Showing posts with label DJCAD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DJCAD. Show all posts

Monday, 27 May 2013

Sarah Morbey Flat Pack Fashion





"The fashion and textiles sectors of industry have a reputation for being inherently wasteful and bad for the environment. I want to challenge this perception and raise awareness of the issue through textile surfaces for fashion. I am exploring the secret life of waste, finding beauty and intrigue in mundane and discarded objects. Utilising materials available to me including industrial and household “waste” I have created a collection of flat pack pieces that can be positioned on the body as garments. The materials I have used include plastic, leather and metal. Combining traditional and modern techniques I have re-purposed these materials into beautiful wearable surfaces. Each piece is a one off due to limited materials available and the nature of the design. This in itself encourages the pieces to be valued as unique works of art." Sarah Morbey

Sarah Morbey has just graduated from DJCAD in textiles and has made some wonderful translucent and modern 'collage like' pieces from waste materials.

Sunday, 26 May 2013

Jenny Kwella




Jenny Kwella's DJCAD graduate designs are more surface design that could be used for dress fabrics and interior design. Jenny's collections draw from her experiments from different media and collage to represent portraits, life drawing and other sources, a bright and friendly portfolio of work.

Rosalind Crawford



Rosalind Crawford's DJCAD graduate collection drew inspiration from Perth train station's Victorian architectural details and it was wonderful to see in her source books, sketchbooks and final knitwear the journey from the source of her inspiration to the final pieces.

Wednesday, 22 May 2013

Abigail Crowther



Abigail Crowther's work is beautifully detailed, reminding me of biological diagrams of plant structure, and
her hand made printing blocks are beautifully intricate and have led her want to create three dimensional decorative surfaces.
"Traditional textiles can be very flat so I want to change the perception of it by bringing together paper design and surface design. Inspiration for my project came from the life cycle of a plant, I have always been drawn to the patterns and shapes within nature for my primary drawings." Abigail Crowther 

Tuesday, 21 May 2013

Louise Campbell




There is lots of wonderful knitwear designs at DJCAD textile graduate show.
These pieces are the work of Louise Campbell:
"This project aims to re establish the relationship between concrete and nature; uniting the organic with the man made. Modern architecture and nature coincide beautifully. This relationship was to ignite my initial research. My knitted garments aim to communicate a link between structure and texture. I paired strong block compositions exploring colour and regularity with hints of textural elements to achieve a perfect balance." Louise Campbell

Monday, 20 May 2013

Judy Scott



"I have designed and created two collections, which wrap and enfold the wearer. For children and big kids a range that will envelop them in colour and is bright and wearable, created using wool the pieces will give warmth and be hard wearing and functional." Judy Scott

Here is Judy Scott's cocoon range for children which has a similar feel to the work of Swedish fashion designer Gudrun Sjödén but both her adult and children's collections also have a strong Japanese influence. 


"Cocoons in nature keep their contents safe, they wrap envelop and enclose therefore I have used this as a source for my research. From birds nests to shells and flower buds, they are formed differently but all serve a similar purpose. Primary inspiration was gathered on the Isle of Mull exploring its may hidden cocoons; limpets, flower buds and mussel shells and from the man made the fishing boats, nets and buoys, amazing examples of form, shape and colour to develop further."  Judy Scott.