Skip to content
The UK's official graduate careers website
powered by Google

Fashion: Your skills



The skills you acquire as an undergraduate doing a fashion degree will vary according to the nature of your course. Design degrees encourage you to develop and produce your own concepts. The ultimate aim is to produce collections of work and often to focus on one or two types of design, such as menswear or streetwear. You also learn practical skills such as drawing, pattern cutting and the use of sector-specific IT programs such as CAD-CAM. Textiles and working in different materials is another area that is covered. Although the bulk of your time is spent in studios and workrooms, there are classes in fashion history and how clothing has been influenced by historical and social events. Many design courses also include several business components, including overviews of marketing, the fashion and retail industries and modules for students who may want to become self-employed.

Some non-design courses focus more on the fashion business or media. These tend to be based around lectures and tutorials. There may still be opportunities to become involved in a limited range of practical and creative work, but the emphasis is on commercial techniques and sourcing, manufacturing, buying and selling of garments and accessories. A few degrees and postgraduate programmes aim to equip students to work in fashion communication - for example, as PR specialists or journalists.

All courses involve learning to meet tight deadlines via team and solo projects. It is important to collaborate with others as well as generating individual ideas.

Consider the skills developed on your course as well as through your other activities, such as paid work, volunteering, family responsibilities, sport, membership of societies, leadership roles, etc. Think about how these can be used as evidence of your skills and personal attributes. Then you can start to market and sell who you really are, identify what you may be lacking and consider how to improve your profile. Take a look at applications, CVs and interviews for some useful tips.


Logo: AGCAS

Written by higher education careers professionals

Date:  October 2008 

© Copyright AGCAS & Graduate Prospects Ltd | Disclaimer


Send us your feedback

Rate this page:

 
RSS feeds · Getting started · Site map · Order publications · About us · Contact us · Accessibility information · Privacy statement ·
Careers Services' Desk · For advertisers · HECSU Research · Press Desk · iProspects · National Council for Work Experience