"Form follows function" comes not from Frank Lloyd Wright but from architect Louis Sullivan. Yet over the years it slipped into the misreading that form must dominate function, or that function destroys form.
Good design doesn't carry this division. A building well-ventilated, well-lit, comfortably lived in, is also visually beautiful. A garment cut to the right pattern, in the right fabric, matched to the right movement, also looks elegant.
(Eksik olan son iki paragraf için çeviri önerisi / Translation for the missing last two paragraphs): SUMONE was built on this principle. The narrow shoulder of a blazer is not just aesthetic, but the result of a pattern slice that creates room for movement. The waist cut of trousers is not just visual elegance, but the comfort of sitting and walking.
The form and function dilemma is false. It appears when the designer hasn't worked hard enough. When they have worked hard enough, the two arrive at a single result.