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Fashion Design and Merchandising Program
Description
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Core Courses
All students in the
Fashion Design and Merchandising major take core classes common to both
specializations. Classes include the following topics: careers, textile
science and economics, fashion market analysis, visual merchandising,
principles and elements of design, fashion illustration, and fashion
motivation.
Students majoring in Fashion Design and
Merchandising may specialize in the following:
Fashion Design
Specialization
The fashion design
student combines talent, creativity, and technical skills to produce a
design or line. The student will advance through a sequence of technical
classes in addition to the core classes. You will observe and
analyze clothing styles, develop new ideas, and interpret them through
fashion illustration, clothing construction, pattern making, and
draping.
Professionally
related courses include three-dimensional design and fiber arts. Specialized classes include construction, fashion history, pattern
making, draping, mass production, computer-aided apparel design and
portfolio development course work. Electives may include advanced
fashion illustration and fashion design classes, art and design studies,
photography, and theater.
This specialization
leads to employment as chief designers, sample makers, and other
manufacturing positions in grading, pattern making, cutting, assembly,
inspection, plant supervision, and free-lance apparel design.
Fashion
Merchandising Specialization
If you choose to
specialize in Fashion Merchandising you will study fashion
merchandising, apparel accessories, fashion buying, and fashion
mathematics. Professionally related courses include marketing and
management. An important requirement of this specialization is work
experience in the fashion industry.
The specialization
requires basic business courses in addition to the Fashion Design and
Merchandising core and specialized classes. Electives may include
additional marketing and management, journalism, or other business
related classes. Specialized classes include accessories, fashion
merchandising, fashion buying, field (work) experience, current issues
and trends, personnel, and fashion business systems.
Graduates are
prepared for positions in fashion retailing organizations as buyers,
managers, visual merchandisers, fashion consultants, sales
representatives, and related areas. In addition to clothing and textiles
courses, retailing students have experience in marketing management,
promotion, business computing, and personnel management and
supervision.