Friday, 1 June 2012

Final presentation

Just a few images of my final presentation, seeing it all come together and some details done outside of photoshop. Enjoy!

Mood board with three-dimensional triangle pop outs


Reversible dress illustration - has a slider to transform it to orange! what a mission to do, but I think it relays my concept perfectly. The spec drawing are hidden under a triangle flap.

Same with the 'whore' one

This illustration has 3-dimensional triangle pop outs and a slider on the side to reveal the spec drawings



Fabric board - image of my final print and types of fabrics I would print on and example of it printed on a polyester.

My transformable t-shirts! - you can take out the different transperancies to mix and match and find which kind of t-shirt you want

The infamous 'crack whore collar'

Sample of the looped wool my cardigan would be made out of

Stitched felted wool

Sample of one of my transformable pockets - reveals 'crack'


Final presentation with my zero waste dress to accompany it - I am extremely happy!




Tuesday, 29 May 2012

Zero waste - my process




I started with a framwork, the stair shapes which I created out of a grid on fabric.

I experimented with these shapes through a number of half scale draping exercises

pining and re-pining...



Simplified - crisp triangles - much better











My final zero waste outcome



My zero waste pattern

Illustration finals


My head illustrations, which I drew to use as a basis for my models. This one I tried to illustrate similar to the one I used in my lineup.
I used this head as the basis for my 'bitch' illustration in which I then over-layed with my print and of course the 'bitch' script.


These are my final illustrations incorporating my final designs, my print and my concept. The top two illustrations are going to have a reveal and conceal slider, where you can see the dress and the t-shirt in another colour, as the garment is reversible. On the other illustration I am going to have a slider with my spec drawing on it, which pops out the side. I like this idea of interaction as I feel it fits nicely into my 'consumer participation' idea of my collection.