Creative expression

Paige Loczi activates space through form, color, and story. As Founder and Principal Emeritus of LOCZI Design, she built an interior architecture practice that listens for resonance—seeking a balance between intrigue and ease in every project. Rooted in sacred geometry, geomancy, and the repeating patterns of nature, her work translates subtle energetic principles into environments that are visually stunning and deeply supportive of the people who inhabit them.

In service

Consulting with a few of our favorite architects and general contractors, Paige and her team can help your project come to life.

We’re honored to have our work recognized in a range of publications, platforms, and press features.

Conscious Design

A transition doula tends the spaces, objects, and practices that help us cross life’s thresholds with intention. We mark the moments that mark us—birth, death, marriage, illness, awakening—by giving them physical form: altars, shrines and shields, portals, and thresholds that situate us within larger living mandalas of time and cosmos. These structures become anchors, reminding us that we are not separate from the patterns we move through, but active participants in them.

Color, pattern, and sacred geometry act as living codes that speak directly to the body.

When we surround ourselves with resonant forms—whether a carved totem or archway, a pedestal in a corner, or a doorway dressed as a portal—the very cells of our bodies respond, seeking coherence and alignment. Across cultures, Egyptian, Roman, Mayan, Chinese, and Tibetan builders have imbued their environments with these geometries to guide people back into inner resonance. Just as a charm with a child’s birthstone or a tattoo after profound illness becomes a talisman of transformation, these design elements function as ongoing conversations with our own becoming.

Through conscious design we create dynamic reminders that hold our intentions and activate our awareness.

A transition doula works with the seen and unseen, arranging objects, crafting thresholds, and inviting the body to move in ways that awaken deeper geometries within. In doing so, we remember our place on the wheel of life, our connection to ancestors and guides, the land beneath our homes, and the wider natural world that continuously shapes us as we, in turn, shape it.