Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Sensory Authenticity and Material Honesty

Respecting the sensory properties of materials and celebrating their authentic characteristics rather than disguising or artificially manipulating them.

Mura
Why It Matters

Murasaki's descriptions linger on sensory experience—the weight and rustle of silk, the scent of incense, the texture of brushwork on paper. She never disguises material nature but rather celebrates it. In contemporary design culture of simulation and substitution—plastic made to look like wood, cheap fabrics imitating luxury—there is much to unlearn. Sensory authenticity means allowing wood to show its grain, revealing the structure of metal, letting stone express its weight and permanence. When materials are honored rather than disguised, users develop genuine relationships with objects. This honesty also builds trust: users understand what they're touching and why, creating transparency in an era of obfuscation. Sensory authenticity extends to digital spaces too—authentic typography, genuine spaces between elements, honest feedback systems. This practice roots design in reality rather than illusion, building deeper, more trustworthy human-object relationships.

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Develop Your Practice in Design — the practical creative tradition
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