Fashion Drawing For Dummies
Book image
Explore Book Buy On Amazon
Back in the days before the internet and great cameras, fashion illustrators were essential for showing a designer’s creations. Today, you find fewer true fashion illustrators who make their living through drawing fashion.

But the art of fashion drawing itself will never die, no matter how advanced technology gets. Illustrating is and always will be important because it gets the idea out of your head and makes it real on paper. That’s why illustration is an important skill for a designer to have.

Can you imagine how hard it would be to just use words to describe a design and expect someone to be able to make it? Drawing transcends language and is the perfect visual representation of your design.

To see why drawing will never go out of style, look at a designer’s process notebooks and watch an idea grow from a rough sketch to a finished product. Doodling on a computer doesn’t allow you to work through a sketch like a series of hand drawings does — at least not yet!

Careers in fashion illustration

Making a career out of drawing today in any field is tricky, not just in fashion drawing. A lot of art has gone digital, and some illustrations are done solely on the computer using a mouse or drafting tablet. But don’t throw away your drawing paper just yet — even artists who work on computers need the ability to draw.

The truth is that the need for hand design will never disappear completely. Magazines may no longer need illustrations of the latest trends because the camera captures it all, but readers still like to see drawings and organic art. Illustrations can exaggerate and introduce elements of fantasy in ways that are difficult or impossible for cameras.

Can you make a living in fashion illustration? Perhaps. A lot of fashion illustration overlaps with fashion design. Most people who want to draw fashion also want to design their model’s clothes. Most of the time, when you show your skills in illustrating, you’re also showing your designing skills.

Consider some of the following potential career choices beyond designing and marketing your own line of clothing:

  • Work for a designer who has great ideas but has trouble transferring them to paper.

  • Teaching others to draw is a thriving career choice. You have to complete some schooling to teach others, but inspiring new artists to develop their talent is a great way to spend your professional life.

  • Be open to illustrating jobs that aren’t directly related to fashion. Children’s books especially depend on illustrators to capture the story and bring it to life, and the human characters in the story have to wear clothes! Try your hand at drawing some cute kids and let them play dress-up.

  • Check out a career creating line sheets, which are drawings of garments that the manufacturer plans on producing. Merchandising garments and designs are cheaper when the garment simply has to be illustrated, not made. Line sheets help buyers see products so they know whether they want to order them.

Careers in fashion design

The textile industry is the largest industry in the world — one walk through the mall can clearly illustrate the power of clothing in the retail world. Everyone wears clothes. Because clothing styles change frequently and because clothes don’t last forever, fashion is a constantly changing market.

Careers in fashion design are abundant! From sourcing (which is finding all of the notions and fabrics to create the garment, along with finding a factory to construct the garment) to product development, fashion employs millions around the world.

If you want to get into the design industry as an illustrator, learning the trade and creating a portfolio is the way to go. Schools offer two- to four-year programs about pattern drafting, grading, fashion design, textiles, and fabric design, giving people the skills to go out into the fashion design world and create living, breathing designs.

Break into the fashion world

To be an artist is to be a salesperson, if you ever want anyone else to see your work. No one will come knocking on your door to see your work unless you put it out there. Working in a creative field today requires not only some knowledge of social media but also a working knowledge of the internet.

Marketing online is not only easy but also less painful for artists who don’t have the killer instincts that make great salespeople great. Rejection is always easier online than in person! Although getting noticed is easier than ever, there’s tremendous competition, because everyone else is using the same channels to show their work.

You can do it, though, with talent, luck, and persistence.

About This Article

This article is from the book:

About the book authors:

Marianne Egan teaches fashion illustration and design, apparel construction, and more. Lisa Smith Arnold teaches art and drawing, including fashion illustration, at Norwalk Community College.?She has also served as creative coordinator and fashion editor at several major publications.

This article can be found in the category: