Art of applying design and aesthetics to clothing and accessories
Fashion designers in 1974 in Dresden.
Fashion design is theart ofapplyingdesign,aesthetics, clothing construction, and natural beauty toclothing and itsaccessories. It is influenced by diverse cultures and different trends and has varied over time and place. "A fashion designer creates clothing, including dresses, suits, pants, and skirts, and accessories like shoes and handbags, for consumers. They can specialize in clothing, accessory, orjewelry design, or may work in more than one of these areas."[1]
Fashion designers typically use a runway of models to showcase their work.
Fashion designers work in a variety of ways when designing their pieces and accessories such as rings, bracelets, necklaces, earrings and clothes. Due to the time required to put a garment out on the market, designers mustanticipate changes to consumer desires. Fashion designers are responsible for creating looks for individual garments, involving shape, color, fabric, trimming, and more.[2]
Fashion designers attempt to design clothes that are functional as well as aesthetically pleasing. They consider who is likely to wear a garment and the situations in which it will be worn, and they work with a wide range of materials, colors,patterns, and styles. Though most clothing worn for everyday wear falls within a narrow range of conventional styles, unusual garments are usually sought for special occasions such asevening wear or partydresses.
There are different lines of work for designers in the fashion industry. Fashion designers who work full-time for afashion house, as 'in-house designers', own the designs and may either work alone or as a part of a design team. Freelance designers who work for themselves sell their designs to fashion houses, directly to shops, or to clothing manufacturers. There are quite a few fashion designers who choose to set up their labels, which offers them full control over their designs. Others are self-employed and design for individual clients. Otherhigh-end fashion designers cater to specialty stores or high-end fashion department stores. These designers create original garments, as well as those that follow established fashion trends. Most fashion designers, however, work for apparel manufacturers, creating designs of men's, women's, and children's fashions for the mass market. Large designer brands that have a 'name' as their brand such asAbercrombie & Fitch,Justice, orJuicy are likely to be designed by a team of individual designers under the direction of a design director.
Garment design includes components of "color, texture, space, lines, pattern, silhouette, shape, proportion, balance, emphasis, rhythm, and harmony".[3] All of these elements come together to design a garment by creating visual interest for consumers.
Fashion designers work in various ways, some start with a vision in their head and later move into drawing it on paper or on a computer, while others go directly into draping fabric onto a dress form, also known as a mannequin. The design process is unique to the designer and it is rather intriguing to see the various steps that go into the process. Designing a garment starts withpatternmaking. The process begins with creating a sloper or base pattern. The sloper will fit the size of the model a designer is working with or a base can be made by utilizing standard size charting.
Three major manipulations within patternmaking include dart manipulation, contouring, and added fullness.[4] Dart manipulation allows for a dart to be moved on a garment in various places but does not change the overall fit of the garment. Contouring allows for areas of a garment to fit closer to areas of the torso such as the bust or shoulders. Added fullness increases the length or width of a pattern to change the frame as well as fit of the garment. The fullness can be added on one side, unequal, or equally to the pattern.
A designer may choose to work with certain apps that can help connect all their ideas together and expand their thoughts to create a cohesive design. When a designer is completely satisfied with the fit of thetoile (or muslin), they will consult a professional pattern maker who will then create the finished, working version of the pattern out of paper or using a computer program. Finally, a sample garment is made up and tested on a model to make sure it is an operational outfit. Fashion design is expressive, the designers create art that may be functional or non-functional.
Over the years, there has been an increase in the use of technology within fashion design.Iris van Herpen, a Dutch designer, incorporated3D printing in her Crystallization collection.[5]
Software can aid designers in the product development stage. Designers can useartificial intelligence andvirtual reality to prototype clothing.[5]3D modeling within software allows for initial sampling and development stages for partnerships with suppliers before the garments are produced.[6]
Modern Western fashion design is often considered to have started in the 19th century withCharles Frederick Worth who was the first designer to have hislabel sewn into the garments that he created. Before the formerdraper set up hismaison couture (fashion house) inParis, clothing design and creation of the garments were handled largely by anonymous seamstresses. At the time high fashion descended from what was popularly worn at royal courts. Worth's success was such that he was able to dictate to his customers what they should wear, instead of following their lead as earlier dressmakers had done. The termcouturier was in fact first created in order to describe him. While all articles of clothing from any time period are studied by academics ascostume design, only clothing created after 1858 is considered fashion design.[7]
It was during this period that many design houses began to hire artists to sketch or paint designs for garments. Rather than going straight into manufacturing, the images were shown to clients to gain approval, which saved time and money for the designer. If the client liked their design, the patrons commissioned the garment from the designer, and it was produced for the client in the fashion house. This designer-patron construct launched designers sketching their work rather than putting the completed designs on models.
Until the 1950s, fashion clothing was predominately designed and manufactured on amade-to-measure orhaute couture basis (French for high-sewing), with each garment being created for a specific client. A couture garment is made to order for an individual customer, and is usually made from high-quality, expensive fabric, sewn with extreme attention to detail and finish, often using time-consuming, hand-executed techniques. Look and fit take priority over the cost of materials and the time it takes to make.[8][9] Due to the high cost of each garment, haute couture makes little direct profit for the fashion houses, but is important for prestige and publicity.[10]
Ready-to-wear, or prêt-à-porter, clothes are a cross between haute couture and mass market. They are not made for individual customers, but great care is taken in the choice and cut of the fabric. Clothes are made in small quantities to guarantee exclusivity, so they are rather expensive. Ready-to-wear collections are usually presented by fashion houses each season during a period known asfashion week or fashion month. This takes place on a citywide basis and occurs twice a year. The main seasons of Fashion Week include spring/summer, fall/winter, resort, swim, and bridal.
Half-way garments are an alternative to ready-to-wear, "off-the-peg", or prêt-à-porter fashion. Half-way garments are intentionally unfinished pieces of clothing that encourage co-design between the "primary designer" of the garment, and what would usually be considered, the passive "consumer".[11] This differs from ready-to-wear fashion, as the consumer is able to participate in the process of making and co-designing their clothing. During the Make{able} workshop, Hirscher and Niinimaki found that personal involvement in the garment-making process created a meaningful "narrative" for the user, which established a person-product attachment and increased the sentimental value of the final product.[11]
Otto von Busch also explores half-way garments and fashion co-design in his thesis, "Fashion-able, Hacktivism and engaged Fashion Design".[12]
Currently, thefashion industry relies more on mass-market sales. The mass market caters for a wide range of customers, producing ready-to-wear garments using trends set by the famous names in fashion. They often wait around a season to make sure a style is going to catch on before producing their versions of the original look. To save money and time, they use cheaper fabrics and simpler production techniques which can easily be done by machines. The end product can, therefore, be sold much more cheaply.[13][14][15]
There is a type of design called "kutch" originated from the German wordkitschig, meaning "trashy" or "not aesthetically pleasing".Kitsch can also refer to "wearing or displaying something that is therefore no longer in fashion".[16]
The median annual wages for salaried fashion designers was $79,290 in May 2023, approximately $38.12 per hour. The middle 50 percent earned an average of 76,700. The lowest 10 percent earned $37,090 and the highest 10 percent earned $160,850.[17] The highest number of employment lies withinApparel,Piece Goods, and Notions MerchantWholesalers with a percentage of 5.4. The average is 7,820 based on employment. The lowest employment is within ApparelKnitting Mills at .46% of the industry employed, which averages to 30 workers within the specific specialty.[17] In 2016, 23,800 people were counted as fashion designers in the United States.[18]
Geographically, the largest employment state of Fashion designers is New York with an employment of 7,930.[17] New York is considered a hub for fashion designers due to a large percentage of luxury designers and brands.
Fashion show at a fashion designing college, US, 2015
The United States is home to the largest, wealthiest, and most multi-faceted fashion industry. Most fashion houses in theUnited States are based inNew York City, with a high concentration centered in theGarment District neighborhood. On the US west coast, there is also to a lesser extent a significant number of fashion houses inLos Angeles, where a substantial percentage of high fashion clothing manufactured in the United States is actually made.Miami has also emerged as a new fashion hub, especially in regards toswimwear and other beach-oriented fashion. A semi-annual event held every February and September,New York Fashion Week is the oldest of the four majorfashion weeks held throughout the world.Parsons The New School for Design, located in theGreenwich Village neighborhood ofLower Manhattan in New York City, is considered one of the top fashion schools in the world. There are numerous fashion magazines published in the United States and distributed to a global readership. Examples includeVogue,Harper's Bazaar, andCosmopolitan.
American fashion design is highly diverse, reflecting the enormous ethnic diversity of the population, but is largely dominated by a clean-cut, urban, hip aesthetic, and often favors a more casual style, reflecting theathletic, health-conscious lifestyles of the suburban and urban middle classes. The annualMet Gala ceremony inManhattan is widely regarded as the world's most prestigioushaute couture fashion event and is a venue where fashion designers and their creations are celebrated.Social media is also a place where fashion is presented most often. Some influencers are paid huge amounts of money to promote a product or clothing item, where the business hopes many viewers will buy the product off the back of the advertisement. Instagram is the most popular platform for advertising, but Facebook, Snapchat, Twitter and other platforms are also used.[19] In New York, theLGBT fashion design community contributes very significantly to promulgating fashion trends, anddrag celebrities have developed a profound influence uponNew York Fashion Week.[20][21]
London has long been the capital of theUnited Kingdom fashion industry and has a wide range of foreign designs which have integrated with modern British styles. Typical British design is smart but innovative yet recently has become more and more unconventional, fusing traditional styles with modern techniques. Vintage styles play an important role in the British fashion and styling industry. Stylists regularly 'mix and match' the old with the new, which gives British style a unique, bohemian aesthetic. Irish fashion (both design and styling) is also heavily influenced by fashion trends from Britain. Well-known British designers includeThomas Burberry,Alfred Dunhill,Paul Smith,Vivienne Westwood,Stella McCartney,Jimmy Choo,John Galliano,John Richmond,Alexander McQueen,Matthew Williamson,Gareth Pugh,Hussein Chalayan andNeil Barrett.
Most French fashion houses are inParis, which is the capital ofFrench fashion. Traditionally, French fashion ischic and stylish, defined by its sophistication, cut, and smart accessories. French fashion is internationally acclaimed.
Madrid andBarcelona are the main fashion centers in Spain. Spanish fashion is often more conservative and traditional but also more 'timeless' than other fashion cultures. Spaniards are known not to take great risks when dressing.[23][24] Nonetheless, many of the fashion brands and designers coming from Spain.
Berlin is the centre of fashion in Germany (prominently displayed atBerlin Fashion Week), whileDüsseldorf holds Europe's largest fashion trade fairs withIgedo. Other important centres of the scene areMunich,Hamburg, andCologne.German fashion is known for its elegant lines as well as unconventional young designs and the great variety of styles.
Most of the Indian fashion houses are in Mumbai,Lakme Fashion Week is considered one of the premier fashion events in the country.[25]Lakme Fashion Week in India takes place twice a year and is held in the populous city of Mumbai. The first show occurs during April featuring summer collections. The second show takes place in August to showcase the winter collection.Lakme, a cosmetic brand for Indian women, hosts the event. This fashion week started in 1999 and originally partnered with theFDCI, Fashion Design Council of India then later switched to a sponsorship with Lakme.[25]
Milan is Italy's fashion capital. Most of the older Italian couturiers are inRome. However, Milan andFlorence are theItalian fashion capitals, and it is the exhibition venue for their collections. Italian fashion features casual and glamorous elegance. In Italy, Milan Fashion Week takes place twice a year in February and September. Milan Fashion week puts fashion in the spotlight and celebrates it in the heart of Milan with fashion lovers, buyers and media.
MostJapanese fashion houses are inTokyo which is home toTokyo Fashion Week, Asia's largest fashion week. The Japanese look is loose and unstructured (often resulting from complicated cutting), colors tend to the sombre and subtle, and richly textured fabrics. Famous Japanese designers includeKenzo Takada,Issey Miyake,Yohji Yamamoto andRei Kawakubo.
Chinese clothing has historically been associated with lower quality both inside and outside China, leading to a stigma on Chinese brands. Due to government censorship, Chinese citizens were only able to access fashion magazines in the 1990s.[26] However, as more and more Chinese designers matriculate from the world's top fashion schools, Chinese designers such asShushu/Tong andRui Zhou have made their way into the world's top fashion weeks, and Shanghai has become a fashion hub in China.[27][26] In the early 2020s,Gen Z shoppers pioneered theguochao (Chinese:国潮;pinyin:Guó cháo) movement, a trend of preferring homegrown designers which incorporate aspects of Chinese history and culture.[27]Hong Kong clothing brandShanghai Tang's design concept is inspired by Chinese clothing and set out to rejuvenate Chinese fashion of the 1920s and 30s, with a modern twist of the 21st century and its usage of bright colours.[28] Additionally, arevival in interest in traditional Han clothing has led to interest inhaute couture clothing with historical Chinese details, particularly aroundChinese New Year.[29]
Fashion in theSoviet Union largely followed general trends of the Western world. However, the state'ssocialist ideology consistently moderated and influenced these trends. In addition, shortages ofconsumer goods meant that the general public did not have ready access to pre-made fashion.
Most of the Swiss fashion houses are inZürich.[30] The Swiss look is casual elegant and luxurious with a slight touch of quirkiness. Additionally, it has been greatly influenced by the dance club scene.
In the development of Mexican indigenous dress, the fabrication was determined by the materials and resources that are available in specific regions, impacting the "fabric, shape and construction of a people's clothing".[31] Textiles were created from plant fibers including cotton and agave. Class status differentiated what fabric was worn. Mexican dress was influenced by geometric shapes to create the silhouettes. Huipil a blouse characterized by a "loose, sleeveless tunic made of two or three joined webs of cloth sewn lengthwise"[31] is an important historical garment, often seen today. After the Spanish Conquest, traditional Mexican clothing shifted to take a Spanish resemblance.
Mexican indigenous groups rely on specific embroidery and colors to differentiate themselves from each other.[32]
Mexican Pink is a significant color to the identity of Mexican art and design and general spirit. The term "Rosa Mexicano" as described by Ramón Valdiosera was established by prominent figures such as Dolores del Río and designer Ramón Val in New York.[32]
When newspapers and magazines such as El Imparcial and El Mundo Ilustrado circulated in Mexico, became a significant movement, as it informed the large cities, such as Mexico City, of European fashions. This encouraged the founding of department stores, changing the existent pace of fashion.[33] With access to European fashion and dress, those with high social status relied on adopting those elements to distinguish themselves from the rest. Juana Catarina Romero was a successful entrepreneur and pioneer in this movement.
A fashion designer conceives garment combinations of line, proportion, color, and texture. While sewing and pattern-making skills are beneficial, they are not a pre-requisite of successful fashion design. Most fashion designers are formally trained or apprenticed.
A technical designer works with the design team and the factories overseas to ensure correct garment construction, appropriate fabric choices and a good fit. The technical designer fits the garment samples on a fit model, and decides which fit and construction changes to make before mass-producing the garment.
Apattern maker (also referred as pattern master orpattern cutter) drafts the shapes and sizes of a garment's pieces. This may be done manually with paper and measuring tools or by using a CAD computer software program. Another method is to drape fabric directly onto a dress form. The resulting pattern pieces can be constructed to produce the intended design of the garment and required size. Formal training is usually required for working as a pattern marker.
Atailor makes custom designed garments made to the client's measure; especially suits (coat and trousers, jacket and skirt, et cetera). Tailors usually undergo an apprenticeship or other formal training.
Atextile designer designs fabric weaves and prints for clothes and furnishings. Most textile designers are formally trained as apprentices and in school.
Astylist co-ordinates the clothes, jewelry, and accessories used in fashion photography and catwalk presentations. A stylist may also work with an individual client to design a coordinated wardrobe of garments. Many stylists are trained in fashion design, the history of fashion, and historical costume, and have a high level of expertise in the current fashion market and future market trends. However, some simply have a strong aesthetic sense for pulling great looks together.
Afashion buyer selects and buys the mix of clothing available in retail shops, department stores, and chain stores. Most fashion buyers are trained in business and/or fashion studies.
Aseamstress sews ready-to-wear or mass-produced clothing by hand or with a sewing machine, either in a garment shop or as a sewing machine operator in a factory. She (or he) may not have the skills to make (design and cut) the garments, or to fit them on a model.
Adressmaker specializes in custom-made women's clothes: day, cocktail, and evening dresses, business clothes and suits, trousseaus, sports clothes, and lingerie.
Afashion forecaster predicts whatcolours, styles and shapes will be popular ("on-trend") before the garments are on sale in stores.
Amodel wears and displays clothes at fashion shows and in photographs.
Afit model aids the fashion designer by wearing and commenting on the fit of clothes during their design and pre-manufacture. Fit models need to be a particular size for this purpose.
Afashion journalist writes fashion articles describing the garments presented or fashion trends, for magazines or newspapers.
A fashion photographer produces photographs about garments and other fashion items along with models and stylists for magazines or advertising agencies.[34]
^abValdiosera, Ramón. “Rosa Mexicano: Moda y Marca.” Artes De México, no. 111, 2013, pp. 60–65.
^Chassen-López, Francie. "The Traje de Tehuana as National Icon: Gender, Ethnicity, and Fashion in Mexico." The Americas, vol. 71 no. 2, 2014, p. 281-314. Project MUSE,doi:10.1353/tam.2014.0134
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