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#fashion internship
awsmzahraa · 1 month
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My fashion internship at Berlin so far
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starrspice · 4 months
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hola! Just wondering, IS Eclipse in the desinger au? I think he would be more of a modle in the au.
YES! They are in the fashion designer au
Eclipse is Y/N's professor in fashion technology 👀
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cbbyzac · 6 months
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HAVE YOU EVER WANTED TO WORK AS A FASHION MAGAZINE? CRYSTAL BUTTERFLIES IS HIRING 🩷
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teatitty · 9 months
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Will I ever stop being pissed off that Jirou never got mentored by Mic when they both have sound based AOE quirks, no never I will rant about this till the day I die
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zzzzzestforlife · 3 days
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Heyy , just wanted to tell you thank you for the outfit inspo 🫶 I didn’t know Uniqlo had such cute & affordable basics !
ahhh so glad they helped ☺️ you're gonna do so well at your internship and look hella fine doing it 💁‍♀️
👀 summer outfit inspo for our professional girlies 💕
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episims · 1 year
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Today a 15-year-old person told me that I'm kinda badass and that I should wear a suit for work.
I'm painfully aware that this is the peak of my reputation and I'll never feel this cool in my life again.
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noushkanel · 4 months
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Deux hauts réalisés lors de mon stage avec les Gambelles, à partir de chutes de canevas brodés et de tissus
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fashionistasparadise · 6 months
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Honey, We Shrunk the Interns.
Growing up, I never dreamed of pursuing a career in fashion. Right up until I left college in 2011, I was fixated on the idea of becoming a barrister. Although fashion was an avid interest of mine – one that I studied intensely, poring over my favourite magazines and keeping up with runway shows each season – it felt a million miles away from the reality of my quiet, suburban life. After all, it's not what you know, but who you know – fashion’s unofficial epitaph that is sadly still relevant over a decade later. 
With no connections via relatives or family friends, I turned to Gaydar, determining that through the gay network I’d find an in. As luck would have it, I came across a young fashion photographer who put me in contact with his stylist flatmate to embark on my first internship. 
I wasn’t paid a single penny, much to the dismay of my parents – who chose more reliable careers in building and finance – but my modest entry into the industry felt akin to the moon landing, at least to me anyway. I met models, hauled suitcases filled with returns on buses all over London, and peered inquisitively at the magic being made on set while steaming clothes in photo studios – marvelling at Prada samples that I recognised from the runway. I even met fashion royalty, in the form of Pam Hogg, who offered me a cup of tea when I turned up rain-soaked at her studio one sodden evening. 
From there, an internship at GQ Style followed, the majority of which I spent sobbing in the bathroom thanks to the (nameless) editor at the time who often humiliated me with pointless menial tasks. In one instance, I was asked to hand deliver a single daffodil to Alasdair McLellan sans address, later loudly berated in the open plan office for the flower’s wilted demise by the time I was provided with the studio’s location. 
My introduction to interning finished with a friendlier stint at Dazed – acquired via the gay network, once again – five years before I’d return in a full circle moment as a fashion editorial assistant. 
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Beyond the obvious hands-on experience my months of interning provided me, it quickly proved even more valuable than I realised. After initially being rejected by University of Arts London to study fashion journalism, a follow-up email clarifying the additional internships I’d undertaken quickly secured me an interview and later a prestigious place on the course. 
Throughout my studies at university, we were encouraged to continue gaining industry experience, culminating in a term entirely dedicated to interning during my second year. Interviewing at Wonderland and 10 magazine, I chose the latter, and continued interning there throughout my final year – while simultaneously juggling my final major project, writing my dissertation, and a part-time job – until I ultimately became the publication’s fashion assistant upon graduation. 
Over my career, I’ve had the privilege of working with hundreds of interns – the good, the bad, and the lazy – the brightest sparks among them going on to become my peers holding jobs at Clash, The Face, GQ, Wallpaper*, Matches, and British Vogue. As was my experience at 10, it was common for brilliant interns to find themselves earning entry-level full-time roles within Dazed and AnOther right up until the pandemic when the company’s internship programme was discontinued. 
At the time, the Guardian reported that 61% of employers cancelled their placements due to the pandemic, with small and medium-sized businesses the most likely (49%) to do so. Yet, as we emerged from the two-year slump, internships were just as scarce, largely due to HMRC cracking down on unpaid internships – serving fashion publications (both the media and arts are serial offenders) with warnings of fines if they failed to pay interns the national minimum wage. 
So, where does that leave today’s budding fashion journalists? 
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‘It is impossible, it literally feels like winning the lottery,” Moira Gonazález, an MA Fashion Communication student at Central Saint Martins tells me. ‘My plan was to join a team as an intern and work my way up, but it’s so difficult to start like that – maybe one person out of every 20 will reply and most of the time you don’t learn anything. I’ve ended up assisting so many stylists where I’ve just been in Ubers picking up stuff all around London. So many people still expect you to work full-time for free, which is crazy, but everybody’s willing to do it for fashion.’ 
Despite being required to complete 120 hours in the industry as part of her BA, Moira was the only person on her course who was successful in doing so. ‘The teachers said that if you worked on shoots for uni that it would count towards the hours, so there was no motivation to go out and get the experience,’ she says. ‘The process can also be so long, it took four months to get to the interview stage for an internship at Burberry. How can you survive living in London as a 20-year-old and pay rent if you have to wait for four months to get an answer? It’s impossible unless you’re privileged enough not to worry about money.’
To see for myself, I looked into fashion editorial internships in London to see what was currently available. Unsurprisingly, I failed to find a single placement to apply for and advice offered by the Business of Fashion overlooked the obvious, that no amount of experience or tenacity can help secure an internship if there aren’t any available to begin with. Reaching out to all the editors I knew, the results were marginally better with month-long placements available for university students only at 10 and the Evening Standard. The majority – including Elle, Wallpaper*, GQ, The Face, and Perfect – responded with a resounding no, with Vice allegedly going as far as implementing a company-wide ban on all internships. 
Of the paid internships the government were hoping would become available, only Dazed and British Vogue currently offer them – both six months, full-time, and paid the London Living Wage – though at the time, the vacancies were filled. ‘I remember when British Vogue posted the internship on LinkedIn and after two days they already had 500 applicants,’ Moira says. ‘When I later saw who got the internship, she had worked at two banks previously, studied politics, and was 25 or 26 so had a much bigger CV. How can I even compete?’ 
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‘For me, I’ve always found that there was never a clear route into the industry, I didn’t have a degree and my parents aren’t creative – there’s nobody in the creative industry in my immediate family. I wasn’t getting anywhere and couldn’t get my foot in the door,’ says Louis Merrion, Dazed Digital’s inaugural paid editorial intern. ‘I had come to a point where I was looking at unpaid internships, but I’d have to work weekends to be able to afford to commute from Southend. All of sudden you’re working seven days a week and you could come out of the end of it without having gained any experience. It’s easy to see why people get so disillusioned with the system.’ 
Three months into his tenure at Dazed, Louis’ day-to-day involves tasks that you'd expect for aspiring writers: shadowing working journalists, transcribing, researching, pitching and writing their own stories. ‘It feels more like an apprenticeship than an internship because of the learning aspect of it, you’re not expected to come in and know how the industry works straight away,’ he adds.
With several bylines now under his belt, Louis is already using the opportunity to gain additional experience working alongside Dazed’s social and Studio teams, which he hopes will set him in good stead once his internship ends. ‘I couldn’t ask for a better first creative job and the experience I’ve gained is invaluable,’ he says. ‘I now feel like somebody who is actually involved in the creative industry as opposed to being a part-timer; I have the belief that I could have a career in it. It’s not as far-reaching as it seemed six months ago.’ 
It sounds too good to be true and for most it will be – the cost of paying the LLW means that spaces on such internships are currently limited to two golden tickets per year. What do you do if you're not so lucky?
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An alternative path into the industry – thanks, in part, to the diversity reckoning fashion faced in 2020 – are mentorships that pair beginners with working creatives for 1-2-1 support over a six-month period. 
Mentoring Matters (founded by Laura Edwards, a design director who has worked with Christopher Kane and Alexander McQueen), Room Mentoring (founded by Elle's editor-in-chief Kenya Hunt), RAISEfashion, and The Junior Network are a handful of these schemes born during the pandemic – generally aimed at aiding Black and brown creatives and those from working-class backgrounds. 
In 2021 through Mentoring Matters, Aswan Magumbe, a BA Fashion Communication student at Central Saint Martins was paired with i-D’s global editorial director Olivia Singer. ‘Mentoring was more personal, so Olivia helped me pinpoint specific things I needed help with like pitching and how to approach PRs. I also got a lot more in-depth feedback about my writing,’ she shares. Yet, even with this, Aswan admits, ‘I’m still very stuck. Mentoring is good because you have somebody to turn to, but I still don’t know how to navigate internships. I really don’t know the route to take.’ 
As a working journalist, I’d be hesitant to take on a role as a mentor for this very reason. While I could impart practical wisdom on how to be a writer, I have no means of offering advice on where to practise those skills. While well-intentioned, these mentorship schemes are guiding marginalised voices into an industry that has been reluctant to give them a seat at the table to begin with. How responsible this is without fully understanding or doing more to remove the roadblocks that sadly still exist remains to be seen.
It’s a complex issue, yet to be properly acknowledged – the disheartening reality is that many editors I spoke to weren’t aware that their publications no longer offered internship opportunities. I urge them to similarly reflect on their own arduous journeys – regardless of whether they grafted as an intern or not – and question leadership on why they aren't putting more time and resources towards supporting the talents of tomorrow. Take a chance on a new writer with no bylines, become an unofficial mentor, answer that email asking for advice – do more!
We’ve talked enough about making opportunities more readily available for those who want to pursue a career in fashion – it’s time to finally do something about it. 
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jsmninternshipjc · 10 months
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I am Jasmyne Crawford (Senior, Fashion Design, 2185753) and I have been given the incredible opportunity of being a Fashion Design intern for Hanifa . 🩷
Over the course of my internship so far ( May 1, 2023-current), I have been able to work alongside my supervisor Iggy, the rest of the design team, and other departments of the brand in shoots , archive detailing , sewing , illustrating and creating tech packs , sample production , trend and fabric researching , and much more throughout my time at the brand. I’ve already learned incredible skills in sewing , including , but not limited to , invisible zippers , full quality muslin creation , sewing all seams on the inside of a garment for an entire seamless look , fabric sampling , and more.
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lieutenantselnia · 8 months
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I might get to watch PotC 3 with my best friends this weekend (they've never seen the movies before and I've made it my mission to introduce them), and I'm already curious what they're going to say, because the third part is overall my favourite (so many emotions😭).
But honestly I'm especially curious what they're gonna say about Davy😅 They weren't particularly fond of him so far, but come on the man looks like he's about to start crying throughout basically the entire movie (I mean he literally does cry at some point), how can you not want to hug him feel bad for him?
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awsmzahraa · 1 month
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Here are some more Moments in Berlin, Follow my instagram for more pls and help a girlie out~ @awsmzahraa88 #worlddomination??
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paranoidandroid88 · 1 year
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@ ifm
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jaeminpookie · 11 months
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god pls let my life path be towards being a model, i love fashion and i love taking pictures pls let me have my chance 😞
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dersitedreamr · 1 year
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I think having kanaya be a fashion girlie is fun i just think people don’t lean into it enough… have you ever met a fashion major… especially the ones that attend fashion based schools… it’s breakneck competition... These people are showing up to class dressed to the nines running on maybe three hours of sleep dragging along ginormous mood fabric totes stuffed to the brim w/ sewing materials looking like a less hairy more cunty Santa Claus
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zzzzzestforlife · 5 days
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Hii, this is a weird question but would u mind sharing some work outfit inspo for summer? It’s my first time doing an internship and I don’t find much inspo for summer , I’m scared of dressing too casual or not professional enough, esp in Europe where it’s more emphasized 😭
hi! first off, congrats on your first internship!!! 🎉🎊🥳 i did my first internship in the summer too so i understand the struggle of dress code at a new company in this season 🥲 but don't worry, there are lots of ways to look professional without sweating buckets 💦 hope this helps! ☺️
🌻☀️ Professional / Business Casual Fits for Summer ☀️🌻
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formal slacks/skirts — you can wear them with your lightest summer tops to dress them up for a more professional setting! (alternatively, plain black or gray yoga pants can look deceptively like formal slacks but are waaay more comfy! 👀)
accessories — you could show up in a plain (but well-fitted) t-shirt + plain black yoga pants and already look really put together with just a few accessories! like a dainty necklace + earring set for example! (depending on your internship maybe a bracelet or rings could be inconvenient, like for me personally i HATE typing with anything around my hands but they do look really cute 🥺)
dress shoes — if you have strong feet (or can sit down most of the time at your internship and don't work in a lab/warehouse/etc. where certain footwear may be required) you can do a light blouse + jeans or the aforementioned t-shirt + slacks/skirt combo with dress shoes! 👠
uniqlo — or any professional/business casual clothes that are made of light, summery materials, i just really love their silk blouses and loose-fitting/airy slacks 😍
cardigans/light blazer/slightly oversized long-sleeved button-up — like, yes, it's summer, but in my experience, that's exactly when everyone cranks up the AC and suddenly you're shivering like it's late autumn 🤧 so it's just nice to have an extra layer handy and it pairs really well with summer dresses!!
hope this helps get you started! once you go in a few days, you'll be able to get a vibe check as well to inform you better than i ever could 😉 if you're ever uncertain, don't hesitate to ask your HR department either! (they might even give you a dress code as part of your orientation) best of luck at your internship, lovely!! you're gonna do so great 💛🌼
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