All site blogs

Papuara

November 2, 2009 by DesignSociety Support   Comments (0)

Pillows, Clutches, Bags, Fashion, Designer

Fashion Design, Style

Patricia has been designing for Papuara for the last four years , started with decorative throw pillows then moving to exotic handmade- hand bags , diaper bags , laptop carriers, backpacks.  Their inspiration and fabrications comes from old and new fabrics creating a colorful-exotic party mix. recycled garments is part of their couture. Each piece has its own touch of uniqueness and you can view their other products at http://papuara.com

 

Rosiemusic

September 19, 2009 by DesignSociety Support   Comments (0)

Fashion, painting, Art

Fashion Design, Style, Art

Rosie Music is an illustrator. Her beautiful watercolors just so happen to look amazingly cute and awesome on clothes and accessories.

She's 27 years old, from Mexico City, and her artistic ideas stem from here love of music, and themes of love and lonliness. She even has her vibrant watercolors available on natural paperbacked wood veneer, which gives her illustration a very warm, and textured feel. Her art evokes both, a general sense of happiness juxtaposed with the shy, vulnerable emotions of that first crush you had in grade school. Its the perfect recipie for cute, and stylish indie clothes.

Featured Designer: Pebelle

September 13, 2009 by DesignSociety Support   Comments (0)

Style, Fashion Design

www.pebelle.com

Petra Isabelle is all about turning girls’ gams into glorious kaleidoscopic array of color.  She has beeDesignern working with textiles in her hometown of Vienna, Austria for years, studying at the Academy of applied arts in Vienna, for that very reason.  She learned various dying techniques to develop a style of manipulating textiles, twisting and contorting colors to the contours of the body.

She has been working on her lines of tights since 2004, but since then has really begun launching her lines on the Internet and getting her designs in shops under the name Pebelle, a combination of her first and last name. She says, being from a small country like Austria, its important to think of her lines of tights internationally. “Look across the border, try to reach the whole world, not just your neighbors.” Her dyeing is her art and life, reflecting on the people who wear them, their lives reflecting back into her work, turning fishnets into saturated snake-skins, tights into a torrent of color and pattern, socks into something interesting to look at. She does it a lot, and she does it well.

Buy Pebelle @ designsociety - http://designsociety.net/social/pg/stores/pebelle

Featured: ChooseYourShoes

September 13, 2009 by DesignSociety Support   Comments (0)

Featured Designer, custom Shoes

Art, Style, Fashion Design

Michael Burk from www.chooseyourshoes.net has his own secret techniques to turn blank shoes into canvases that are home to anything within the limits of your imagination. He’s old fashioned in that he uses a brush and paint to turn your feet into fine art. But his design work and artistic style is everything but old fashioned. Tell him what you want, and he’ll turn your idea into killer custom kicks that are sure to catch stares. Check out his gallery of work and try to imagine what you would choose for your shoes!

http://www.chooseyourshoes.net/

http://www.myspace.com/chooseyourshoes

You can purchase his Zombie Feet Shoes HERE

Iphone App: Stylish Girl & Cool Guy

September 13, 2009 by DesignSociety Support   Comments (0)

Iphone App, Fashion, Style

Style

 

Stylish Girl is your ultimate style planner and shopping assistant, revolving around the clothes in your closet and the clothes you love to have.

http://www.stylishandcool.com/

Interview Christina Neit w/Good Quill Hunting

September 13, 2009 by DesignSociety Support   Comments (0)

Designer, Interview

Fashion Design, Art

Dragonheart

 

Christina Neit knows her beads. Shes been doing them for a long time, and it shows. Her elaborate designs, jewelry draped in a mosaic of bead work, accenting stones, read like a auto-biography of an artist and her years of carefully, and diligently perfecting her craft. She says“Time is the key and often it takes time to be able to develop your own style.”Time has been kind to Christina, as she has turned her favorite past time as a girl into her own style of wearable, buyable artwork and self-expression. With time, shes gained the wisdom to develop her style and learn a lot about her business. “It is also an inner growth experience of finding yourself and what

pleases you and what please others. The broader you can be the broader your market as well.”

For more of Christina and her beautiful bead work please visit her website: http://goodquillhunting.com
http://GoodQuillHunting.etsy.com
Where can people find your work?My work can be found at most Bead Fiesta shows and in person at Bead Fiesta The Shoppe in Sterling, MA. I do a variety of shows throughout the year, so it is really best to check out my ‘AGENDA’ on my website. I do some local shows and Renaissance Faires and have even done a few Pow Wow’s.  I also have Etsy accounts, one for my work and one for my patterns/designs. My website, listed above, accesses everything.

Is there any advice you would give to upcoming designers? Network, network, network and never give up! You have to believe in yourself (sometimes that could take a long time to accomplish), but do not give up…persevere over any and all obstacles. I might also advise-quality over quantity. Do great work and be original. All items referred to as ‘unique’ may not in fact be so unique, know the difference.

How would you describe your artistic style? I think I tend to be the ‘ultimate eclectic’. I can never decide on anything (perhaps the indecisive Libra trait in me). I love all things that sparkle and I love things that are ‘earthy’. I try hard to consolidate my ideas to encompass elegance and earthy at the same time.

Where do you go to get Ideas? If I get ’stuck’ for ideas, I often just go online and look around, it is rare that I am stuck. I often feel overwhelmed with ideas and doubt I will ever finish everything that has crossed my mind. I get many ideas when I am ‘out and about’, but I am home almost 24/7. I can find enough ideas in my own environment and thanks to the internet to keep me satisfied for a lifetime plus!

Who influences you the most? music, Artist, Designer, Other? Why?   I have a very long list of Artists and Designers (of many different venues) that inspire me. I am not influenced by any one person in particular.
Music has always inspired me!! It gets my mind going and can often set my mood. It is actually amusing that my work does not reflect alot of black and somber pieces, because I love heavy music to the sound of Metallica, Pantera, Tantric, Disturbed and go as light as Shinedown, Hinder, Nickelback. I should actually develop a line for ‘metal maniacs’ ;)

DIY Womens Shoes

September 13, 2009 by DesignSociety Support   Comments (0)

DIY, paint, custom Shoes

Supplies:

-Paint Markers

-Pair of shoes

-White Acrylic Paint

-Liquitex fabric medium

-Pencil

-Spray gloss finish

 

Mix, Liquitex fabric medium & white acrylic paint.

w2Paint the entire cloth area of the shoe with this mixture then draw the outline of the design or picture you want on your shoe.

w3Paint the detailed images/shapes or patterns last. If you are going for more shine, spray some Glossy finish after the paint has dried.

w4Paint the base colors first then the detailed shapes when the base dried.

w5Color in the designs with acrylic paint. For small patterns, use a paint pen.

There you have it, a pair of shoes to reflect your own personal style. I have found that cloth shoes work best with the acrylic paint. Liquitex fabric medium helps to smooth the paint and make it more manageable to apply to the

DIY Mens Shoes

September 13, 2009 by DesignSociety Support   Comments (0)

Custon Shoes, Painted, DIY

Tutorials, Style, Art

How to turn a boring shoe into walking art with a little paint!

Supplies:

-Paint Markers

-Pair of shoes

-White Acrylic Paint

-Liquitex fabric medium

-Pencil

-Spray gloss finish

 

Mix, Liquitex fabric medium & white acrylic paint.

m2

Paint the entire cloth area of the shoe with this mixture then draw the outline of the design or picture you want on your shoe.

Paint the detailed images/shapes or patterns last. If you are going for more shine, spray some Glossy finish after the paint has dried.

m4

Paint the base colors first then the detailed shapes when the base dried.

m5

Color in the designs with acrylic paint. For small lines (like the teeth), use a paint pen.

There you have it, a pair of shoes to reflect your own personal style. I have found that cloth shoes work best with the acrylic paint. Liquitex fabric medium helps to smooth the paint and make it more manageable to apply to the shoes.

The Future, and Fashion

September 9, 2009 by DesignSociety Support  

Fashion

Business, Tutorials, Fashion Design

Fashion has been going through time loops throughout history. One day you can walk out in bell bottoms and long straight hair with a flower headband of the seventies, and the next day its skinny jeans and big hair from the eighties. Some people may feel like a Judy Davis hair do one day and back to their big hair the next. There is no uniformity to the “claimed” trends of today. I just hope people can see towards the future design for current lifestyles rather than the fashions of America’s past. It seems as though America is trapped in its own fashion ego by replaying imagery from years passed. Our Minds have been flooded with this imagery for centuries. Media hype and television has synchronized our brains to think within certain boundaries. As Americans we are slowly learning the freedom of individuality. I can only assume the fashions of the future will be developed by individuals rather than an exploitation of designers for corporate fashion mass production. We as Individuals have the power to explore the emerging trends of the future in our own minds rather than looking for a trend or design line to copy.

Technology has now given us the tools to learn the design, and technical skills we need to be our own designers.Not only does the Internet provide a good base for learning, but it also fills the need for peer feedback. I suggest posting some of your creative works on the web and asking for critical feedback to help your skills form.

Some ways to learn & be your own designer….

Video Tutorials

www.youtube.com

www.diylife.com

www.sharonsews.blogspot.com/

www.vimeo.com

Fashion dictionaries

www.snapfashun.com/stylopedia/00_a.html

Pattern and technical information

Business Templates

Self Promotion- Social Media, Blogs

www.wordpress.com

www.blogger.com

www.twitter.com