Showing posts with label northampton uni. Show all posts
Showing posts with label northampton uni. Show all posts

Saturday, 20 July 2013

Pash for Fash


A lot as happened since my last blog post- It almost feels as though I’ve suddenly become a ‘real-life’ adult in the space of a few weeks. It started with a relaxing week away from job-hunting and post-uni blues, and has ended with an official BA hons in Fashion and a new job!

Awooooo
Hoooo!

Yesterday afternoon we all threw on our rather unflattering graduating gowns and pretty much spent the entire day sweating under the sweltering English sun (there’s a sentence I never thought I’d say)… I spent much of the day looking bald, or as my friend so lovingly phrased it “like an upside-down eggcup” (thanks Amy)… Instead of forcing you all to look at a million photos of my boiled egg impersonation, I’ll just share this rare photo of us with the one person who managed to keep us all sane during our final year- our amazing tutor Jane Mills- I’m pretty sure I would have just spent the entire year crying under my desk if it wasn’t for her calming words of wisdom keeping me on track!



But anyway, enough about graduation!
A week or so ago, I got a tumblr message from a girl who’d seen some of my work and who wanted advice on going on to study fashion—I always find it really lovely when people ask for my advice, firstly because I’m still learning myself and it’s usually me crying for help, and secondly because I just feel like I needed to nurture her and guide her through life like an over-protective mother.

The first thing she asked is how/why did I decide to study fashion?
Generally this is quite a hard question to answer because, unlike the majority of my classmates who apparently have “always loved clothes and used to make dresses for their barbies”, I really didn’t care for clothes growing up. Obviously clothes played a huge part in my life, but being a pretty rough and tumble child I was constantly covered in mud and my only experience with barbies were the times I spent drowning them in the bath.
The only early memory I have of anything slightly fashion related was my love of buttons. I spent many a happy day playing with a jar of mixed buttons at my Grandmas- as you can tell I was a really out-going child- apparently I liked the way they felt on my hands, I don’t know. Whether this early experience was in some way related to my future career path, I’m not sure. I doubt it  (I was also obsessed with the wombles, but my chances of becoming a small furry animal are pretty slim, so….)
In fact, I have no idea what lead me to fashion. I remember being nine or ten and carrying about notepads full of little sketches- frilly skirts and chunky heels (apparently my choice of clothes changed a lot from the muddy dungarees I’d adored a few years before), however, after my dramatic “I’m Hannah and I want to be a fashion designer” announcement over breakfast one morning was met with a scoff and a “you can’t do that, it’s too competitive”, I just tried for forget it had ever crossed my mind.

Browsing through fashion blogs run by late teens/early twenties and trying to distinguish ages when other people start to recognise their passion, has proven pretty difficult. As much as I really love some of the content, most I cannot distinguish from one to the other. The last few weeks have left me with a blur of outfit posts and a lot a Topshop… When I could first afford to start buying fashion magazines such as Elle and Vogue (which was rare), the thought of ever wearing the type of clothes pictured in them just didn’t cross my mind. It was a completely different world to me, a world full of successful, powerful women with equally powerful wardrobes. My closet filled with charity shops purchases and hand-me-downs didn’t quite compare, but that was okay. To me those clothes didn’t seem real- they were beautiful, yes, but they belonged in a world that I never even dreamed I could ever be a part of.
The idea of 16 year old bloggers with racks of shoes and Prada skirts just completely blows my mind. Part of me wonders if I even knew who Mario and Miuccia Prada were when I was 16…. I still lived in a world in which I was obsessed with Tokyo street style and cut up all my clothes- clearly not much has changed there...

I originally went off to study Fine art. Canterbury was really beautiful and the course was pretty chilled out- I had time to just draw, paint and do whatever the hell I wanted, which was pretty much perfect! Thankfully though, I had some really awful flatmates who made me realise I actually hated living there and really didn’t want to do art, and so on a whim I applied to study fashion at Northampton. I was accepted and switched uni’s at the end of the school year- quite possibly the best rash decision I’ve ever made!

Three years on and I’m still not entirely sure what I want to do, but at least now I know what field I want to do it in! And I guess the next ten years will probably be my most exciting and hard-working, which surprisingly, I'm really looking forward to!
Thinking back to the way I went about choosing a career path back in school, really makes me wish I’d had someone there to give me more advice and guide me through making that decision. It’s such a massive choice to make at such a young age- and who actually knows what they want to do at 17?! I don’t know whether it’s any better four years on, but I felt like I was completely alone in deciding what Universities to apply for and what course I wanted to do.
I think in the end I just browsed a list of uni’s and at random picked a few that I knew had an art course. Probably not the best way to go about it... 
I’d really like to start blogging more about career options within the fashion industry- it’ll probably be an eye-opener for me as well as prospective students- as well as advice on what to do once you’ve actually graduated.

Personally I’ve already gotten pretty sick of the majority of my parent’s generation banging on about the recession and how none of us will ever get jobs- it’s NOT motivating, and even if it is true, please stop raining on our parade! It really doesn’t make people want to start looking for work, trust me.
Internship advice is also really important, as work experience and connections are probably the most crucial elements to finding fashion related work after graduation. Again, the word ‘internship’ has started to make me feel slightly ill, butttt they’re essential and I’ve actually learnt A LOT from interning, so they’re definitely worth it!
And if there’s anything at all fashion or uni related that anyone wants to ask feel free to tweet me at @hannahpodbury  ---believe it or not I ACTUALLY WANT TO HELP! 

H

Tuesday, 25 June 2013

Touch sensitive

Better late than never! I remembered earlier I hadn't yet made this post... During GFW (a long time ago now), one of my dressers' happened to be browsing through the twenty//2 gfw newspaper and discovered a shoot of one of my pieces.
I always find it interesting to see and how other people perceive my work and it's quite amazing being able to take a step back from it and look at it from a different perspective...

Photography- Ali Kepenek
Fashion- Adam George




Saturday, 8 June 2013

GFW- Northampton


Graduate fashion week already seems an absolute lifetime ago now, so trying to write this post now is slightly harder than I thought it would be, and so I don't waffle on too much I'm just going to write about a couple of collections that mean quite a lot to me...

Starting with my own... to be honest it was all a little bit of a blur, and I spent the majority of the Bath Spa/Northampton show feeling like I was going to throw up, so I was incredibly relieved that none of my nylon tubes shed on the catwalk (as we all dramatically envisioned), no one tripped over the jellyfish and died (although to be honest if she'd fallen in that I'm pretty certain she'd just bounce straight back up), it generally everything went pretty smoothly.

As lovely as some of the press releases have been on my work, I still look at it and criticise every little detail that I know could have been better. What's most depressing though is there's still so much more I want to learn and so much more I want to try out, buutt I guess that's what an MA is for! 



The main inspiration for my collection came from a trip to Japan last summer where I spent about three weeks pretty much falling in love with all their modern architecture. I came back home and just spent weeks drawing from all the imagery I'd taken (and wishing I was still there) and my colour palette of blues and soft greys just kind of evolved from all my drawings, paintings ad colour swatches. My actual final pieces came from me modelling directly onto the stand with shit loads of nylon tubular crin- lengths knitted with broomsticks to create oversized jumpers, folded into hundreds of loops and tied into oversized bunches to create "jellyfish" like structures. 
There are quite a few details that couldn't really be picked up on the catwalk, one of the being the little hand-knitted and hand-dyed squares stitched in a gradient onto blue stretch net, and the devore skirts (one of which took about two months to scrub out with a tiny toothbrush).. I could probably talk about my work for the rest of life, but I'd bore the shit out of you all, so I talk a little bit about two other textile collections that really stand out for me...
The first is by Emma Parker. I seriously spent the majority of this year just staring at her work thinking "oh my God this is incredible, why the hell isn't this my collection?!" Then looking back at my own work and wanting to spit on it in dusgust. But seriously, I don't think I've ever met anyone who's as clever as she is in the way she manipulates and experiments with every media she uses. She used fur in the majority of her collection, but in ways I'd never seen before. It was so exciting to come into the studio every morning to see yet another new and amazing creation in her work space. Her use of devore was something that I really loved as well as again, it was used in a way that not many people had thought possible...

I'm not gonna lie, her collection was probably my favourite out of our year group (and quite possibly the whole of GFW), so I feel pretty privileged to have been there watching it grow and evolve into this amazing creation below...

Secondly is Kiran Bassan's collection. 
Her collection is quite literally an exact reflection of her personality- bright, vibrant, fun and just generally pretty damn amazing!
And as many of you are probably already aware it was her beautifully layered hand-printed pieces that bagged her the Zandra Rhodes Textile award! I can't even begin to describe the painstakingly long hours she spent hand printing metre upon metre of jersey, silk and organza, (then waiting for each layer to dry before doing it all over again), not to mention the time she spent shredding her over-sized kimono type pieces... 

It got to the point where we were quite literally crying whilst pinning fabric onto the backing cloth (seriously, if I never had to pin again I'd be the happiest person on the planet)! 
I'm sure she'll agree though that every painful minute spent slaving away in the print room definitely worth it! Her work is absolutely beautiful and I am proud to say I was the first ever person to try on that orange jacket at the front! (Hellll yea)!

I'm so immensely proud of everyone, and although I only mentioned a couple of people in this post I have to say that I loved every single one of the collections we showed this year, and I feel so privileged to have worked alongside so many talented and creative designers.
 I can safely say I wouldn't be the person I am, and my work wouldn't be what it is now without the support and encouragement of everyone in my year, in fact I can't actually imagine how I'm going to get by without them....
Oh God!



I'll shut up before I start getting too soppy, and instead I'll leave you with my favourite photo- the finale :)

Goooodnight!

Thursday, 6 June 2013

The beginning of the rest of my life..

So, graduate fashion week is officially over. The long nights spent wrestling with metres of tubular crin and sweating over a boiling bath of dye have finally come to an end! This sounds like it should be a good thing, and I should probably be out celebrating my new-found freedom (I can have a life again)?! but I've found I actually feel the complete opposite. Three years spent throwing myself into something I absolutely love has been incredible, and despite a fair few break-downs over print mistakes and shrunken tubing I can safely say this past year has been incredible! So incredible that the thought of it all being over, having no uni work to do and having to move out of the house I've spent living with my best friends for the past two years is making want to crawl into hole and cry. Buuttt as everyone around me keeps insisting (and what I've also been trying to convince myself), this is just the start and I guess the next few years spent discovering what I want to do with the rest of my life will be pretty damn exciting as well...

It better be.
Anyway, for now I thought I'd share a few more recent images of my work (and a little work in progress)--I'll make another post later this week on my final collection and the gfw catwalk--

Studdioo space 
Initial experimentation with tubular crin

The beginnings of my knitted jumper-- I got rid of my face because it was gross okay..