Fashion Design Essentials

(lu) #1

TECHNIQUE


38. Rote, Rules, and Roughs

A fashion designer may be tempted to avoid
steps in the creative process to meet deadlines
or simply reap the rewards a little sooner.
Whether it's in sketching, pattern making, or
sewing, bypassing steps could undermine the
final outcome.


  • Sketching: A sense of the shape and flow of
    a garment can often initially be found in a
    rough sketch. Repeating that process on paper
    provides a place where details can be finessed
    before the actual garment is being developed.

  • Pattern making: Measure twice, cut once.
    Mathematics is a univ ersal language, and
    there is little room for improvisation when it
    comes to accuracy. How pattern pieces inter­
    lock, how they are based on clear and detailed
    notations on a pattern, and how they adhere
    to the body's measurements are all based on
    a system of rules.

  • Construction: Basting seems like the biggest
    waste of time, until something goes wrong. In
    the end, thinking about basting usually wastes
    more time than actually doing it. These tem­
    porary stitches serve much the same function
    as a rough sketch. They let you assess how the
    garment is coming together without taking per­
    manent, and in some cases irreversible, steps.
    In addition to getting it right the first time, each
    and every phase of preparation provides an op­
    portunity for inspiration. The rules don't neces­
    sarily change, but the ones you apply, as well
    as how, when, and where you apply them, is a
    creative act in itself.


82 Fashion Design Essentials

First stage of sketch:
the rough


  • ..


" ,

. -, "

Free download pdf