Interview with Fashion Designer Melissa Calamia
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- Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
- Fashion designer Melissa Calamia drops a TON of knowledge on us about getting started in the fashion industry, what fashion school was like, how she got her first internships and jobs, how to cold-call email for jobs, and what she really thinks about the new show Next in Fashion. Find Melissa and her work here:
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I'm a fashion designer and illustrator who used to teach university fashion classes until my RUclips channel took over my life! I love my YT students! I make videos about design, illustration, color theory, industry real talk and FAQ, fashion business, art supply hauls and reviews and I have all my videos organized by playlists. I believe hard work and dedication are more important than "talent" when it comes to having a successful career.
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Hey hey party people! Hoe you love this interview! Links to her social media + website and links to other interview videos are in the description box!
Next week's Patreon Podcast episode answers all your questions about inspo, mood boards, concept development so join me at the Captive Audience level to listen! www.patreon.com/zoehong
Amazing interview. I was in design school in the late ‘70’s and of course the industry is completely different now. Your videos and this interview are a wealth of knowledge. Loved it! ❤️❤️❤️👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Thanks!
Awesome! I don't even work in fashion, but a lot of her advice is so relevant for any industry! She really seems like a hard worker.
She's great!
Zoe I love you so much. Young male fashion designers here. You have taught me so much
this was a delight to watch and not just because my name was dropped. Thanks Zoe for making this happen!
We were plotting how we can get all 3 of us in one city so we could meet up for drinks!
such a good conversation. i go to LA TRADE TECH FOR FASHION DESIGN and transitioning to the work industry and this is was incredibly applicable. right now im doing a grading class and it is hell. im much more left brain so mixing math with fashion is against my religion.happy to know im not the only one.
Yes! Thank you!
You're welcome!
Thank you so much for this video😊😊
You're welcome!
I went to school, owe 30,000 in graphic design.
I did not know how to draw, paint, or Art History , I love beautiful things.
I have nice pictures, I have a lots of cloths based on collect what I thought was beautiful .
after 15-20 years. I am selling most of my cloths because I gain weight or yes they are polyester
Most of my learning is experience... now that I watch about 4-5 videos of your .I understand that at school there Is not teaching . like you books for me are sometimes boring . I like hand on get thing working . I learn currently Art by watching videos at The Museum of MOMA.
I have lots of books ARTS AND CRAFTS .I collect beads treads and some fabrics. I love your videos about fabrics . Thank you for your labor and knowledge I learn more from you than in school.
Pouring over technical packets generally are done by technical or assistant designers and this is called "Paying your dues", also a lot of Head or Senior Designers do not know specs (measurements) or concept of patternmaking and how fabrics behave because they "fall" into their position for different reasons. I worked for 10 years as an assistant to a head designer who got her start as a high school dropout receptionist who slept with the leading salesman. He, apparently, threatened to leave the company if she was not given the position. 😛 I ultimately left to become a designer for a competitor realizing that she was never going to let me be promoted and loose my feed expertise.
Zoe working in fashion for so many years and not knowing commercial patterns come with instructions is so funny to me. My mom also never used instructions and rarely used patterns so was really confused how I knew to sew things like darts
You learn something new every day! hahahahaha
I don't know why u don't have many subscribers u ARE GREATTT
Thanks! Share this video so I can get more subs! hahahaha~
Hhh already did to like 15 of them guess I deserve a little somethin hheeee🤗🤗🤗🤗
Thank you!
You're welcome!
Good answers from Melissa, after they appeared in the better market. Trends tended to appear in the department stores 2 years after fashion shows and it was at least 3 years before catalog sales. God forbid a current trend be presented to a buyer who especially bought for middle America.
Such interesting topics and questions 🙏
Thanks zoey very informative!
Reminds me of the one fashion design class I took in college. I do have a question though. In the class I took We were given a final project that nearly broke all of us. we were given 4 random colors and were told we had to make a 35 piece fashion design set. From these 4 colors we were told we had to pick our own fabric that got as close as possible. With that fabrics and colors we had to make our designs look couture with what we had. Only three of us out of a 20 student class passed. Any advice I can get as i'm redrawing my really bad designs to look better.
Hi Zoe! Great interview, quick question here. If you wanted to listen to a fashion podcast, what kind of content would you like hear from it? Thank you!
People telling the truth instead of glossing/rushing over the dirty details.
We learned grading in school
Wait-- Zoe's never seen from a commercial pattern?!?? 🤯🤯🤯
Nope. I've only sewn from my own patterns. In school, I made patterns from the school blocks, but still my own patterns.
You guys look alike
Reminds me of my engineering school - I went there to learn theory AND how to actually build stuff. But after a couple years with zero hands on projects I asked when we would actually make something real - I was told that "Engineers design things for the "lesser" non-engineer people to put together". My jaw hit the floor. The consequences of this really hit hard at the very end of the program because graduating seniors did have to present a real final project. It was like a 7th grade science fair because no one knew how to turn their designs into real things.
That's why I like watching your videos so much Zoe, it's like therapy - undoing all of the weird stuff I was taught in school.
That's bananas. The learning is in the doing. Theory doesn't mean much without practice. Glad my channel could help!
Have to add that I’m grossed out about Parsons making sewing/construction optional.
I've had enough conversations with admins at different universities to know that retention is a thing they think about constantly. And just by running this channel, I'm aware of people trying all the time to get what they want while avoiding anything they don't like or aren't good at right away. I don't agree with it, but I think Parsons was buckling to retention pressure. In this industry, you either have a lot of money/connections or skills, and things will shake out accordingly with the sign ups for these classes.
Zoe Hong yes I remember the pattern drafting class I took about a year ago. About 5 people dropped out by the end of the semester-people don’t realize this stuff takes skill, practice, and math. I’m not surprised people look for shortcuts.
Because of your channel Zoe, a lot of what I am doing was validated. I wish I watched youtube before and found your videos. Now that I have my own brand, I am here for my marketing and never thought I would be inloved in this platform. I am an entrepreneur and one day when I decided to make a business with what my passion is, I study fashion designing by myself so I can hire myself 😘. It took me a decade to start my own brand. Keep inspiring more people ❤
Good luck with your business!
@@zoehongteaches Thank you 😍
And how is it going for you?
Great Video!
Would it be possible to interview a Technical Designer?
That's a good idea.
Please can anyone help me with gaining admission into any good fashion school in the US? I am 30 years plus.. I am so passionate becoming a fashion design and I wish to go through school so I get the skills needed as fast as possible.
Since you ask at the end to like the video if I learned something -- I did and I did. I learned
that you, Zoe, have never looked at a sewing pattern?? Also, I'm thrilled that Melissa once worked for McCall pattern Company. In response to her statement about the construction guidesheets in a pattern, some beginning home sewers may not own a serger (merrow), therefore, the pattern guide asks that the sewer use a zigzag stitch to finish a seam.
Regarding your conversation comparing Project Runway and Next in Fashion, please remember that Project Runway pretty much wrote that format. Their whole premise is giving a boost to designers who are unknown.
I've never looked at a *commercial* pattern, or a home sewing pattern. I've looked at and made plenty of patterns for industry production.
Zoe Hong Would’ve loved to see the difference between a home sewing and a production pattern. Ina future video, maybe? I’m a home sewer because my youthful dreams of fashion design as a career never came to be. 😊 Mind you, home sewers are creating beautifully executed wardrobes for themselves.
I WATCH WAY TOO MANY VIDEOS OF ZOE HONG SHES UBER AMAZING AND YES I USE PATTERNS BEFORE LEARNING HOW TO SEW NOW IM IN COLLEGE AND HAVE AN INDUSTRIAL SEWING MACHINE LICENSE
Woohoo, party person has checked in! Can’t wait to watch and take notes. She’s an awesome guest :-)
I've known her for 10 years. She's fantastic!
Zoe, I loved your grading question. I had one grading course in FIT back in the 80’s and it’s always a key element in my work. I’m always searching for additional info on the subject. It’s interesting too that you get so many inquiries regarding the subject. It tells me it’s very relative to many sewers. Thank you. You’re wonderful.
She’s such an adult in the best sense of the word! Managing time, taking criticism, working well with her team is crucial to moving forward to a successful career and life.
Amazing interview ❣️😆
27:56 internship
Really enjoyed this video. I got what I thought was a very realistic view of working in the industry. I also heard important experiences and opinions that I will share with my sewing students. I teach domestic sewers but I like to incorporate ideas and tales from the 'front'. Thank you so much for sharing this with us.
You're welcome!
Very interesting interview. My life does not have anything to do with designer, sketching, flats etc etc except that I love to sew when I can and find time to do it. Tomorrow I have to finish the last 18 minutes. Zoe and Melissa thank you very much!
You're welcome and thanks for tuning in!
Mind blown. So helpful to hear from someone in the fashion trenches.
Good! That's the goal of these interviews!
Love these interviews, love you! Keep up the greatness.
Thank you!
Thanks for you zoe😘♥️♥️♥️
You're welcome!