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The range statement relates to the unit of competency as a whole. It allows for different work environments and situations that may affect performance. Bold italicised wording, if used in the performance criteria, is detailed below. Essential operating conditions that may be present with training and assessment (depending on the work situation, needs of the candidate, accessibility of the item, and local industry and regional contexts) may also be included. |
Stylists | may include but not be limited to interior decorators or designers providing services to create visual effects in interior spaces roles of a stylist include visual merchandiser in a retail or commercial environment, home stylist, magazine/TV stylist, stylist for trade show displays, display units, car showrooms etc |
Client | may include but not be limited to real estate agents wanting properties prepared for sale, events coordinators requiring themed or decorated venues and retailers preparing shop themes or displays may also include but not be limited to suppliers, manufacturers, private clients, colleagues, retailers or the public |
Suppliers | may include but not be limited to suppliers of furniture, furnishings, accessories and fittings |
OHS requirements | are to be in accordance with Commonwealth, State or Territory legislation and regulations, organisational safety policies and procedures. Requirements may include but not be limited to the use of personal protective equipment and clothing, fire fighting equipment, first aid equipment, hazard and risk control and elimination of hazardous materials and substances, manual handling including lifting and carrying |
Legislative requirements | are to be in accordance with applicable legislation from all levels of government that affect organisational operation. Requirements may include but not be limited to award and enterprise agreements, industrial relations, Australian Standards, confidentiality and privacy, OHS, the environment, equal opportunity, anti-discrimination, relevant industry codes of practice, duty of care and heritage |
Organisational requirements | may include but not be limited to legal, organisational and site guidelines, policies and procedures relating to own role and responsibility, quality assurance, procedural manuals, quality and continuous improvement processes and standards, OHS, emergency and evacuation, ethical standards, recording and reporting, access and equity principles and practices, equipment use, maintenance and storage, environmental management (waste disposal, recycling and re-use guidelines) |
Project brief | may include but not be limited to client needs and objectives, client aims and objectives and criteria for evaluation, milestones for the project, organisational or personal profiles and aims, image requirements and function, target market, budget, timeline and consultation requirements |
Communication | may include but not be limited to verbal and non-verbal language, constructive feedback, active listening, questioning to clarify and confirm understanding, use of positive, confident and cooperative language, use of language and concepts appropriate to individual social and cultural differences, control of tone of voice and body language |
Sketches and drawings | may include but not be limited to hand drawn images or ideation drawings completed freehand, drafted technical drawings or drawings produced on computer using computer aided drafting (CAD) software packages. These usually contain project specifications |
Layout | may include but not be limited to the plan of how a room will be designed and decorated showing the placement of products |
Artistic relevance | may include but not be limited to the connection between creativity and the design theme |
Colour | may include but not be limited to colour principles, psychology, fundamentals, coordination, perception, contrast, harmony, effects on space, formulas and colour wheels |
Entertainment values | may include but not be limited to comical, informative, meditative, sales focused or visually pleasing |
Cultural considerations | may include but not be limited to demography, geography (local, regional, national), religious, climatic, societal, cultural, lifestyle, attitudinal, gratification, honour, living conditions, infrastructure, status and habitude |
Historical considerations | may include but not be limited to influences from styles, periods and movements over the past centuries and how this research may inform current projects |
Products | may include but not be limited to furniture, soft furnishings, floor treatments, curtain treatments, built-in cabinetry or fittings, light fittings, lamps, picture framing, tapware, laundry fittings, bathroom fittings, toilet fittings and kitchen fittings |
Finishes | may include but not be limited to paints, waxes, lacquers, stains, pigments, oils, plastic coatings, veneers, ceramics, stone, glass, textiles and other textures |
Accessories | may include but not be limited to trinkets, ceramics, trays, vases, carvings, baskets, pots, plants, candles, clocks, silverware, mirrors, frames, screens, floral displays, haberdashery, glassware, fireplace items, gifts, hand crafts, water features, photographs, pottery, personal items, statues, book ends, bowls and bottles |
Materials | may include but not be limited to solid timber (native and imported), manufactured timber products, plastic, metal, alloys, stones, glass, textiles, fibreglass, foam, cardboard, paper products or any other manipulable substance |
Costings | may include but not be limited to the cost of products and materials used during completion of the project, labour and overhead expenses |
Timelines | may include but not be limited to the agreed project time span set and agreed for the project |