36
@inproceedings{30df1895-00d0-4820-88cc-8aa005993cdd, abstract = {{Designers’ work sometimes originates from a simplified view of human demands and needs, which may result in furniture that does not fulfill the user requirements. If we consider old people as one<br/><br> group with fairly similar needs and demands rather than have realistic images of old people as a heterogeneous group there is a tendency that it will result in misguided efforts to design for wellbeing. The aim of the present study was to get understanding and insight in modern ageing and individual needs, wishes and aspirations for interiors and furniture, by thematic interviews of users in their homes. Eighteen persons aged 53-82 took part in the study. A thematic interview guide was used, covering themes such as comfort, pleasure, interaction and ideas of improvement of furniture and interior design.<br/><br> The results demonstrate that products perceived as comfortable, flexible and pleasurable leads to attachment and emotional experiences as dignity, meaningfulness and freedom. It is also the case that different kinds of relations to furniture and interior design are valued and prioritized differently depending on the situation and the individual’s preferences.}}, author = {{Jonsson, Oskar and Sperling, Lena}}, booktitle = {{Proceedings for the 7th Conference on Design & Emotion}}, keywords = {{Furniture design; Interior design; Experience; Emotion; Ageing population}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{1--12}}, title = {{Wishes for Furniture among Persons in the Third Age: Interviews with Users in their Homes}}, year = {{2010}}, }