Saturday, 5 May 2012

Is the Future of Fashion Online?

As an English fashion writer said recently, "To have one finger on the fashion pulse, you need to have the other one on your computer mouse." This can apply to fashion education, too, for the fashion career-conscious.

Urban Fashion and its Bloggers

Urban fashion is The Thing in the industry at the moment. A blend of indie-rock-wear, expensive jeans, and funky hats can be seen lining the racks of boutiques everywhere, including the fashion-conscious San Francisco Bay Area, one of the West coast's primary fashion hubs.
At one time, celebrity and fashion magazines would have driven this fashion trend. Rock groups still contribute as well, but there is something else that is steering the direction of fashion these days: a little thing called a blog.
Fashion blogs have begun to pop up over the last several years, challenging the authority and the timeliness of once uber-powerful fashion mags. In San Francisco especially, where urban fashion is important to the local industry, bloggers often critique runway and street fashions alike, well before any printed publications do.
In an online column in the Bay Area, one San Francisco resident said, "Words can't describe how heavily message boards and fashion blogs influence teen fashion."

Learning Fashion Online

If the Internet is such a powerful place to define fashion design, think about how powerful it can be to learn it. Some fashion degree programs, like design, are best earned in person at on-campus programs. Others, like fashion marketing and fashion merchandising, can make for great online degree programs.
Posting online about fashion is one of the requirements of an online degree program in fashion, so that's one trend you'd have under your belt. It's never been easier to start a fashion career than it is today, with online fashion schools leading the way.
Sources
Inside Bay Area, "Urban wear starts rockin' suburbs"
Daily Mail, "The fashion blog stars"
Joe Cooper is a freelance education and technology writer and edits medical literature. He holds a bachelor's in American Literature from UCLA.

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