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Tag: inspiration

2010.05.19 14:35:27

Hey everyone,

Just wanted to make a quick post about a few different topics! I haven't written about my knitwear class in a long time. Mostly because we have been simply making swatches of different techniques and preparing our final project. The final is due on May 27th, so it is really crunch time over here. My inspiration this quarter is elephant skin - I love the textural qualities, and it's been really cool to translate that into knitwear. I need to photograph my sketch, mood board, and progress so far to share it with you! I will do that tomorrow and post it here by Saturday.

As far as footwear goes, we have critiqued our designs to death (4 times now!) and we're ready to focus on the final presentation. For Thursday, we will have some thumbnail sketches drawn out of how we want to present the final design concept. We'll have several pages explaining the concept, the trend it follows, our target market, and of course a few pages to communicate the design itself. Footwear is kind of on the backburner right now since knitwear is due long before it.

Finally, internships! I interviewed all April, and I don't remember if I announced it here or not, but at the beginning of May I was offered an internship position at Fossil. I'll be moving to Texas in mid-June to work in the women's leather accessories department. I'm very excited, I've always wanted to go to Texas, and I already have my housing lined up with some other girls from my school. I can't believe how quickly this quarter has gone! This summer I want to work on majorly overhauling my design portfolio, and I want to blog about that process here to help everyone else put together a beautiful exhibit of their work. I'll also be working on my 2nd wedding dress order this summer (the 1st is in progress right now!) so I have a feeling I'll be quite busy!

Anyway, that's all for now, just thought I'd stop in and let you all know what's coming up!
Love, Elizabeth





2010.04.29 14:09:34

So, I've been feeling really uninspired and unoriginal lately, particularly in my knitwear class. I just can seem to come up with a concept that is new, exciting to me, and exciting to my teacher/classmates. What do you do when you're stuck in a creative rut??

Do you have a good mix of music to listen to, an inspiring quote or movie, an amazing photograph? Send me your ideas! I can compile them all into a blog post for us all to refer to when we're feeling uninspired.

Love,
Elizabeth





2010.02.07 13:05:09
*AJ

You know I finally figured out what this part 3 of our course is all about. The whole shape and form thing...I just didn't get it. It is why I have not made many blog postings: I honestly did not know what to write about. I did not understand what was happening and could not explain what we had done or what our homework was.

Anyway, I realize that we had a 3D part for learning about 3d aspects of art. Then we had a 2D part for learning skills and being exposed to many different styles, techniques, types of 2d, etc. This part here is about literally exploring shape and texture and rhythm and colour. She doesn't want anything she can recognize, it's not the point. The point of part 3 is to improve our techniques with developing texture, combining colour, and using non-distinguishable shapes. The goal is to learn to combine these so that we can solicit emotion, that is why we were asked to do word association exercises and then making artwork that is representative of the words. And that is also what she means by cliche.

In the end it is a misunderstanding, she is not really using the word cliche right. When she says cliche she actually is meaning the pre-determined visual associations we have. So, painting blue with white to represent the sky is a cliche in her words because it is an association that already exists. Instead she would want us to pick out characteristics of the sky and use shape, colour, texture, rhythm, etc to translate those characteristics onto paper (or sculpture or whatever). I look at the sky right now and it is bright blue with little clouds everywhere so how do I translate that? Sure it's blue, but it's beautiful too and godlike. Maybe I paint yellow because to me yellow is happy and add white stripes to draw the eye the same way the clouds do.. Then to represent the rhythym of those clouds, which by the way look playful and are dancing around the sky, maybe I take a bunch of colourful childrens buttons and glue them all over the place with a rhythmic but not repetitious pattern.

The reason we are doing this is so that we can learn how to be creative in a way we didn't know how before and bring more maturity to our art-making processes. It's not about the thing I always joke about "this is representative of the struggles of....blah blah". It is not about making artwork using weird colours or materials that represent something. Instead it is about learning how to find inspiration to create our own artwork without taking the inspiration we are using literally. So maybe the sky was my inspiration for that piece of art but in the end it does not represent the sky, it is a brand new piece of art which started because I looked at the sky. Part 3 of our course is about freeing ourselves from associations we have and about seeing the world through the eyes of a child's make believe where nothing is set in stone and nothing means anything because we are making up the game as we go.

I realized all this when I showed her an apple painting that I did in response to a word association exercise using Eden. She made a comment about cupping my hands on the painting, making a tiny square and maybe that is all that is needed: Just a splash of green and a red. She was showing me one technique to free myself from that "cliche" of an apple representing Eden and instead to say maybe this extra shiny bumpy patch of bright red with a smooth white square (the shiny part) is a way of translating that inspiration (Eden) into your own art -- your own totally new art.

The exercise last week was misunderstood a bit I think by almost everyone. I will be making a post detailing the last 3 weeks now that I understand what went on but essentially we were told to make a picture. Then we attached another picture to it and did it over and over again until we had a large piece of artwork. Most people just put their papers together and treated it like one big painting. Rather than adding piece to piece they just used a bigger canvas in total. I actually misunderstood in the opposite way as I made one painting and then progressed through a series of 6 paintings into the painting at the end of the series. Mine were related in progression but did not make up a large image when placed together.

But what we were supposed to learn from that was how to compartmentalize to make things which hold their own and also which are so related to one another that they become a large picture when moved together. I think the reason they tried to teach that to us was to try to hone our exploration skills while remaining within a very tight frame of reference. Anyone can make a big painting and anyone can change their shapes into recognizable things like faces but you need great interpretation and analytical skill to make a big picture which is make up of individual parts and does not cheat by using the ability of the human psyche to recognize things we know (like faces, or animal shapes) made up from those parts inside that big picture.

Anyway, this is what I have figured out and now everything makes a lot more sense to me and I wish I could go back to the first day and redo it! (or that I had time to redo it all at home).





2010.01.21 18:15:30
*AJ

These are photos of everything I did for the first half of my foundation course at Hogeschool voor de Kunsten Utrecht. This album includes the artwork I did as well as photographs I was asked to take and photos from a trip to a museum. I have not included captions because it would take too much time. You can read about it all through my blog here at FSO or feel free to post questions as comments and I will reply :)

http://picasaweb.google.com/Abegael.Annie.Jackson/HKUGeneralFoundationCourseFirstHalf#

All the artwork is included, even the really awful stuff. In no particular order and unedited. Apologies for duplicates or pictures that are rotated incorrectly!

The next of the course half is more specialized for students wishing to pursue Fashion Design, Theatre Design and Interior Architecture and will be in a different album when it's done (it starts tomorrow).

If you're interested in seeing my inspirational photos and my research resource images you can also check out all my albums:

http://picasaweb.google.com/Abegael.Annie.Jackson/





2009.10.14 17:47:23

I was hit with a flurry of work this week, but I finally got my ideations scanned in! Our teacher asked us do to some sketches of our design ideas, and have some kind of color indication as well. What we typically do is have everyone pin their sketches up on the wall, and then our teacher goes down the line and gives advice, helps us pick which one we want to ultimately make, etc. Here are a few of my 1890's inspired designs. Don't judge the state of the figures, they were just quick sketches Wink

Scan_2Scan_3

My favorites were the first and last sketches... I really want to do a ruffled standing collar. My teacher and I seemed to agree that the last would be the best. And as far as colors go, I'm thinking something either pale pink or ivory, to keep with the theme, using light colors that were used during the time period. I'm planning on making a pencil skirt with a paper bag waist in a gray color with a lace blouse.

The coat will, as I mentioned, have a standing ruffle collar, and it will also be a very tight fitted princess seam coat, to mimic the corsets of the 1890's. The coat will then have a circular bottom that cascades a little longer toward the back.

Any thoughts? Have any of you guys designed something based on a certain time period? If you have any sketches or photos of past projects, I'd love to see them! Feel free to post them in our "Showcase & Critique" forum: http://www.fashionstudentsonline.com/forum/viewforum.php?f=28
Be sure to put a link to your post in the comments section here so I can come find you!

With love, Elizabeth





2009.10.03 17:41:53

As I mentioned previously, my tailoring teacher asked us to start thinking of a decade of fashion to use as inspiration for our projects this quarter. We could choose any decade from 1820-1980, and ultimately I settled on 1890-1899.

I love the femininity of this decade, which is known as the beginning of "La Belle Epoque," or "The Beautiful Era." During this time, the corset continued to be popular, but the skirts of dresses relaxed. Women began to stop using crinolines (cages that went under the skirt to make them huge). Skirts began to have more of a bell shape. Gathering became a big part of clothing, especially in the sleeve, and these sleeves with tons of gathering at the shoulder, but thin wrists, became known as leg o'mutton sleeves.

1898

One of the challenges to being a good fashion designer, in my opinion, is to create garments not just based on clothing details that you like or think will be pretty, but based on a thoughful concept. Even though we have been thinking about inspiring decades since school began, we have not begun sketching. Yes, I like ruffles and feminine details, but school teaches me to put those ideas on hold and delve more into the history of the decade rather than the fashion.

During the 1890's, it was becoming acceptable for the first time for women to take part in sports, such as bicycling and tennis. They obviously couldn't wear their long skirts, so women's sportswear developed as a result. There were ankle-length bloomer-type garments and tailored jackets, and men's inspired blouses.

There is a very interesting contrast between the feminine shapes of the ruffles and corsets and the masculine sportswear garments. I got interested in exploring this contrast and finding a way to relate the two styles.  I found it intriguing to research women’s dress changing to integrate into a male society, and I would like my garments to reflect my further exploration on the subject.

So, I look forward to developing an outfit and tailored coat based on this thought. I hope this is helpful for anyone wanting to get into design... Coming up in the next few weeks will be mood boards, sketches, and garment samples!

Have a great weekend,
Love, Elizabeth






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