designers
Coco Chanel, Michael Kors, Tory Burch, and more—explore who has influenced the world of fashion the most, and who might be the next big name.
Fashion, Feminity, and the Future
I work in the creative career of confidence, empowering women to be the best version of themselves. Striving to be the best version of ourselves allows us to be of service to the world. I inadvertently developed this mindset from the courageous and majestic women in my life, who inspire my work as a fashion designer.
By Ameena Abdul-Hakeem5 years ago in Styled
Blood, Sweat, and Shears
I was given my first pair of Fiskar scissors in the early 1970's. I was a budding seamstress and I loved the way that they sliced neatly through the doubled layer of carefully chosen fabric and felt so light and manageable in my small hands.. A good pair of scissors is the most critical tool for a seamstress. They have to take the fabric as it sits, not displace it forward like a wave.
By Jennifer Gonsalves5 years ago in Styled
Reworked Clothing: Combining Creative Design and Sustainability.
On my seventh birthday, I was given my first ever sewing machine. It was a little, pink, plastic thing with a mini foot pedal and everything. I remember sitting on the floor by my nana, who in contrast was sewing on a big industrial machine, and cutting out her leftover scraps only to sew them back together with my wonky stitching. My first creation was a 'skirt' for my mum (aka a tiny tube of fabric made up of random fabric scraps I found laying around) and ever since then, I've been hooked.
By Emma Naughton5 years ago in Styled
Fashion Designer
Hello, I go by Elijah, and I'm a self taught fashion designer from Chicago. My passion is designing custom clothing, accessories, sneakers, etc. With so many ideas that comes to mind I get to create a new product each day. It can become overwhelming at times because I try to push out all of my ideas but, I'm just one person so I take my time. My inspiration comes from many things wether that's going out into nature, what the weather feels like, or what I may see in stores or magazines. But truly my inspiration derives from my childhood when my mom would always dressed my twin and I in matching clothing which then became a fashion statement as we got order in age and carried it through highschool.
By Eli Daprofet5 years ago in Styled
CUT OUTS
I started creating cuts out artworks to assist with my personal design process for accessories and clothes. Not only was it a way to explore the unpredictability of shapes and volumes, but it also allowed for the chance to layer colours and create new combinations. The series of photographs above document how I was playing with different shapes and altering the layout before sticking down my final design. While the final outcome is a fixed piece, I find that photographs capture this beautiful process of visual and physical artistic exploration, a search to find a voice in different forms and arrangements; this might give expression to a shape that was previously unknown to the eye. It is the endless design possibilities that can be achieved through using the simple tools of scissors and paper that renders this process so dynamic. The form of this "clutched" bag developed from the concept of a simple hand-held bag (a historical accessory used across the centuries) and yet I wanted to modernise any symmetry by creating these abstracted details that constantly pushed a tangible identity. The process of cutting the paper without a fixed idea of an outcome allowed me to develop this series of images which demonstrates that not only should a potential outcome of a bag be considered as an entity in itself but also the process that led to its creation it as integral to its identity. For me, the cut outs are as important as the final product - the dialogue between 2d and 3d in inseparable. Below are some other "bag" concepts that developed as a result of my visit to the Isokan Building in London. the clarity of the white modernist architecture speaks of dynamism in the shadows and highlights and this led me to create cut outs that speak of the architectural lines but also the contrast in tones, which is translated in my contrasting use of blue and yellow. Below this page are some lamp designs which are rooted in my research into art deco design. It is therefore that the product of my path into cut outs has given visual expression to a dialogue between not only fashion and architecture but also to furniture. As I continue t0 push the process of cut outs, I would love to be able to produce a series that speaks alongside clothing. The cut outs are not only 2d works but a fabric in themselves, a textural layering that plays with abstraction and reality.
By Natasha Law5 years ago in Styled
The Start Of A Passion
A year ago when the world shut down, I was left with plenty of time on my hands. Like many others I sought out a new hobby to fill my time. I stumbled across a shirt that I loved from a popular company. While looking at it I said, “that seems easy enough for me to make on my own.” With unearned sewing confidence I began. I went through the box of scrap fabric my mom had pulled out of storage to make masks for a local psychiatric hospital . With no pattern, I began cutting and stitching fabric together. The only sewing knowledge I had was from helping my mom with quilts and making toddler dresses for a service project yet I started flying by the seat of my pants sewing my shirt project and, not surprisingly, the completed shirt had many imperfections. But I still wear it to this day and hope that nobody will comment on the raw edges or the curvy hem.
By Ellis Pinnock5 years ago in Styled
Style Variety: The Secret Project
Why have I always felt the pressure to try and fit in with the modern day social society? Following the latest fashion trends, knowing all the celebrity gossip, keeping up with those trap songs that everyone seems to love, and trying to speak the most frequently used slang words. I just can't do it. As a teenager or for someone in their early twenties, there will always be some sort of expectation on how you must know all about the latest music and fashion trends that everyone's talking about.
By Bethany Gordon5 years ago in Styled
Fashion Expressions
Creativity comes in countless ways paint, design, photography, literature, poetry, music, sculpting, writing and so much more. I have always found joy in expressing myself through the various free artistic forms. For as long as I can remember, my emotional and mental freedom has been released via different creative outlets. Choosing to express myself through fashion design, allows me the independence to create in, anyway I want. Taking part in creative processes such as these teaches the value of other’s works. Oftentimes, we don’t realize the time and effort that goes into creating until we are the ones making the effort to build something.
By avani bodden5 years ago in Styled
Fiber Animals
Calling to mind the feeling of a pair of sharp scissors: the just-perceptible grind of the blades sliding across one another, the low rumble in that soft space between thumb and pointer finger. The rhythm: snip snip snip; the hot tear of a blade gliding across a yard of fabric, rending it in two. Miraculous.
By Jen Wroblewski5 years ago in Styled










