Wednesday 30 September 2009

Graduate Fashion Week 2010 I really want to enter for Graduate Fashion Week 2010 after researching into various awards and competitions I have decided for menswear opportunities this is something I think will really benefit me and my career. I still don't really know much about GFW entry requirements so when I start back at uni I will look in to it further. I also want to discuss with tutors their thoughts and as well as my feelings. Link to GFW website - http://www.gfw.org.uk/about/protege.aspx
I.D Magazine Competition I'm not sure about this one I couldn't seem to find out whether international students can apply, it appears to be American based I don't really know if that would exclude my entry. It does look like a great competition, I would be in the student category to submit my work. Again really need to search abit more, see what else is available. Link to comp - http://www.id-mag.com/upload/images/PDF/callforentries2010.pdf
After searching high and low for possible competitions for my final project I have found one that seams promising. I am keeping my eyes and ears open to other competitions and opportunities and will talk through with tutors which will be the best suited for my ideas and concept. This competition runs through the UK and is open to students studying BA and MA Fashion. Link to comp - http://www.artsthread.com/viewer/competitions_grants.aspx?e=12 The brief "Memories shape who we are. Each generation has its own thread of narrative, weaving together collective or personal memories with objects that evoke a particular time, person or place.In our virtual era, what human traces will we leave behind?In this digital age, are we in danger of losing our memories? We favour technology over traditional methods of recording memory. In doing so we may be neglecting to archive our heritage for future generations."Memories connect the past with the present. The fabric of memory is ever-changing: our memories alter as they travel, metamorphosing with our changing thoughts, emotions and perceptions.We dress in memories. Garments can connect with our senses, evoking vivid recollections through sight, sound, touch and smell. Through its vocabulary – drape, fold, stitch, cut, tear – clothing signifies the emotional range of our memories." Thoughts on the brief I like the idea of this brief, I don't think its too restricting, maybe its not quite right for what I hope to achieve. It talks about 'draping, folding' which automatically makes me think its better suited to womenswear. I really feel strongly that menswear is what I want to do from now on, when looking back at last years collection, I really think I progressed in exploring menswear. If I were to start back with womenswear I don't think I could achieve my best, I'm just not passionate enough about it, with menswear I feel really challenged, excited and a bit scared. I will continue to think about this competition for a possible brief but see what others have to offer too. I feel I need to come back to this after some thought.

Tuesday 29 September 2009

Major Project Preperation

After looking through various designer collections from Fall 2009 I have pulled out a handful of creations that really caught my eye. Alexander McQueen's sinister take on early nineteenth century aristocrats blew me away. Not normally a McQueen lover, I was really shocked by this collection, I really understood what he was doing and I could relate to his concept. It was fantastic, with beautiful tailored pieces with glimmers of a horror movie, stunning and extremely inspiring. I love the way in which he has used beautiful fabrics in the suiting and has explored different textures used an old butchers apron to create a gritty silhouette. Link to McQueen's full menswear 09 show - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwLXExJRvXs Alessandro Dell'Acqua's fall collection encompassed classic materials such as camel, herringbone and Prince of Wales. I thought this collection seemed rich, luxury and fresh. The soft light knitwear introduces a layed back feel, topped up with faultless tailoring and contrasting colours. the colour palette is simple and effective, the use of sequins suggests glamour and wealth. I think it really works though, sequins are something often used in womenswear party season. However crossing boundaries and using splashes of something bold is what can put the spark in to a menswear collection. I want to explore what is acceptable in men's fashion, is there just certain things that don't work? Or can it be accepted in small doses? Or will it ever be accepted? Link to Dell'Acqua's full menswear 09 show - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7NX6BrtHqwA Burberry Prorsum menswear stood out to me for the detail around the neck, whether it being a big printed scarf, or perfectly neat shirt collar, and wide lapels on jackets and trench coats. I was interested in this because of the use of colour and pattern. I'm looking into tartans and different traditional tartans, it was intriguing to see how Burberry used their pattern in moderation. Something as bold can disguise the beautiful tailoring behind it, or the simple cashmere knit piece. Link to Burberry Prorsum full menswear 09 show - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JAyswA4JwLg

Wednesday 23 September 2009

Lucy Parfitt Foundation Degree Beauty Therapy and Health Studies student, London College of Fashion - When going through a practical exercise, make notes or even words on how it went - Scribbled down odd words can help to prompt you when writing - A PDP becomes easier the more you do it - Be quite negative sometimes - Acknowledge that things don’t always go to plan - Reflection teaches you more - You may not learn as well in a particular style, so try different ones - Use individual methods of learning to help you personally - Change ways you learn - Break it down - Write about your feelings - Build upon what you learn
Jennifer Streeting Foundation degree Beauty Therapy and Health studies student, London College of Fashion - Be aware of things in your PDP that are good and bad - Analyse things - Reflective writing helps you to improve - Sometimes it very difficult to analyse yourself - Analyse positive and negative - It’s a relies, at times when stressful and frustrated - Writing it done can be away of emotional support - Accept that things don’t always go right - Keep notes - Be aware of what your doing all the time - Keep notes on lessons that are progressing - It improves your performance - Its about realising the importance of the help to your self - Look back to see how much you have progressed
Jane McIver BA (Hons) fashion Management student, London College of Fashion - Keep a journal of how a project went - Keep track of what you did and didn’t do - Diary of feelings about your work - Write in it regularly at least every week/ two weeks - Its emotionally helpful - Good way at looking at what you have achieved - Good to look back on what you could have done better - It’s a nice way to end a project - Very helpful, personally - Got to be honest, that’s the only way you can get the most out of it - Stepping back and viewing what you have done is important - Give yourself time to write don’t let it slip - Time management is vital
Yvonne Mills Course director, Foundation Degree Beauty Therapy and Health Studies, London College of Fashion - Good reflective writing is honesty - Bring your ideas, faults and feelings to light - Reflective writing is a procedure that we follow - Look back on how you can improve - Think about your trade/ art - Ideally document straight away, that’s when honesty comes through - It brings ideas out - Take away the descriptive element and concentrate on personal writing - It will help you in industry and future career
Sue Thomson Course director, Foundation Degree Fashion design technology, London College of Fashion - A PDP is extremely important part of the course - Enables you to reorganise your learning and reflect - Enables you to seek out answers - Students are problem solvers - You have to engage in being reflective, now and in industry - You have to be keen and work through reflection - A PDP combines sketchbook and theoretical work - When you collect things/ artifacts its for a reason, document that reason - All areas of your course should be reflected in - Get understanding to be able to move forward - Carry around something small to write in - Spontaneously react with your thoughts - Go to tutorials, reflect on them - Evaluate your work with your tutor - Take your own notes in tutorials as well as the tutors
Heather Pickard Director of programmes, BA (Hons) Fashion Management, London College of Fashion - Students should step back from demands of curriculum - Be honest in your PDP - Look at values that will help you in industry and future career - Celebrate all achievements but also highlight bad areas - Reflective writing is involved in the dissertation process - Don’t leave PDP until the last minute - Record all opportunities/ problems/ contacts - Always an ongoing process - Recognise strengths, make it personal - Good starting point- SWOT analysis - Talk about weaknesses/ insecurities - Its got to have thought and context to it
Darren Raven Senior lecturer, Foundation degree in Graphic design, London College of Communication - Courses are fast and furious - Reflection can help capture pieces and experiences of your work - A way of PDP can carry a book around- scan images in - Its your need to communicate with yourself to communicate with others - Don’t rely on memory, all was record it - When you look back you might appreciate something you didn’t before - When reading through, pull out problems and patterns - Look at ways in which you have improved - Take the PDP seriously - It’s an investment in yourself - Brainstorming can help - ‘The Kipling method’ - Question words, use symbols and images - Don’t worry about it, just do it regularly and often - It could be very useful in the future - Document everything - Document something of everything you do
Catherine Smith Senior lecturer, Personal & Professional development, School of Graphic design, London College of Communication - A PDP can transfer reflections into blogs, diaries, writing - Add personal feelings, should be a diary on work rather personal/ social life - Make a separation between work and play - A PDP shouldn’t be in academic writing, in the way the individual writes - Subjective - Its very important, everything has an audience, you must be able to talk about your ideas and feelings - Treat PDP like another person, as a friend, somebody to talk to, share problems - Learn how to articulate work and justify your ideas - Don’t write for somebody else to read, write for yourself - Writing can be a challenge, keep it simple - Different formats; write to yourself, blog, make it visually interesting - Make it feel as though its ‘you on paper’ - If you find it uninteresting or boring try a different format - Experiment

Alison James Head of teaching and learning, London College of Fashion - A PDP is a journal of personal development - It encapsulates change, personal and creatively - It can provide a pivotal moment of change, to look back on - Reflection happens all the time - A PDP should be for personal experiences - A PDP can form a construction of ways of learning - Exploratory examination - Every student is different - Looking at what you have learnt and how it has changed you - It creates a deeper sense of learning - Structure of visualisation, can include sound, music, film - A PDP is there to record experiences - Emotive, personal - Critical reflection can be messy, it doesn’t always form a need order

Reflective Writing videos

After watching all nine videos on reflective writing, I have taken notes on all the interviews. I feel a lot happier and not so anxious after viewing them. I think my perception of what a PDP encompasses was not wrong, but a different approach after listening to other alternatives and ways of creating one. For the past two years the way in which I would lay out my PPRD file was different to what I have tried this year. Looking back now I don’t think I made the most of what a PDP can give back to me, because I used to look at it as a chore and put it off. Something I also picked up from the videos was the way you decide to lay out your PDP, whether it take the form of a book, a blog, or a series or letters. After observing previous visual diaries and progress files, I felt it didn’t work for me as a visual diary by hand or a file just full of writing, it became very uninspiring, I felt uninterested therefore not wanting to look at it or enjoy doing it. So I decided to start a blog, I think the reason I didn’t pursue this before was due to the fact, I’m not a confident computer user. Again though this refers back to my first year of uni, I completed my final illustrations by hand, and I wasn’t happy with how they looked, they didn’t look professional or particularly how I wanted them too. So I decided to learn how to combine initial hand drawings with digital input, and using Photoshop and Illustrator. I started by just experimenting and to my surprise it really wasn’t that hard, I had been worrying that I couldn’t do something rather than just trying. My illustrations came out beautifully I was very pleased at what I had achieved. So back to the blog, I thought right I really want to try this, so I set it up and it’s great, I feel so much more confident working in this way. Now I wish I had done it straight away but then again, I think I needed to go through what I did to make me discover the ways in which I prefer to work and the ways I don’t like working. The videos were really easy to understand, and pointed out some great tips and ideas for a good PDP. By watching them I do feel that I’ve engaged better this year all ready by having my blog to look back on and also if I find I’m struggling at all I can just go back to my notes and view the videos whenever I want or need to. It’s had a very positive effect on me personally as well as helping with reflective writing, by this I mean I’m not worried about starting this academic year, and going back to uni. I know its not going to be easy, and sometimes I really won’t feel as positive as I do now, but for now I’m ready to go back and learn through all experiences good and bad. Link to videos http://www.arts.ac.uk/cetl/visual-directions/podcasts.htm

London Fashion Week

Mark Fast - Size zero Vs Curvy
Mark Fast's use of curvy models has sparked controversy, walk outs, creative differences and general conflict due to his show at London Fashion Week. Rather than using the norm slim models, Fast decided to take a stand and display his latest collection on size 12- 14 models.
I don't necessarily think its a wrong or right thing to do, normally thinner models are used to make the most of a garment, make it look even more beautiful. With long legs and a slim torso, its hard to make anything look bad. I think as a designer, Fast did take a huge risk, with using bigger models, his collection may not have revealed its whole potential, with audiences and critics attention drawn to the models, rather than the collection.
From this article (The Daily Mail, 21/09/09) it explains that this wasn't a rational decision, this was something Fast felt strongly about for a long time leading up to the show. It caused walk outs by Fast's staff, one of which was the stylist and creative designer.
I think Fast did something that he felt passionate about, and what he thought would improve and progress his designs. Surely as a designer passion is key and if you believe in something enough and as long as you can justify your ideas and concepts, you should go for it?
Or Fast did exactly what every designer wants to achieve, getting his collection noticed, a topical subject, with audiences arguing weather its good or bad. Well it certainly hit the head lines and has got people talking. Perhaps its not viewed as prestigious and glamorous as other shows at LFW, but it has drawn a crowd in favour of his actions, that feel something needed to be done about under weight models and it had shown that it does look good on bigger models.
I found this article interesting because I know when I was designing and planning my collection I had an image of 'the end product' including the models that would exhibit my collection and the over all styled look. I searched long and hard to try and get the models that I felt best represented the concept and style of the look my work was portraying. I personally think models are important, I designed and constructed for a certain size so the models had to be that size to do the garments justice.
Maybe I am viewing this as a menswear designer, I feel its perhaps easier to make women look as you want them to, with make up and hair. With men its harder to make them look uniform.

Monday 21 September 2009

Placement at Selfridges

In June this year I was very lucky to have the opportunity to undergo a work placement at Selfridges.I was placed in Visual Merchandising and worked within womenswear, window displays and home department. I managed to secure the placement through a graduating student from FDA Fashion. Although the placement wasn't menswear design I decided to still go for it and to learn more about VM as a career.
I was lucky to be able to stay with a friend in Balham, so I didn't face a hideous commute every day. It took about 50 minutes commute from Balham, so not too bad, I started work at 8am everyday so the team could get started before the store opened to the public at 9:30am. The most critical time of day was during that hour and a half when the team can really make drastic display changes. Majority of the rest of the day was spent preparing for the next morning, or upcoming events such as sales and new promotions.
I found working in VM very different to what I had imagined, sometimes there was alot of waiting around, waiting for things to be approved. Then as soon as we got the OK it was all hands on deck and get the task done as soon as possible. I think before doing this placement I was quite naive in the way I thought that part of the industry worked, by this I mean its very hands on if you want table painted yellow, you paint it yourself, if you want lighting moved, you get up a ladder and do it yourself!! God only knows why these little things didn't occur to me before but I'm glad that the experience from the placement taught me a thing or two!
On the flip side it wasn't all just waiting around, I got to use my creative skills, which I was very happy about because I think as first I couldn't really grasp how VM was that creative. I got to work along side the head of window and womenswear VM. I helped with the new set of window design ideas, I did some detailed research into the ideas and created prototypes and mini displays to show the concepts. I did really enjoy doing this it also made me feel I could show them what I could do whereas when I was putting up 'sale' signs I couldn't really prove anything other than just getting on with it and making sure everything was done.
On the last two days I was there I got quite involved in the latest promotion for the home section, I was asked to cover lots of props in designer guilds wallpaper and fabrics. I was pleased I was asked to use my creative skills and produce something that would be viewed in the home section by thousands of people. I also worked in personal shopping producing elaborate and luxury food hampers, displaying them for the prestigious customers of personal shopping to purchase.
Overall I feel I really learnt so much about working in fashion through my time at Selfridges I learnt that its not easy, its extremely hard work and you have to be so dedicated, but its not all negative, its also very rewarding seeing your ideas and work in practice, and getting noticed. I had a tiny little corner in one of the windows of the work I had produced when I was there and it felt great to think I did that, and thousands of people will view it.
Like I said before, although this placement wasn't ideal for me and I will pursue some more placements in menswear in the near future, I learnt so much, about VM and retail. Two things that are imperative to the design cycle, they are things that should be considered before and after a collection is produced.

Graduate Fashion Week 09

For the past two years I have gone to Graduate fashion Week and dressed for the Arts Institute shows. Its an amazing event, and the stands are fantastic, and its interesting to see what other students are producing. I feel its important to go to GFW to support the graduating students, dress for the show and get an inside look at all the garments and styling. The collections this year were unbelievable, the concepts and realisation of designs were astounding. When I was there I felt a real buzz being backstage, waiting for the show to start is so exciting! When ever I get a chance to dress for a show or get involved in some way I always take it, I've gained some really good experience from attending GFW for the past two years, I would like to think this will help me this year when I have completed my collection. I feel really strongly this year that I have my sights set high but if I'm dedicated enough there's no reason why I shouldn't be able to achieve them. From my first year of FDA Fashion I attended GFW and was just blown away, I thought this is it this is what I want do, I really am going to push my self this year to hopefully make to GFW. I know the selection process is very tough as there will be an extreme number of designers this year, and a tiny amount of places. However I'm not going to let that put me off, I will keep my head down and go for it. On the other hand I am aware its not the end of the world if I don't get in, there are still great opportunities to come. All in all in was a great day, well worth the early start! AIB did fantastically and I feel very proud to be part of AIB and represent them.

Friday 18 September 2009

FDA Fashion presents Inspired

A few pics of my collection at the show.

Thursday 17 September 2009

FdA Fashion Graduate Show 2009

The FDA graduate Fashion Show was a fantastic way to end the year. This image is my menswear collection, 'L'Uomo Dandy'. I was so pleased with what I managed to achieve for my final design unit. Looking back through photos now I can see little imperfections and details that I would have liked to have progressed forward but that's just something I can take with me and go forward with in my final year.
For my first time designing and constructing menswear, I really didn't know just what to expect, I knew I would really have to work hard and learn quickly as there is never enough time. However I think the pace that I had to work at helped me improve on getting things done faster, although still taking care and being precise, working faster also helped my personal motivation.
The research and concept behind my collection, consisted of Italian designer inspiration, of clean cut lines, sleek architectural structure of the body. I looked at Armani, Dolce & Gabanna, Prada, Marni. Although using Italian inspiration I wanted to combine a traditional British tailored look too, I researched into Neil Barrett, Savile Row, Ozwald Boateng, Edward Sexton.
This concept and 'Ready to Wear' path did provide me with good results and of course combined with my brief, for department store Beales. Yet I felt quite restricted to what would work for this brief, it had to be Spring /Summer 09 and fit in with Beales current stock package. So I knew I wanted to explore tailoring work with cottons, wools and linens, but really wanted to push my ideas and creativity further to create a stronger concept.
I feel my concept was strong and the final look did portray correctly what I set out achieve. I want to concentrate further this year on a stronger concept, broader ideas and look into menswear thoroughly to create a progressed more professional final collection.

Wednesday 16 September 2009

Stepping into the Future!

After a summer of placements, exhibitions and partying I have finally decided to get with times a set my self up with a blog! I'm hoping this new 'digital' journal will help get me through my third year of uni, by uploading and recording ideas and events it will make it easier for me to manage my reflections. Also encourage me to record on daily basis the things that inspire me and push my creativity, including experiences good and bad!