Saturday, 5 May 2012

New York Fashion Film Prada Misses One Thing

Don't snub your nose at a fashion assistant job. In The Devil Wears Prada, Anne Hathaway plays a bumbling fashion design assistant to the exquisitely evil editor-in-chief of a New York fashion design magazine. Careers in fashion design may not start big - but they definitely start with entry-level jobs.

Humble Beginnings in Fashion Design

Planning for a career in fashion design? Dreaming of a sleek, high-floor office where the fashion accessories cost more than your rent? A career in fashion design is nothing if not stylish, although they don't always start that way.
In the film, fashion assistants are privy to the cream of the fashion design crop, from designer handbags to couture evening gowns. While this fashion dream sounds nice - it's not the norm. Most entry-level fashion design jobs or fashion marketing internships pay very little (salaries as little as $28,000/year) and don't keep you wearing the latest fashions.
Fashion design assistants and fashion marketing interns often work long hours on their feet all day, and while they receive a little more credit than the fashion design assistants in the film, it isn't much.
But - these jobs can be the ticket to a career in fashion design. And so can an education.

Fashion School

The best way to start a career in fashion design is to attend fashion design school. There, you'll learn the essentials:


  • Garments and textiles
  • Sewing, stitching, and clothing assembly
  • Fashion buying and marketing
  • Fashion design history
With a fashion design education under your belt, walking into an entry-level fashion design job will put you ahead of the pack, enabling you to understand design concepts and business concepts better, and ultimately, get you promoted faster.
Who knows - maybe with a degree from fashion design school, the heroine from Prada might have fared better against the Devil.
Source
Can Mag
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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