Friday, July 26, 2013

Make A Fashion Collection Portfolio

A well-structured portfolio can help you find employment.


A fashion collection portfolio is a crucial tool for any budding designer looking to find work in the fashion industry. A portfolio typically contains samples of a designer's best work in the form of sketches, photographs and fabric samples. A well-structured portfolio should demonstrate a designer's unique creative vision, rather than a simple awareness of current trends in the fashion industry.


Instructions


1. Arrange your designs in a binder or presentation folder. The more professional portfolio folders are significantly more expensive than standard ones, but are likely to create a better impression with potential employers. Store your portfolio via online storage space or on a compact disc if you intend to send your portfolio to several companies in diverse locations.


2. Group work into specific categories and label the beginning of each category by affixing bookmarks to the folder. For instance, you could group your fashion designs chronologically, from your early ideas to later ones, or seasonally, with designs for spring wear through to winter garments.


3. Include finished pictures of your best fashion designs in your portfolio. This demonstrates to potential clients that you can efficiently transform theoretical ideas into realizable images. Include early pencil sketches if you still have them and the full, colored pictures as well. This will illustrate your awareness of colors and successfully combine them.


4. Affix fabric swatches alongside your designs. Fabric swatches are sample pieces of fabric, which will demonstrate to potential clients how your finished product would look and feel. Keep the swatches small, but large enough to illustrate any decorative patterns that are integral to your designs. Swatches should be no bigger than the size of your portfolio folder to ensure it looks neat and tidy.


5. Add any items that served as inspiration for your designs. These might include vintage photographs, magazine clippings or paintings. Potential employers are more likely to take you on if they can see your sources of inspiration and your creative interpretation of them.


6. Diversify your portfolio as much as possible. The greater range of designs you can show, the broader your skill set will appear to potential employers. Include formal eveningwear designs, such as dresses and jackets, alongside casualwear, such as coats and pants.


7. Create your own website where you can display some of the best work from your fashion portfolio. Hire a web designer to structure the site unless you have previous experience in web development. A site that appears amateur and hurriedly put together can do you more harm than good. Scan your favorite sketches, photographs and swatches and group by category on the website.

Tags: your portfolio, your designs, best work, fashion designs, fashion industry, from your, inspiration your