Students from the Swedish School of Textiles made their debut at Copenhagen Fashion Week (CPHFW), presenting their unique and innovative fashion designs on the runway. This showcase highlighted their creativity and the school's role in fostering new talent in the fashion industry. Their participation at the event marked an important milestone in their emerging careers as designers.
Graduating bachelor and master students from the Swedish School of Textiles, part of the University of Borås, showcased their designs at the latest Copenhagen Fashion Week (CPHFW).
The runway show, titled 'Exit 2024,' featured the final projects of this year’s graduating bachelor and master students in fashion design.
The 2024 class presented a collection that signifies a transition from the old to the new, blending nostalgia with futurism, as noted in the show’s description.
This year’s graduates at the Swedish School of Textiles represent a generation focused on addressing broader societal and environmental issues, challenging traditional fashion norms and aspiring for change.
The graduating bachelor students include Yeruul Ariunsansar, Sylwia Macheta, Thuy Hong Bui, Abbas Mandegar, Hilma Wittmoss, Louise Arvidsson, Luiza Bachofer, My Willaume, Pia Erdt, Sofie Kruse Demitz-Helin, Sonja Sandin, Heaven Lindehag, Albin Söderberg, and Ellen Kowka.
The master’s graduates presenting their collections are Alice Andrade, Adrianne Philip Möri, Alicja Kamaj, Arthur Barbosa Barros, Hugo Ehret, Liesl De Ridder, Emma van Gerven, Matilda Sundkler, and Margot Malpote.
At the CPHFW show, Yeruul Ariunsansar’s final bachelor collection, ‘Sculpted Space,’ explored the fusion of fashion and art, focusing on creating ‘wearable knitted space compositions’ through innovative knitting techniques to form three-dimensional silhouettes.
Alice Andrade’s collection, ‘Morphing Entries,’ challenged traditional dress conventions by using post-consumer waste materials and unconventional pattern-making methods to explore various ways of displaying and deconstructing the female body.
Hugo Ehret’s master project, ‘Paperfolds,’ revisited accordion pleats in menswear, using paper yarn and hand-created pleats to explore the pleats' dynamic language and their role in revealing and concealing the body.
See more student designs from the Swedish School of Textiles’ graduation show at Copenhagen Fashion Week below.
In addition to bachelor and master’s degrees in fashion and textile design, the Swedish School of Textiles in Borås also offers a doctoral degree in fashion and textile design.
For questions or comments write to writers@bostonbrandmedia.com
Source: fashionunited