Follow Blaire Brown to top fashion school, Fashion Institute of Technology

Fashion Institute of Technology, NY Future Fashion Professional: Blaire Brown
Home State: Maryland
Etsy Store: www.fashionflamingopurse.etsy.com

Why Fashion?
I chose fashion as my career path because of my passion for the fashion industry, and because of my purse business that I run. Seeing that my love for design and creating garments has not ever gone away, I decided it was the perfect career for me to continue pursuing in college. Currently I am a Fashion Merchandising Management major at FIT, but I plan on going back and getting my Fashion Design degree after I get my Bachelors in FMM.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ABOUT BLAIRE’S FASHION SCHOOL EXPERIENCE….

What if you can’t draw? Start using a fashion croquis

If you are one of those people that enjoys designing, but has a miserable time attempting to draw people to put those clothes on (like myself), I would suggest you start using a croquis.

It is my understanding that croquis are templates of people that you can use to draw your brilliant clothing designs on. You can find very simple looking croquis, or croquis with attitudes and hair styles.

I went to a fashion seminar during the summer of my junior year of high school, and they attempted to teach me out to draw croquis-like figures. Let’s just say I didn’t get a design scholarship… my dresses and skirts always looked like they were on men. This is why I suggest using a croquis.

You will find a ton of FREE “I can finally draw people” croquis templates here.

Obvious tip: If you go out and get a pad of paper of tracing paper, you can make it look like you drew the people yourself!

Not so obvious tip: Try and brand your people. Do not let them look like the people in everyone else’s designs. When you look at famous designer’s sketches, you see these interesting characters that do not look like anyone else’s.


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What it’s like to intern [read intern diary here]

Intern Diary: more! Magazine [a London fashion weekly]
by Michelle Chai of the daisybutter Blog

My name is Michelle Chai, and I am a 19-year-old university student, studying Writing Fashion and Culture in Southampton, England.

For as long as I can remember, clichéd as this is beginning to sound, I havetoyed with the idea of incorporating my love for fashion with my love for writing, and turning into something I could pursue for a career. So, I’ve ended up studying for a competitive degree in one of the hardest industries to get into.

I don’t even remember ‘starting’ to love fashion, I just remember fighting with my mother to put my own choice of horrendously bright leggings, frilly socks and T-bar shoes on from the age of 5!

This summer, I was lucky enough to be offered a two-week internship at a weekly fashion magazine in London, England. In England, getting work experience is mayhem – most publications now only offer those studying a relevant course or those over 18 a placement. So, without further ado, this is a little diary of what happened during one of the weeks that I worked at more! Magazine.

Day One

Monday morning is usually a hectic day in the office, with everyone running ragged making preparations for the next issue (more! comes out every Tuesday), and this was no exception. Shani Chaplin, the fashion assistant, was busy calling in press samples for the upcoming photoshoot and making last-minute changes, and so I was left to my own devices in the packed fashion closet. It usually depends on which publication you are interning for, but your main duty will probably be making returns of press samples to send back to PR companies. This is also excellent for learning about which PR companies look after certain brands! I also had to organise the main fashion cupboard, full of items to be shot in the next week.

Day Two

In between making more press sample returns, today I also was asked to rush around to the Topshop press office on Oxford Street to collect ten new collection garments for Frankie, a junior stylist. This is where it becomes obvious that you need to know where things are in the city you’re working in – thank God I’m a frequent London shopper! Although it quickly became obvious that interning at a fashion magazine isn’t all glamour, I persisted, unlike the other two interns who flaked and just sat on their phones for a good 3 hours, and finished the days’ returns.

Day Three

Today was quite a slow day. Again, I worked on returns, and organising the fashion cupboard. I even went to the courier room to collect parcels, which was pretty boring, but I took it all in hand with a smile plastered on my face… and finally, the fashion department noticedme! Sophie, the Executive Style Director, Shani and Frankie, asked me to help style for the shoot on Thursday and wrote out labels with the garment label, price and brand. I slaved away, collecting more parcels from downstairs and rushing back up – one of the parcels included fancy customised cupcakes and LUSH Cosmetics goodies! – and Shani asked me to assist Anna, the Senior Stylist, on the Coverline photoshoot on Thursday! It really goes to show, if you persist and appear friendly, enthusiastic and indispensible, the big guns will notice.

Day Four

Photoshoot day. It was so stressful just getting to the studio! Once I arrived though, the studios were so sleek and modern looking, with different set-ups in each studio. This was probably the highlight of my time at more! so far, it was so busy and fun to work at! Basically at the shoot, I unpacked the clothing, styled the accessories and dressed Katy (the model), who was so lovely and pretty! I also wrote the credits, and pinned the outfits to fit the model. SO much work, but definitely worth it! Oh, and we got free sushi!

Day Five

This is the last day of my first week at more! The entire Fashion department went along to work the Clotheshow London, and put on some live fashion shows, leaving myself and two other fashion interns to man the department! I was slightly worried and overwhelmed by the amount of work but managed to cope, and realised that organization is everything in the fashion world. No matter how hectic things are, there is always some form of organisation in order. I finished returns, compiled credits for the main fashion spread, got voxpopped about Twilight and tidied the fashion closet.

All in all, my experience has been amazing. Although it is tiring and repetitive at times, if you seriously love fashion then you should definitely send out and email cover letters and your CV (or resume) to magazines. An internship will confirm whether this is the thing for you. Also, always remember confidence is absolutely everything!

Intern Tips [advice learned from experience]:

  • Rings and bracelets are risky. I lost my favourite ring! And I kept getting caughton pieces of clothing because of my bracelets!
  • Flat shoes are an essential, or even a low wedge. Heels may look professional, but when interning, you’re probably better off wearing something that looks good and feels comfortable.
  • Organization is everything. It’s quite hectic in the fashion cupboard, and there are hundreds of returns bags, hangers, clothing and other bits and bobs lying around, so being organised will get you off to a flying start.
  • Be friendly and smiley!
  • The courier room people will probably become your best friends; given the amount of time you’ll probably spend collecting garment packages and other ‘special deliveries’. One of the parcels I took up to the girls included personalized cupcakes and Lush goodies! :O I can hear jaws dropping in amazement already!
  • Interning at a fashion magazine isn’t glamorous; I’m not going to lie. It is a lot of blood, sweat and tears, and by the middle of your second day, you’ll most probably want to pack it in (I know the interns I worked with were close to leaving on Tuesday!) but keep smiling, power through and the fashion editors WILL eventually notice.

Have a question for Michelle or about interning in general? Leave a comment below!


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Who was Alexander McQueen?

Getting to know the late fashion designer, A. McQueen

by Call Me Stylista

McQueen, the beginner

The perennial Bad Boy of fashion had a very early initiation into the world of clothes. He started by making dresses for his three sisters which led him to leave school with an O-level in arts at 16 and then serve as an apprentice under Savile Row tailors, Anderson & Sheppard.

McQueen returned to London in 1994 and applied to Central Saint Martin’s College of Art & Design, to work as a pattern cutter tutor. Because of the strength of his portfolio he was persuaded by the Head of the Masters course to enrol in the course as a student. He received his masters degree in fashion design and his graduation collection was bought in its entirety by influential fashion stylist Isabella Blow.

In 1996 LVMH chose McQueen to succeed John Galliano as head designer at Givenchy. McQueen eventually parted ways with Givenchy in 2001, when he claimed his contract with the French label was ‘constraining his creativity. Under his own label, and with the help of the Gucci group, which acquired a 51 per cent stake in the business, he built a fashion empire. Today, McQueen has flagship stores in New York, Milan, London and LA, an accessories collection, a menswear collection; and eyewear.

McQueen, the showman extraordinaire

Alexander McQueen’s shows were nothing short of monumental. During his Spring 2001 RTW show the audience sat around a mirrored cube, which, when lit from inside, revealed itself to be a mental-hospital holding cell. Demented girls, wearing hospital headbands and everything from extraordinary mussel-shell skirts to impossibly chic pearl-colored cocktail dresses, slithered and strutted.

For his comparatively cleaner and more sober Fall 2002 collection, McQueen couldn’t resist a lone, macabre trick—a vista of a pack of caged wolves, and the opening image of a lone figure clad in a purple leather cape leading a pair of dogs.

His Spring 2004 show was an exuberantly hilarious re-enactment of Sydney Pollack’s Depression-era film ‘They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?’  The narrative involved dancers, models, and audience in a visceral celebration of exquisitely glamorous clothes.

His Fall 2009 show which had women with sex-doll lips and sometimes painfully theatrical costumes was heralded as the future of fashion by the industry-insiders but was nothing compared to the frenzy that greeted his Spring 2010 collection. It was strong statement about the future of our ecology, the incessant global warming which would force humans to live in the sea. These very humans evolving into alien-like reptiles were depicted in his collection. Having been embraced by the likes of Lady GaGa, it would be no exaggeration to assert that McQueen’s penchant for punk interjected with futuristic romanticism was not only accepted but also appreciated by the masses.

Apart from these there were innumerable moments during his shows that would leave the audience spell-bound. Like Shalom Harlow twirling on a turntable as she was spray-painted by a robotic arm; a ghostly apparition of Kate Moss that appeared and vaporized in a glass pyramid to the haunting strains of “Schindler’s List,” and para-Olympian record-holder Aimee Mullins striding down the catwalk on hand-carved wooden prosthetic legs with integrated boots.

McQueen, the trend god

Alexander McQueen was the man who made the builder’s bum fashionable. His “bumsters”, which appeared in 1996, spawned the trend in perilously low-rise, crevice-revealing jeans. The bumster is what defines McQueen, because it put him on the map and got him noticed as a force to be reckoned with.

One enduring motif which McQueen transported from catwalk to the High Street was the skull. His trademark scarf bearing the design has become a celebrity must-have. Johnny Depp, Lindsay Lohan, Nicole Ritchie and Cameron Diaz are among the stars who have been snapped wearing it.

His razor-sharp tailored looks fused the romantic with the edgy avant-garde, a fresh contrast that won international acclaim. In cutting his teeth at Anderson & Sheppard, and Gieves and Hawkes, McQueen learned the disciplines of shape and proportion in traditional tailoring. During this time he even made a suit for Prince Charles.

McQueen’s technical virtuosity grew quickly to eye-popping engineered prints. McQueen the creative palette extended further than just clothes. Some of McQueen’s most memorable designs were outlandish, unconventional and plain bizarre.

In his signature doc martens and with his close-cropped hair,this outspoken designer, who died on 11th February, 2010 was affectionately dubbed by the fashion press “the hooligan of English fashion,” or the “l’enfant terrible.”

-end-

*Her screenname, Not Fashionista. Call Me Stylista, aptly describes the fashion philosophy of this 20 year old law student from India who lives, dreams and breathes fashion. Armed with a personal blog called Call Me Stylista, this fashion addict has big plans to conquer the fashion world one fine day.

Photo credit: www.style.com www.net-a-porter.com www.designmuseum.org