Apparel Design
In Apparel Design, students prepare to be conscious leaders in the field who approach fashion as a platform for cultural dialogue. Through immersive, studio-based practice, you establish unique design languages and clearly articulated creative processes.
Makers of thoughtful and thought-provoking garments, majors generate both fashion and knowledge, continually reimagining what apparel and the systems for producing it can be.
Degree program
Taking fashion as a unique form of self expression, the Apparel Design BFA program provides a strong base in making and craftsmanship and prepares you to impact an array of creative industries.
In the studio
With an intense focus on craftsmanship, Apparel Design majors develop diverse creative practices rooted in an awareness of clothing as an emotional medium as well as a material and visual one. Emphasizing ethical sourcing and production, the program encourages students to challenge industry conventions and work toward positive, sustainable change.
Student work
Isabelle Saxton BFA 2020
Yuki Xu BFA 2021
Mariya Kurguzkina BFA 2019
Josylnne Houlder BFA 2020
Izabela Clarke BFA 2020
Eleanor Kutzer BFA 2020
Desiree Scarborough BFA 2020
Avery Albert BFA 2018
Jackie Oh BFA 2020
Kylin Conant BFA 2021
Mina Serbetcioglu BFA 2020
Zoe Grinfeld BFA 2020
Amanda Glickman BFA 2020
Jeremy Miller BFA 2020
Emily Frisch BFA 2020
Kyra Buenviaje BFA 2020
Alumni
After graduation, Apparel Design alumni set their sites on changing fashion and the surrounding industry as a whole. Whether they launch their own studios, pursue careers with retail leaders or enter into related fields, graduates of the program employ sustainable practices that respect craft and labor, while centering the wearer throughout the design process.
Popular around the world, Nicole Miller’s designs continue to stand out on the runway. In 2013 she earned the Spirit of Design Award for outstanding contributions to the world of design and for her generosity in working with students and young designers. Launched in 1982, Miller’s label now includes women’s apparel, handbags, footwear, jewelry, bridal wear and men’s sportswear. She credits RISD with inspiring her sense of freedom and creativity, and remains connected with the college as a visiting critic and mentor to RISD students and as a trustee.
Mel Ottenberg, one of the industry’s most sought-after stylists, is well known for shaping the singular style of global pop icon Rihanna and for lending his aesthetic vision to ad campaigns for commercial clients like Dior and Nike. Now the creative director of Interview magazine—which he helped relaunch in 2018—says that RISD suited him well because he needed a bit of distance from the intensity of the NYC fashion world. “I wanted to figure out what I was about before being drenched in… what everyone else was doing.”
Featured stories
Faculty members Catherine Andreozzi and Michael Lye teach courses focused on apparel design and habitats for astronauts and have created an informal pipeline for alums interested in working for the space agency.
Rhode Island School of Design is among the schools that showcased their seniors’ work on the runway
A devotee of historical workwear, the environmentally conscious new grad will show his all-cotton collection at New York Fashion Week in September.
select photo credits:
top image: work by (from l to r) Sue Sima, Kailin Hartley, Yiyi Wang, Sofia Zhuk-Vasilyeva and Abraham Hsu, photo by Jonas Gustavsson
second image: 3... 2... 1... by Kailin Hartley, photo by Christian DeFonte