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#Fashion Manufacturers
fashiondesign-college · 6 months
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Designers, Manufacturers, Trends in the Fashion Industry
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The fashion industry is a complex, ever-evolving world where creativity, craftsmanship, and commerce converge. At its core, three vital components - designers, manufacturers, and trends - form the backbone of this dynamic realm. In this blog, we'll delve into the symbiotic relationship of these elements, exploring how they collaborate to shape the ever-changing landscape of fashion.
Designers: The Creative Visionaries
At the heart of the fashion industry are the designers. They are the creative minds who conceptualize and craft the garments we wear. Designers are responsible for bringing imagination to life through their sketches, fabric selections, and pattern creations. They are the ones who push the boundaries of style, create unique pieces of art, and set the trends that influence how we dress.
Designers often draw inspiration from a multitude of sources - history, art, culture, and their own personal experiences. They envision what we want to wear before we even know it ourselves. The fashion world is adorned with iconic designers like Coco Chanel, Christian Dior, and Giorgio Armani, whose contributions have left an indelible mark on the industry.
Manufacturers: Crafting the Reality
While designers provide the creative vision, it's the manufacturers who bring these visions to life. They are the master craftsmen who transform sketches and ideas into tangible garments. Manufacturers handle the nitty-gritty details of garment production, from selecting the right fabrics and materials to stitching, sewing, and quality control.
Manufacturers play a pivotal role in ensuring that fashion is not just art but a wearable, functional piece of clothing. They bring efficiency and practicality to the creative process, ensuring that designs can be produced on a larger scale without compromising quality. Without the meticulous work of manufacturers, even the most brilliant designs would remain mere concepts.
Trends: The Shifting Currents of Fashion
Fashion is an ever-evolving entity, and trends are the driving force behind this perpetual change. Trends represent the collective tastes and preferences of a given time and place. They influence what we wear and how we wear it. From bell-bottoms to skinny jeans, trends have the power to define entire eras.
The fashion industry is highly attuned to the ebb and flow of trends. Designers keenly observe what's in vogue, and their creations often reflect or challenge prevailing trends. Manufacturers adapt to the demands of these trends, producing garments that cater to the shifting currents of fashion.
Trends are not just fleeting fads; they can be influenced by societal, cultural, and economic factors. Sustainability, for example, is an ongoing trend driven by environmental concerns and ethical considerations.
The Collaborative Dance
The relationship among designers, manufacturers, and trends is a harmonious, yet ever-changing, dance. Designers create with an eye on current trends or sometimes with the intent to create a new one. Manufacturers work in tandem, ensuring that the designer's creations can be brought to life efficiently and cost-effectively. Trends, in turn, respond to the designs and manufacturing capabilities, influencing what's considered fashionable at any given moment.
This dynamic interplay keeps the fashion industry fresh, exciting, and relevant. The collaboration between these three components is the driving force that makes the fashion world spin. It's a constant dialogue between imagination and execution, creativity and practicality.
Conclusion:
The fashion industry is a captivating blend of creativity, craftsmanship, and cultural currents. Designers bring visions to life, manufacturers craft the reality, and trends keep the industry in a state of flux. This unbreakable trio ensures that fashion remains an art form in motion, continuously redefining the way we express ourselves through clothing.
As the world of fashion continues to evolve, we can expect even more exciting collaborations between designers, manufacturers, and the ever-shifting trends. Each season brings new stories, new collections, and new looks, showcasing the enduring creativity that makes fashion one of the most intriguing and influential aspects of our lives.
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deepwear · 1 year
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Where do I find fabrics to make clothes?
Deepwear is a garment manufacturer and a design house that offers a futuristic strategy for managing your brand and ramping up production while reducing costs and boosting dependability. Their fashion agency staff members have managed a variety of fashion companies in their back-of-house for more than 20 years. They have created collections that have been bought and sold internationally. https://deepwear.info/
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stephiepeter67 · 1 year
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jeniferwatson193 · 2 years
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fashionsfromhistory · 5 months
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Designed by Bruce J. Talbert; Made by Skidmore Art Manufactures Company (English)
c.1865
Indianapolis Museum of Art (Accession Number: 1998.285A-C)
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sleepyleftistdemon · 5 months
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An ID card that appears to belong to a Chinese prisoner was found inside the lining of a coat from the British brand Regatta, raising concerns that the clothing was manufactured using prison labour.
The waterproof women’s coat was bought online by a woman in Derbyshire in the Black Friday sale. When it arrived on 22 November, she could feel a hard rectangular item in the right sleeve, which restricted the movement of her elbow.
After cutting into the coat to remove the item, she discovered what looked like a prison identification card, with a mugshot of a man apparently in a prisoner’s uniform in front of a height chart, and the name of the prison in China.
“You don’t expect it from [Regatta]. It’s a UK brand that’s up there with Next, with M&S, that you put your children in their clothes … and this happens, and it just makes you feel really uneasy and uncomfortable,” said the woman, who does not wish to be named.
The card was found inside a plastic holder embossed with the words: “Produced by the Ministry of Justice prisons bureau.”
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According to Regatta’s 2023 modern slavery statement, “forced or imprisoned labour is prohibited” in its supply chain and it is a member of the Ethical Trading Initiative, a membership organisation that requires adherence with certain guidelines, including a ban on “forced, bonded or involuntary prison labour”. The statement also says 70 factories were audited in 2022-2023, although it is unclear how many were in China.
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sporesgalaxy · 3 months
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please dress how you want king you deserve it... your parents will get used to it eventually as just something you do, but only if you actually do it. I'm holding your hand. you can do it
aw haha thanks!!! Im working on it, I branch out a little more every year!!!
and yeah like I said my mom doesn't push back very hard, I know she'll get over it. but I also kinda don't know how I want to dress. and my options are slim bc a lot of stuff in both gender sections just doesnt fit me. so it's just been slow-going as I figuratively stumble around in the dark fashion-wise. but I'll get there!
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clamoridoll · 1 month
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i don't think her design is awful (though not really worth $75) but i wish they did something different with her hair, like put it up in a bun or something. it doesn't fit the formal victorion vibes, but historical accuracy aside, the black hair with the dark blue dress just engulfs her silhouette, y'know?
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purringfayestudio · 1 year
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Just a little note about my art materials.
I DO NOT use real animal fur in my art plush.
If you are already aware, great! You can go about your day. For more info or the reasons for this announcement, read more. (CW frustration, rant. Discussion around real fur vs fake fur and people attacking before they read.)
I am not vegan, but I feel a special level of frustration when people immediately assume I'm using real fur (or worse "dead animals") to make my plushies. Especially when I clearly say I'm using "faux fur" and "fabric" in my posts/captions. Faux means "fake" and real fur (i.e. pelts) is not fabric.
Ignorance is totally fine. Not everyone has access to the knowledge or experience to differentiate real vs fake fur. BUT I expect everyone who comments to be capable of reading the caption first.
Beyond people not reading, though, it's the immediate assumption that I'm a murderer or something, as if realistic things can't possibly be fake. And then sometimes jumping straight into attacking me over it instead of taking four seconds to read what I already wrote about it.
It creates drama where there is none. It's unnecessary, manufactured outrage for no reason. I'm just here to chill and share my fiber arts that I work incredibly hard to make look real, but very much aren't.
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I make realistic, FAKE animals so that people who don't want to be irresponsible by cuddling a living (or dead) exotic can still experience holding a realistic replica. Since they're soft and weighted, they are also immensely comforting for anxious or neurodivergent people.
Faux fur gives me the freedom to make any animal, real or not, in virtually any color. Real fur, on the other hand, is prohibitively expensive, limited in "design" and color, and terribly, woefully difficult to sew (it's literally leather under the hairs). Besides I have a moral objection to cutting up pelts to be used for fashion or other non-essential items, except for indigenous or extreme climate cultures.
That said, not all my plush are 100% vegan. Some contain horse hairs as whiskers. These are ethically collected and sourced from a Native American small business. If needed, I can remove them upon buyer's request. At least until I find a synthetic alternative.
So from here out I'll just be weeding out people who act before they read because I'm getting very tired of it across every social media site I'm on. It's like 3-4 comments on every post now, everywhere. I'd assume it was trolls except for how sheepish people act when I reply that it's fake. I should be flattered they think it's real but mostly I'm just tired of fighting drama fires.
Anyhow. Thank you for your time. Let me know if y'all want to see a real vs fake fur educational post. Even if you are vehemently against real fur, it would serve you well to know the difference so you can make educated decisions.
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khizuo · 2 months
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hmm idk if i can articulate this well but i think it's telling that a lot of the fast fashion hatred is centered on chinese companies. not to say that shein isn't a shitty retailer or whatever but the hyperfocus on the poor quality of chinese fast fashion (which overwhelmingly tends to be made in china, unlike a lot of western fast fashion retailers which locate their manufacturing in overexploited global south countries) is a bit of a holdover from the whole "made in china = bad" attitude that used to dominate. by all means criticize fast fashion but lets not resort to sinophobia while we do it?
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bradandchris · 9 months
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Brad, Chris, Sebastian, and Luke got their plant-based swimmers wholesale from Speedo's plant print plant. It's near that mall you pass on the way to Laguna Beach. You know, the one where they filmed 'Back to the Future'.
We're surprised it's still there. Not Speedo's plant print plant, but rather the mall. Boys will always be in need of cheap showcase swimwear direct from the manufacturer for the beach.
Ugh. There's that word again. 'Manufacturer'. Seriously, can anyone say it in a remotely sexy way? It's easier to sing than it is to speak.
Ahem.
🎶'MAN-UUUUUUU-FACT- ERERRRRRRRRR!!!'🎶
See?
😁
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vulpesarctica · 1 year
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Not me about to turn off season 2 of Next in Fashion and just rewatch season 1 because they just gave these poor schmucks 4 HOURS to make an outfit (out of old clothes no less, so they have to deconstruct those first before they can even start making)
Season 1 was so wholesome and I really loved it and this just seems like everything that was wrong with Project Runway and Making the Cut all over again 😩
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deepwear · 1 year
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The Fashion Industry's Complete Guide to Labels and Trims
The majority of garment producers add many labels, each of which contains information about the brand and the maker for the final consumer
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The Brand name or logo, Material composition, Country of Production, Safety Information, Care Instructions, and other Product Specific Information like Style Number, Size, etc. are typically displayed on Garment Labels.They could be printed labels, woven labels, damask labels, etc. Read our Blog
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vintagepromotions · 2 years
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Poster advertising the Encartada Factory in Valmaseda, which produces 'yarn, woven wool, berets and blankets’ (c. 1920).
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An advertisement for Schwarzenbach, Huber & Co., a silk manufacturer and importer, 1928. Artist unknown. Their headquarters at the time was on 4th Avenue (now Park Avenue South) between 31st and 32nd Streets.
Photo: Alamy
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