Posts tagged as:

diy

trish

LA Indie Fashion: Thread Show Nov.13, 2011

by trish on November 9, 2011

Threadshow Seattle

/

LA peeps who love slow fashion and shopping locally made goods, Thread is coming to town again. Just in time for gift-giving season, THREAD will showcase 100 of the top independent designers in the LA area to ensure attendees find unique and creative gifts. Consider this to be the best The holiday shopping you will do this season. Don’t forget to take you newly purchased handmade gift to the DIY Gift Wrapping Lounge. And because they know friends like to shop together, you and your bff need to hit the themed photo booth together!

Location: The Cooper Design Space
Hours: 11am-5pm

For eight years, THREAD Show has encouraged cities across the country to shop local by presenting a curated showcase of the most skilled and creative designers in each market.

This year, THREAD Show is also announcing a new Premium Ticket, available to the first 300 at the door. Serial shoppers will be granted entry one hour prior to general admission. The shopper who prefers wide open isles and plenty of room to browse will be able to enjoy first access to the holiday collections. This limited availability ticket also comes with a gift bag packed with THREAD Show swag and a complimentary cocktail.

Skip the third-party retailer this season and head to THREAD for a unique holiday shopping experience. The preview hour for each show will be from 11 a.m. to noon. Premium Tickets will be available for $25. Doors open to general admission from noon to 5 p.m. General admission tickets will be available for $5 if attendees pre-register up to 24 hours prior to the show at www.threadshow.com. $10 tickets will be available at the door.

    • Shop from loads of trendsetting designers bringing you men’s and women’s clothing, accessories, shoes, jewelry and more!
    • Do it yourself (because nobody does it better)at the DIY gift wrapping station
    • Sip away on amazing signature cocktails
    • Join us for a mini-mani from an hot local nail salon
    • Snatch up the designer and sponsor giveaways coming from the DJ booth all day long
    • Make it a memory in the THREAD Photo Booth
    • Chill out with quick rub down in the THREAD Well Lounge
    • Check out the top designer looks at the Fashion Art Installation
    • Get styled with a new do and a make-up touch up in the Style Lounge
    • Art gallery featuring top local artists
    • Snacks, drinks, magazines and loads of free stuff
    • Kids 12 & under get in for FREE

      { 0 comments }

      Mo

      This Weekend: Boston Fashion Week Kicks Off

      by Mo on September 21, 2011

      Hey stylish darlings of Beantown — are you ready to event hop? Fashion, specifically Boston Fashion Week, has the run of the city for the next week. We spy some DIY fun, museum exhibits, trunk shows, runway shows and much more in the line up. Go here to see the full schedule and to sign up for daily updates; learn how this event came to be in this Boldfacers interview with Founder Jay Calderin: The Rundown: Boston Fashion Week. Here are a few things below that caught our eye….

      /

      Picture 24

      Selahdor @ Liberty Hotel, tomorrow night, 9/22 -  RSVP to fashion@libertyhotel.com

      /

      SC248606.crop_.showcase_3Beauty as Duty, Museum of Fine Arts Boston

      /

      Picture 13

      Fashion and Sustainability, tomorrow night, 9/22 @ MassArt

      /

      Picture 19

      Emerging local designers @Liberty Hotel, Thursday 9/29, Details here

      /

      ac3275702af74892b0e070e17596389f_7Tag up your Instagrams! #bostonfashionweek

      (yes, we love those cocktails names…)



      /

      { 0 comments }

      The overall goal of the project is to have a maker-class who may consider themselves DIYers, on-line merchants or craft hobbyists in the context of a larger economy and labor movement… MicroRevolt.

      Join MicroRevolt146+ to commemorate the victims of the Triangle Waist Factory fire for the upcoming centennial, March 25, 2011. Grab their pattern here, or design your own. If you participate please let us know! Comment below, or email us a picture of your armband to mo@smashingdarling.com.

      armbands

      Please forward widely…

      microRevolt has launched a new craft action called 146+. The craft action involves participants knitting an armband enumerating the fire victims from the Triangle Waist factory that catalyzed an international labor movement exactly 100 years ago this March. The project connects the factory fires to the ones that have taken place in Bangladesh, where workers are making consumer apparel for Walmart, JCPenny and H&M. The overall goal of the project is to have a maker-class who may consider themselves DIYers, on-line merchants or craft hobbyists in the context of a larger economy and labor movement. So we hope for 146 or more participants to stand in solidarity with Workers United (workers in hospitality, food service, gaming, apparel, etc.). Volunteering to knit a simple numbered armband would contribute to the action even if you cannot make it to the factory site on March 25th, 2011 on the centennial.

      146+POSTERreblog

      { 1 comment }

      diyfashion-lastweek-blog_large

      Submission deadline is this Thursday, February 10th, at 9am EST!
      Get all the details on the BurdaStyle Blog.

      { 1 comment }

      Getting to know the Independent Fashion Industry...
      and the people in it.

      The two of us Darlings discover and virtually meet some amazing people online via this orbit otherwise known as the internet. But truly, I think I can type for the both of us that we would rather be on the road discovering in person. Wandering around a community, popping into stores, picking up local publications to read over coffee to see what’s happening, getting lost and finding favorite new spots. Those are the best days, and that was just the sort of day I had in London this past May and how this interview with Rosie Martin, Founder of DIYCouture came to be. So anyway…read on and get to know her a bit better. Cheers, Darlings!

      Sewing is a visual activity, and needs to be explained visually. With this in mind, DIYcouture takes a different approach from that of conventional sewing patterns, using diagrams and photographs to explain the making process.

      Picture 4

      Darlings: When and how did you get the idea of empowering people to make their own clothes?
      Rosie: I didn’t study clothes-making or fashion but fumbled my way through stitching some basic items as a teenager. By the time I left home I was wearing quite a few clothes that I made myself, though I hate to think what they looked like. Around that time there was quite a bit of publicity about British high street shops that were found to be paying their workers what could be considered less than a respectable wage…in order that we British could find ourselves a nice bargain. At the same time I continued to sew and learn through mistakes and was even receiving the odd compliment on the clothes I wore. I told these people how easy it was to make the clothes but heard repeated expressions of doubt, as if I must have a particular knack for sewing, which I insist I do not.

      rosiemartinwindow

      Rosie Martin, DIYCouture Founder

      I had a commission to make an outfit and I chickened out of plowing in, as I usually would have, and went to buy a sewing pattern. After I finally bought something from a large array of fuddy-duddy looking patterns, I opened it to find an almost mind-bogglingly, confusing sheet of sewing code! After I worked out what was going on, I realised that the pattern was actually very simple, but the means of explanation made the process pretty baffling.

      I thought it would be great if more people had the confidence to take to the sewing machine and make the odd piece of clothing for themselves, rather than turning immediately to the high street. I thought that all they needed was a clear and simple means of explanation and some encouragement – an honest voicing telling them: you can do it!

      opencloak

      Darlings: How did you decide on the format for the books as the best way to deliver your patterns and instruction to consumers?
      Rosie: I knew that I wanted the instructions to be as visually simple as possible. I didn’t want people to have to turn to different parts of the book to look up the meaning of words or symbols, I wanted it all there right in front of them as they needed it. I wrote all the words, drew the diagrams, and took all the pictures of my hands making the clothes, then as I sat down at the computer (with my Dad, who is a typographer by trade) to design the pages. I wanted all the information in the books to be necessary and the layout to be easy on the eye. We sat down with these thoughts in mind, and the books as they are is what we came up with!

      pleatedskirtspread03

      Do you think people are understanding slow fashion as part of their lifestyle?

      Rosie: I think with the economic upheaval there has been an environmental awareness of waste and social awareness of wasteful consumption. There does seem to be an awareness of sustainability in the mainstream now and this includes – slowly, slowly! – in peoples awareness of clothing, or fashion. There does seem to be a move towards garments whose history is there for all to see and towards designs with lasting appeal that won’t end up in the bin after two or three uses. This is in stark contrast to the ‘fast fashion’ ideal of churning out product that through it’s low pricing is almost shouting: “keep buying more, faster!”

      coverpiccloakdanielle

      Darlings: From when you began, do you think more people are seeking this out as part of their lifestyle as a way to be less wasteful?
      Rosie: I think there are a lot of people that are seeking out the knowledge to build something themselves with almost a ‘ back to basics’ ideology. People are growing their own vegetables and building there own furniture. At the same time people are also seeking out the DIY way in our post-Millennium world as they are excited about having production in their own hands. We now have MySpace and YouTube, meaning that almost anyone can get their music out there or be their own mini-movie director. So I think for some people it is a way to avoid buying throwaway fashion and for some it it is a way of having fun, by having a go at making something that you usually receive whole and packaged.

      Darlings: How many garments do you think you have made to this point in your career? If you had to guess, how many people have you empowered to make their own clothing?
      Rosie: I have made too many! I made quite a lot of FAILS as I was designing the collection as it was sort of a “I make the mistakes so you don’t have to” period. I had to try out all the garments in the collection and see what could go wrong, so that I could instruct people properly on what they needed to know. I would say I have made more than 200 pieces of clothing. I have also had the chance to sell some of these off at a couple of fairs I am happy to say, so they haven’t gone to waste.

      I have had a few hundred book sales and these are climbing all the time, as well as a few tutorials published on line and in magazines – most recently on the Etsy blog, so in my humble estimate it must be bordering on 1000 people that have had a go. That’s a very nice thought! I hope it keeps getting bigger!

      tinkerbell

      Darlings: How often do you add a new design to the collection?
      Rosie: I designed the collection all in one blast as I had the overly ambitious idea that I would release one book a month throughout 2010. However, due to the cost of printing and my short sightedness with regards to funds I have only been able to print the first three of the series. So the remaining nine are sitting there waiting to go! I am going to release two more in the next six weeks as either downloadable pdf’s or as electronic books on CDs that will be posted out to customers. Then I hope to make
      enough money to print the sixth book before the year is out. I have just this week signed a contract with the publisher Laurence King and they are then going to put the next six instructions together in one big DIYcouture book, along with six brand new
      designs.

      concreteblocks

      Darlings: Are you tracking the designs as they are made across the globe?
      Rosie: That is a great idea, I wish I were!! It would be so cool to have a map with little dots all around the world where people are DIYCing. I have had a few customers send me pictures of the clothes they have made with the instructions and I absolutely love it. It is great to see how different every single piece is. I do plan to make the DIYcouture blog more … sensible…. soon and to write to customers asking them to send in their best pictures of themselves posing in the garments. I’d love to get these images out there.

      radiatorbeamcloak

      Darlings: Is there anything you want to make sure everyone knows about DIYcouture or anything else you think is important?
      Rosie: My main message is to people who don’t believe they have the skills to make a piece of clothing that looks professional. I am here to tell you that you, even as someone with no sewing experience, you absolutely can create something that you are proud of. Sewing machines are very straightforward and intuitive – I believe the best way to learn to sew is to go for it with a piece of clothing. Believe in your hands!

      { 2 comments }

      Mo

      Recycled Denim Challenge at Ecouterre

      by Mo on October 11, 2010

      Happy Monday Darlings, we’ll keep it short and sweet, just like us! (wink, wink.) This denim reinvention challenge from Ecouterre caught our eye so we are passing it on, if you play maybe you’ll score yourself a sweet little feature on Ecouterre and Inhabitat and the Gap 1969 Stream. Find all the details at Ecouterre Good luck to all!

      gap-recycled-denim-contest

      Get all the details at Ecouterre.

      CALLING ALL DESIGNERS & CRAFTY DENIM DIY-ERS…

      Wondering what do with your old and distressed denim?  There are many ways you can salvage your old jeans, and reincarnating them into a new fashion-forward garment or accessory can offer them a second lease of life. To help kick off Gap’s nationwide denim recycling drive, we’ve partnered with the Gap 1969 Style Stream to find the most creative denim reinventions on the planet. If you’ve wrangled an old pair of jeans into a dress, a piece of jewelry, or a conversation-starting handbag, enter our RECYCLED DENIM CHALLENGE and send us your photos by 11:59 p.m. ET on October 20, 2010 for a chance to be featured on EcouterreInhabitat, and the Gap 1969 Stream, and a chance to win a $200 Gap gift certificate!

      item-59682-49bb4a387f463-m

      Denim Blitz Bomber Jacket, $80

      item-67906-4aa7db7acda50Erhart Denim Pencil Skirt, $45

      { 0 comments }

      trish

      Intro To Shoe Making: Sandals

      by trish on June 29, 2010

      3rd Ward

      shoemaking sandals

      This one is for all of our shoe designer wannabes in or near Brooklyn … I know I fall in this category. I am sooooooooo a shoe making, leather-sewing, sole-forming wannabe. 3rd Ward in Brooklyn, NY  is having a shoe making workshop. Listen up and act fast, registration ends July 1, 2010 for this month long, one evening a week class. Class will be Tuesdays – July 6, 13, 20, 27, 2010 from 7 – 10 in the evening.

      Class Description:

      In our first class you will measure your own feet in order to create a pair of sandals to fit them! You’ll build patterns based on your own design, then cut the leather, assemble your pieces and create a lining. Next, you’ll create a custom outsole shape, based on your feet, and an insole designed to meet your design and comfort whims. Finally, you’ll attach your upper to your sole, and be all set for spring with your new kicks!

      Participants will be supplied with all the basic tools & materials needed to make their sandals. However, if there are any elements (buckles, ornaments, etc) that you would like to include, please bring them to the first class, so that we can help you incorporate them into your design.

      Sign up here.

      { 2 comments }

      sd_ad+what

      As always Mo(darling) & I (trishdarling) are always combing the internet looking for articles, events, happenings, updates for the industry we are in. We try to pass along as many things as we can and as we do so many questions pop up for us. Questions we continually try to search to answer. Mo brought to my attention a post by Statement Style, Alternative Strategies for Emerging Designers. Here is the opening paragraph:

      An emerging designer can not be fooled into the trap of using the current economy as an excuse for the struggles that they face. The truth is you would most likely be broke or poor when you started no matter what. That is simply a consequence of deciding to make a living as an artist. As an emerging designer you must be creative, flexible, and disciplined in your approach to generating sales. Building a brand is a long term goal and while sizable wholesale orders are the ultimate goal they are unattainable for the emerging designer because they simply can not afford large scale production.  The mere decision to become a designer creates a cash shortage. You need money to buy and create your collections and it is entirely possible that for your first two or three seasons you may not generate any wholesale orders. So where might that steady but small stream of income come from?

      This paragraph forces me to ask so many questions. I think the biggest question that I can’t seem to shake is, “Are sizable wholesale orders the ultimate goal of every emerging designer?”.

      I know for myself, this is NOT true at all. My business model was never geared towards wholesale orders. They would actually make me cry. I am very happy to be selling my product through my brick & mortar boutique, FROCK, and online through Smashing Darling. This opens up so many more questions … so does this mean there is a difference between me and the kind of emerging designer Seth of Statement Style is talking about? Where does the term independent fashion designer fall into in all of this? or… would I be considered a DIY designer?

      What kind of a designer do you consider yourself to be and if you consider yourself to be an emerging designer, is your ultimate goal to have sizable wholesale orders?

      { 32 comments }

      trish

      Book Signing at Treehouse, Brooklyn NY

      by trish on February 11, 2010

      167

      This just in from Treehouse in Brooklyn, NY:

      SOOOOOO excited to announce a very special DOUBLE booksigning event at treehouse next FRIDAY FEBRUARY 19th 7:30-9:30! with Cal Patch of hodgepodge and Kayte Terry of thisisloveforever. Both are sewing and crafting geniuses, and will be in our newly renovated craft area signing their lovely books and sharing tips n tricks to perfect your crafty ways! can’t wait! (wine n treats provided too! )

      51-d1CctirL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-sticker-arrow-click,TopRight,35,-76_AA240_SH20_OU01_
      Applique Your Way


      51jh2MFTSCL._SL500_AA240_

      Do it Yourself Clothes: Patternmaking Simplified

      { 0 comments }

      trish

      Unwind DIY Style

      by trish on February 25, 2009

      The latest issue, Unwind DIY Style is available for you to peruse. Download the pdf This is the much awaited for workshop issue. It is chock full of beautiful pictures to inspire, workshops to teach, and resources to be discovered. Don’t wait, grab your favorite beverage, get cozy and read this issue cover to cover. You will be glad you did.

      We also need to add, when you find something interesting that you think others would benefit from don’t forget to post a note about it on Facebook, write a tweet, or post a bulletin on Myspace about it. Keep passing good useful information forward. In true social media form, don’t forget to say, you heard about it from DIY City Mag. We have to help those that are helping us.

      DIY Calendar of upcoming events:
      Feb & March 2009, Letterpress on the Vandercook Press – Brooklyn, The Arm
      Feb & March 2009, Make Your Statement, Spruce Austin
      March 1, 2009 Creole Crawfish Festival Cajun/zydeco dance Southaven, MS
      March 2, 2009 Launch your Jewellery/Silversmithing Career, Organic Metal
      March 2, 2009 The Art of Tying Knots – Macramé Curtains, Online DIY Learn
      March 2009, Mold Making/Concrete Casting with Sean Hennessey
      March 2009, Rug Hooking with Bev Conway, Inn at Baldwin Creek
      March 18 Chinese Brush Painting: Tulips and Crocus MCFTA Midland, MI
      April 2009, Your Self-portrait as a Famous Artist – Portland, 100th Monkey Studio
      April 10-17, 2009, Bali – Mixedmedia with Traci Bautista

      The girls at DIY have also asked we pass on this message for them:

      We’ve also created a site for you to offer workshops online if you would like to teach a or take class. Check it out at http://diylearn.ning.com/ Let us know if you are interested and we can show you how to get started. Email us at diycitymag@gmail.com for details. -Deb & Wendy

      Blog Widget by LinkWithin

      { 1 comment }