Well T K under normal circumstances I'd agree with you. This job has a lot of money making potential and the customer is a fortune 500. There's alot of pressure on me to produce something that satisfies them. The industry standards are just not what they're looking for I guess.
Having done a lot of work for a certain institution that continually tested the boundaries of what could and could not actually be done, I am familiar with the type of customer you're dealing with. In
a number of those cases, I'd discover that the person asking for this kind of thing was often doing so with zero authority (it's not just Fortune 500 companies that have design/decorating standards) and- when the people who
actually made the design decisions saw what was proposed, they'd say something along the lines of "what bozo asked for that?"
What sucks is, if you're not the guy in charge, you're stuck trying to deal with said bozos without pissing them off (and losing future, possible business) while not losing your *** (or pissing your boss off) because you're doing sample after sample of something they aren't going to like anyway.
All you can do is try to guide them to the best possible available solution, letting them know that the material that's actually
available is going to be all
anyone can offer them and convince them of that- unless they're willing to
fund a solution specifically tailored to their wants (which I seriously doubt, regardless of their supposed monetary power).