This 8-week fashion design study abroad summer school programme will help you further develop your design and making skills, as well as offering insights into professional roles that go into creating and sustaining a fashion career; whether as a designer / maker, stylist, content creator (or commissioner), communicator, collaborator, researcher, textile specialist or product developer, you will critically engage across a wide range of interests, and specialist areas to develop practical, and transferrable skills.
Below you will find the units you will be taking for for the Introduction to Fashion Design: summer school course. For this programme you will need to take 12 credits.
Credit value: 2 credits
Tutor contact: 20 hours
Self-directed study: 20 hours
Lead Tutor: Eleanor Warrington and Jovanka Novkovic Davies
If you are planning on entering the highly competitive fashion industry, it is becoming increasingly important to understand the ‘Business of Fashion’. In addition, it is vital to have a clear understanding of ALL the roles within a merchandise team and also, knowledge of the supporting roles within a fashion organization. Understanding all aspects will give you confidence and in turn, make you more attractive to future employers.
Increased business knowledge will result in you being able to explore more avenues within the industry and provide you with the ability to work with colleagues across all disciplines of a complex business.
On this multi-faceted unit, you will gain knowledge of all aspects in a clear, understandable format. It is excellent for students wishing to enter the fashion business as part of a product development team in the capacity of buyer, merchandiser, garment technologist or designer.
You will be introduced to the major roles and responsibilities within the Product Development Team (PDT) including – The Buyer, Merchandiser, Garment Technologist and Designer. You will learn about merchandise planning, retail strategy, operational marketing, network science, costings and sourcing. You will learn how to create a balanced collection using a professional range plan, taking into consideration both historical evidence and trends. In addition you will analyse Trend Forecasting and the techniques needed to guarantee successful product development and profitability. You will be introduced to all the levels of retail: Mass-market, Ready-to-wear, Couture and Bespoke. You will also learn about the Luxury market, how avant-garde is relevant to the fashion industry and have an overview of fashion futures and retail innovation.
This is a challenging unit, which will provide you with an immense amount of knowledge and will serve as an excellent grounding for a career in fashion. You will acquire a level of expertise which will enable you to apply for professional roles or internships.
Lead Tutor: Michael Czerwinski
This class is delivered out in the field combining tours, informal lectures, group discussions and self motivated discovery. You will participate in a number of museum visits and guided walks through obscure parts of London (some related to fashion, all related to this city).
You will be encouraged to search for inspiration and gather stimulating information whilst exploring and discovering an ‘alternative’ London. Part of this will be gaining knowledge of the layers of idiosyncratic behaviour, cultural attitudes and curious customs that define the real essence of a place.
You will have the opportunity to examine aspects of what makes 'Britishness’ and more to the point gain an understanding of ‘Londoness’. Fashion is continually changing and London- with its multi-cultural mix, edgy, vibrant art scene, history and traditions, is the catalyst that influences these changes. You will examine the influence of various factors on fashion including social events, popular culture, architecture, the arts, mass media. Also, looking behind the scenes, you will gain an alternative perspective through observing the mechanics of a city steeped in a complex history. Where do people go? What do they say? How do they talk? What do they eat?
The aim is to ‘make a difference’ to the way you find, see, absorb, process, and communicate information – in your own individual and personal way.
You will keep a journal to help you critically examine, reflect and express your opinions generated by these visits. This combination of sketches, diary and scrap book will become a valuable tool to underpin your studies.
Lead Tutor: Dean Bright
In Fashioning Textile Fabrics: Collage and Stitch you will draw inspiration from your London research journal developed during your Contemporary Culture and Fashion Studies. You will develop your creative hand craft skills, and techniques to make planet positive design decisions.
Textiles are everywhere and a huge part of our everyday lives (just take a moment to count how many textiles, fabrics, materials you are wearing, and that are around you right now). As the climate emergency increases, we all have a responsibility to consider mass production processes, and if we always need to ‘make new’. As a community of emerging designers, you can do your part, by embracing the reuse and repurposing of materials.
You can share materials, ideals around reuse, and approach waste as an opportunity to rejuvenate and repurpose. You will discover and experiment with deconstruction, to reconstruction, remaking, and retailoring to create exciting personal design narratives.
Through collage, craft, recycling, upcycling, and various hand (and some sewing machine techniques), you will find ways to create innovative and exciting textile applications. You will hone skills around stitch, appliqué, 2D and 3D exploration; creating scaled up, collaged and patched fashion fabrics, which you will then take through the concept and design process, into viable realised ideas and products.
Credit value: 3 credits
Tutor contact: 30 hours
Self-directed study: 30 hours
Hats, headwear, headbands, chokers, bracelets, ruffs, gauntlets, armour - all pieces that mask, adorn, celebrate, enhance and maybe protect the body.
Armour for example, isn't just an element of war, used as protection - it's a statement. Clothing and adornment work as an extension of personality.
Objects take on another form – when made in leather, dipped in plaster, carved in wood, moulded in plastic or rubber, burnished, cut, embellished, tattooed, punched, or tooled.
How do we create something original and new, when we live in a world where everything already exists?With experimentation comes innovation. New materials create new opportunities. Fashion has a way of enhancing and embracing the past, to redefine the new.
Think theatre and Venetian masks, the grotesque.
In this unit you will play and invent extraordinary things. You will create and construct a 3D form to encase the body, your body if you wish.
Lead Tutor: Rebekah Roy
In addition to the study of style tribes, trends and current designer collections, you will gain an insight into the many different aspects of today's stylist and the various opportunities on offer - fashion editorial, show/catwalk, commercial work, music industry, pop promo and celebrity styling.
You will work towards the creation of a finished image, working in teams on an outdoor street style shoot, in an out of context environment (Southbank/Brixton/Shoreditch) to create your own editorial image.
You will examine image creation, including physicality, psychology, individuality, taste and style, therefore gain an understanding of the skills required to become a great stylist.
Rebekah Roy’s work is driven by her love for creating compelling visual narratives for brands, designers, and artists alike. Her work has spanned continents, from Singapore to Nigeria. She has styled 75+ catwalk shows, including those for London Fashion Week, Rolls Royce, Ascot and Harrods. Rebekah's global vision and insightful expertise have made her a trusted name among leading fashion brands like HLA Group and Kate Spade. Collaborations with iconic musicians include Duran Duran, Billy Idol, Enya, Kate Nash, Max Rae. A strong advocate for sustainability, Rebekah leads by example. In 2020, she took the helm of Bare Fashion London, pioneering the UK’s first vegan fashion show and nurturing an online store dedicated to vegan fashion innovations.
Credit value: 1 credit
Tutor contact: 10 hours
Self-directed study: 10 hours
Lead Tutor: Eelko Moorer
This unit will address visual communication and help you to develop critical thinking in relation to fashion images and the importance of visual literacy.
It has been designed to help you to produce aesthetically pleasing work, to support the other units within the programme. Mood boards, colour boards and final presentation sheets will benefit from an understanding of basic design elements and principles such as colour and composition. You will acquire building tools which you will be able to apply to successful non verbal communication.
The unit will expand your ability to create, communicate visually, interpret content and make meaning from information, learning to transform concepts and ideas into different types of imagery, through to final presentation.
Email us
studyabroadoffice@arts.ac.uk
Ready to apply?
@ualstudyabroad
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