Showing posts with label fashion design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fashion design. Show all posts

Monday, July 19, 2010

Updated: zero-waste and less waste designers

Update August 2nd: to be as transparent as possible on this blog, I should note I've joined the Amazon Associates program. I will only link to books I have personally found useful and worth buying.

Update July 27th 2010: Sometimes those closest to you are the easiest to ignore or forget. Very much part of this list should be Fiona Buckingham of Kyotap by Fiona Buckingham. We've been friends for over 14 years and there are no bounds to the respect I feel towards Fiona's work. Fucken oops!
Last August I attempted something of a list of zero-waste designers that I was aware of; since then a few more have come to my attention so here's an update on that list. I also omitted some researchers because I've probably taken their work for granted for too long. Please don't hesitate to email me if you know of someone not listed here. This list also aims to include research on the topic that precedes current projects. As for the purpose of this list? I hope it will initiate interest in the included designers and researchers' work. I'll keep updating this as comments come in and as my poor memory decides to remind me of someone.

The pioneers
Dorothy Burnham: Cut My Cote from 1973 was a seminal text that summarised decades of Burnham's research into cuts of traditional dress.
Claire McCardell: Bernard Rudofsky included some of McCardell's work in Are Clothes Modern? in 1947 at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. My understanding is that only a few of McCardell's pieces were zero-waste (or close to).
Bernard Rudofsky: He put some of his research into practice in Bernardo Separates, a clothing line in the early 1950s.
Zandra Rhodes
Yeohlee Teng
Julian Roberts: a pioneer for me in the sense that he has for a long time discussed fashion design, patterncutting and sewing as a holistic one.
Materialbyproduct: the company doesn't - wisely, I might add - make zero-waste their primary selling point but the respect for fabric is evident in their collections going back to 2004.
Alabama Chanin: while the designs aren't necessarily zero-waste, the zero-waste policy that governs everything the company does is a delight to read.

More recent, in no particular order:
Holly McQuillan
Myself
Carla Fernandez/Flora 2 (Download the book!)
Mark Liu - check out the article by Mark in Ecouterre
Tara St James/Study NY
Jennifer Whitty
David Telfer
Andrew Hague
Caroline Priebe - she'll be the first to tell you she's not a zero-waste designer but she knows more about it than most.
Samuel Formo
August
Tiffany Ouyang

Also important to look into:
Center for Pattern Design/Sandra Ericson. Why? Here's one reason.
Fashion Incubator/Kathleen Fasanella. Designing manufacturable things is crucial and there is no better place for fashion on the topic than this. Her book, The Entrepreneur's Guide to Sewn Product Manufacturingis a must.
All the old texts on world dress by Max Tilke, like Costume patterns and designs: A survey of costume patterns and designs of all periods and nations from antiquity to modern times
The wonderful books by Janet Arnold.
Winifred Aldrich's Fabric, Form and Flat Pattern Cutting
Thayaht's tuta.
Betty Kirke's Madeleine Vionnet

Credit should also go to Lynda Grose at CCA and Arti Sandhu at Columbia College Chicago for encouraging students to engage with zero-waste.

The bottom line is, keep your eyes open and have fun with it!

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Julian Roberts & J.R. Campbell NYC workshops 11-12 June 2010

Firstly, to those 1265 of you waiting on me to respond to emails etc. I am so very sorry. I am currently doing about three full-time jobs' worth of work (in fact, about to head to the office on a Sunday morning) while dealing with the excruciating stress of being far away from a very sick grandmother and a very sick sister. I will be with both in a week, still hoping for a different trip to my last in October 2008. Anyhow, all will be up-to-date within two weeks or so. Not good enough in so many respects but this is how it is.

Yesterday and Friday were a fantastic break from some of the above; I left the workshops with Julian Roberts and J.R. Campbell inspired and reinvigorated. Thank you both, and thank you Sandy Ericson from Center for Pattern Design for organising, Matthew Stewart from Kent State University NY Studio for looking after everyone and Rachel Poulter for the constant encouragement and help. If Julian is coming to a town near you over the next month, attend! Sandy has the details; it seems Ryerson is already sold out so folks in Vancouver and St Helena, get in quick!

Cutting to the chase, here are my photos from the two days:


I want all of these posters:

View from Julian's living room:
My notes:

Some of Julian's teaching tools:
What Julian prepared earlier:
What Sandy prepared earlier:
Printed fabric by J.R. Campbell, sewn into a tube with a black and white stripe fabric. Leave one end of the tube open.
The man in action:










My play after Julian's demo; thank you Shelley for helping out with fabric! Of course I couldn't resist making a non-subtraction zero-waste subtraction dress (I used slashes instead of cutting out circles to make the tunnel). I will eventually unpick the garment, take a proper pattern and share on here; mine was made with three holes:






My colleague Yvonne Watson working with Sandy on her dress and the beautiful result:




Photos from the show and tell; congratulations to all:





Julian and J.R. showing the tube; pattern by Julian, textile design by J.R.; J.R. with the finished dress:


Some of my textile play. I'm working on something for the 2010 International Fashion Art Biennale in Seoul; this was kind of a quick hybrid of that and Julian's pattern:


Sydney September 2010 dust storm meets Julian Roberts:

Give it a go!


To finish off, the most beautiful off-cuts I've seen:

Saturday, May 15, 2010

CutPrint = JR + JR: Details


As I mentioned some time ago, Julian Roberts is coming to NYC; less than a month to go now! The details for the NYC event are below but Julian's tour will also cover Toronto, St. Helena CA and Vancouver. In NYC Julian is teaming up with JR Campbell from Kent State University, the host of the NY event. The tireless Sandy Ericson from the Center for Pattern Design is the powerhouse behind the tour and can provide more details. The current issue of Threads has an article on zero-waste fashion design and my work features in the article quite prominently so thank you Sandy as well as the team at Threads!

WORKSHOPS
FRIDAY, JUNE 11 1:00PM-5:00PM
Workshop I: Elementary Sub-cutting with Julian Roberts
Introduction to the basics of subtraction cutting.

SATURDAY, JUNE 12 1:00PM-5:00PM
Workshop II: Advanced/Expert Level Sub-cutting and Applications of Digital Print Design with Julian Roberts and J.R. Campbell
Geared for people who already have many of the subtraction cutting concepts down and want to see the pros in action in a live cutting performance. Digital printing concepts are also introduced to demonstrate how this medium can be applied in the sub-cutting process. Participants receive patterns in advance in preparation for the workshop. Workshop II is also open to anyone who participated in the June 11th Workshop I: Elementary Sub-cutting.

MAIN EVENT
SATURDAY, JUNE 12 7:00PM-9:00PM
Sub-cutting Presentation and Fashion Show
Presentation includes a collaborative JR/JR demonstration presenting the concepts of Subtraction Cutting and the application of engineered digitally printed designs to the subtraction cut garments. The last hour includes a reception and fashion show presenting work by Julian Roberts and J.R. Campbell as well as garments created by the students in the supporting workshops. Refreshments provided.

Workshop and Event Fees
A la carte:
$100.00 Workshop I: Elementary Sub-cutting with Julian Roberts
$150.00 Workshop II: Advanced/Expert Level Sub-cutting and Applications of Digital Print Design with Julian Roberts and J.R. Campbell
$75.00 Sub-cutting Presentation and Fashion Show

Combine workshops and event and save more!
$150.00 Workshop I + Presentation and Fashion Show
$200.00 Workshop II + Presentation and Fashion Show
$225.00 Workshop I & II
$275.00 All 3 Events (Workshop I & II + Presentation and Fashion Show)

TO REGISTER, VISIT https://commerce.cashnet.com/fashionshow
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT (212) 967-1730

All workshops and events take place at The Fashion School’s NYC Studio, located at 315 West 39th Street, #402, between 8th and 9th Avenue.

Julian Roberts is represented exclusively by the Center for Pattern Design in the USA, Canada and Mexico.

Wednesday, May 05, 2010

Eco Chic - Towards Sustainable Swedish Fashion (part 2)

The press photos provided by the organizers are simply too beautiful not to use so here they are - thank you organizers! The copyright owner of all the photographs is the Swedish Institute, www.imagebank.sweden.se Please do not republish any images without permission from the Swedish Institute. Don't hesitate to contact me if you spot an incorrect link - I am working on adrenaline now. Sleep beckons in July.

Julian Red
Photography by Mikael Schultz


Nudie Jeans
Photography by Jonas Linell

Pia Anjou
Photography by Pia Anjou

Dem Collective
Photography by Camilla Boström

Swedish Hasbeens
Photography by Swedish Hasbeens

Righteous Fashion
Photography by the Swedish Institute


Johanna Hofring
Photography by Aia Judes

Zion Clothing
Photography by Richard Ström

Camilla Norrback
Photography by Ann-Katrin Blomqvist

Anja Hynynen
Photography by Ardalanish Isle of Mull Weavers