Future-Facing Fashion

For BFA fashion designer Alice Michelle, it all started on the field. “I grew up playing soccer my whole life,” she shares. The competition, desire for perfection and constant drive to push oneself to be better – all qualities that soccer demands – have shaped who she is today. Although she feels the athletic chapter of her life is done, she still maintains the same sense of competition and drive. It’s this mindset she applied to her senior thesis collection, and used to bring her two passions of soccer and fashion design to life.

For inspiration, she dove into fashion history, looking at her European ancestry. Michelle manifests British, Irish, and German flags through an amalgamation of colors, stripes and plaids. She also found herself mesmerized by traditional European gowns of the 15th and 16th centuries.

The corset, with its elements of protection and strength, particularly captivated her, and she worked to modernize it by making it less restrictive. She made hers with a fabric called spacer scuba knit, a durable, sports-driven, and water-repellent material, using pop stitches, trims, and exaggerated silhouettes often found in sportswear.

Michelle is one of the first students at the Academy of Art to use CLO 3D, a 3D design software that helps designers bring their garments to life digitally. With it, she can scan fabric textures as well as upload prints and colors before placing them in her digital designs. It’s also sustainable, allowing Michell to virtually drape, sew, and try on her garments via an avatar the exact size of the dress forms and models they use in fittings, reducing cost and waste.

By using CLO 3D, Michelle is among the designers who are working to create a more sustainable environment for fashion. With one foot in the past, and the other in the future, Michelle is pushing design at the School of Fashion into a new era.

Words: Ellie Dietrich

Edits: Josh Walker

Photography: Danielle Rueda

Model: Tiffany, STARS Management