I was wondering if any professional architects today do this, it’s common with actors and authors and other creative fields.
I’ll be licensed soon, and I want to launch my career on the right foot. My name isn’t a great name for an architect brand. However, the name I was born with (it changed later when my mother remarried) is much better and I’d like to use it instead.
I’d also like to keep my professional and personal lives separate this way, in the age of privacy invasion.
Is this possible to do without legally changing it? Can you register a nom de plum on an architect’s stamp?
Non Sequitur
Jan 21, 19 1:17 pm
Your stamp is going to be linked to your legal name for all the obvious reasons... but depending on location, you may be able to call your firm whatever you want (within reason... using something like "super-wicked-awesome-architects" is not ok where I am).
Holding a license and practicing under it means that you must be publicly accountable. That the catch with the whole self-regulating deal.
Anon_grad2.0
Jan 21, 19 1:19 pm
the architect formally known as kind_stranger. Has a nice ring to it
Classic. I bring this site up whenever there is a discussion on graphics in our office.
randomised
Jan 22, 19 3:59 am
If a pseudonym was ever appropriate...
OneLostArchitect
Jan 22, 19 12:22 pm
Dennis Naylor ? This is a joke site right?
Non Sequitur
Jan 22, 19 12:41 pm
Nope, it's totally legit.
Volunteer
Jan 21, 19 3:25 pm
'Charles-Édouard Jeanneret' is available.
citizen
Jan 21, 19 4:23 pm
Lance Manyon, AIA is taken.
poop876
Jan 22, 19 7:30 am
David Curtis, AIA is not
Non Sequitur
Jan 22, 19 8:11 am
I wonder if DC is still alive?
poop876
Jan 22, 19 8:36 am
Yeah, he's still rambling on the twitters
citizen
Jan 22, 19 11:32 am
These vile insults will not go unnoticed on the twitters, we can be sure.
Rusty!
Jan 22, 19 9:57 am
You just need a post apocalyptic nickname that you insist everyone calls you by.
Me? They call me "The Hammer" because every problem is a nail to me. One day I hope to be just like my boss "The Wrecking Ball", and one day like his boss "Attrition Warfare".
geezertect
Jan 22, 19 10:20 am
You're licensed and you're seriously wondering if you can practice under an alias? This can't be a serious question.
I was wondering if any professional architects today do this, it’s common with actors and authors and other creative fields.
I’ll be licensed soon, and I want to launch my career on the right foot. My name isn’t a great name for an architect brand. However, the name I was born with (it changed later when my mother remarried) is much better and I’d like to use it instead.
I’d also like to keep my professional and personal lives separate this way, in the age of privacy invasion.
Is this possible to do without legally changing it? Can you register a nom de plum on an architect’s stamp?
Your stamp is going to be linked to your legal name for all the obvious reasons... but depending on location, you may be able to call your firm whatever you want (within reason... using something like "super-wicked-awesome-architects" is not ok where I am).
Holding a license and practicing under it means that you must be publicly accountable. That the catch with the whole self-regulating deal.
the architect formally known as kind_stranger. Has a nice ring to it
It can't be worse than Dick Busch Architects.
http://www.dickbuscharchitects...
Even the logo is cringe-worthy.
Classic. I bring this site up whenever there is a discussion on graphics in our office.
If a pseudonym was ever appropriate...
Dennis Naylor ? This is a joke site right?
Nope, it's totally legit.
'Charles-Édouard Jeanneret' is available.
Lance Manyon, AIA is taken.
David Curtis, AIA is not
I wonder if DC is still alive?
Yeah, he's still rambling on the twitters
These vile insults will not go unnoticed on the twitters, we can be sure.
You just need a post apocalyptic nickname that you insist everyone calls you by.
Me? They call me "The Hammer" because every problem is a nail to me. One day I hope to be just like my boss "The Wrecking Ball", and one day like his boss "Attrition Warfare".
You're licensed and you're seriously wondering if you can practice under an alias? This can't be a serious question.
"will be licensed soon"
I thought you are Canadian?
Used quotations my bad... licence is Canadian
Not about me, I was just quoting the OP’s claim.
pseudonyms are for the internet.
V.I. Field AIA
that's a great one.