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Story & Lesson Highlights with Tiffanni Reidy of NE Baltimore | Hamilton-Lauraville

We’re looking forward to introducing you to Tiffanni Reidy. Check out our conversation below.

Good morning Tiffanni, we’re so happy to have you here with us and we’d love to explore your story and how you think about life and legacy and so much more. So let’s start with a question we often ask: What are you being called to do now, that you may have been afraid of before?
Lately, I’ve been weighing becoming “more visible” in my business (mostly on social media). I have always wanted my work to speak for me, but I’ve been feeling like it’s necessary to put a little more of my personality, and more of who am into how I show up as a business. I find this to be a struggle, but is seeming to be more necessary as we continue down this ai-driven marketing reality.

Can you briefly introduce yourself and share what makes you or your brand unique?
I’m Tiffanni Reidy. I’m the owner and lead designer at Reidy Creative. We are an interior architecture and design studio
specializing in colorful and bespoke commercial hospitality and residential interiors for remodels, renovations, and new builds. We ensure that every detail of a construction project has been carefully thought out and designed with the client in mind. We ask a lot of questions to learn as much as we can before designing, so we make sure that our designs feel intuitive and instinctual for every client.

Our other projects include working with community organizations on gathering spaces, food halls, and facade improvements. We also collaborate with other artisans by designing objects for sale, working with to enhance their own designs, and creating larger group works.

My goal has always been to create a collaborative, multi-disciplinary studio where several creative trades whose work is frequently woven together can exist under an umbrella. Reidy Creative is one part of that, but I’m still searching for other businesses interested in that model.

Great, so let’s dive into your journey a bit more. What did you believe about yourself as a child that you no longer believe?
I believed that I had to be just one thing—that I had to figure out one distinct version of who I was, and that I couldn’t be as multi-dimensional and sometimes as contradictory as I am.

If you could say one kind thing to your younger self, what would it be?
I would tell my younger self to be proud of who you are, and to not let small minded people tell you who you have to be. I would reassure myself that if someone doesn’t like who you are, then they just aren’t your people, but your people are out there.

Sure, so let’s go deeper into your values and how you think. What would your closest friends say really matters to you?
People who know me the best would say that the thing I value most is vulnerability and trust. I really want to know people, and don’t enjoy surface conversations or relationships. Tell me who you really are, tell me what you believe in, where your values lie, what your secret aspirations are. Tell me all of the surface stuff too, but without actual vulnerability and trust, we don’t really know anyone.

Okay, we’ve made it essentially to the end. One last question before you go. What will you regret not doing? 
I’ll regret not seeing more of the world. I have serious wanderlust but I haven’t made decisions that take me very far from my own backyard. I’m passionate about localism, about improving communities and neighborhoods, which usually doesn’t push me far geographically.

Contact Info:

Image Credits
Margarita Photography
Beck Stavely

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