EducationWorld

Rising demand for trendy textile designers

textile designer

India’s ancient and once highly respected textiles and garment industries are experiencing a renaissance The nationwide buzz generated by the Lakme India Fashion Week staged in Mumbai annually, is an indicator that India’s ancient and once highly respected textiles and garment industries are experiencing a renaissance. Unlike in an earlier era when textile designing in India was a hereditary profession handed down from generation to generation, in the new competitive era when the textile and garment industries have to keep pace with ephemeral trends and preferences of the crystallising global market, there is a growing demand for professionally qualified textile designers. Some textile design professionals have already established themselves as haute couture fashion designers and their creations range from exclusive sarees to prêt-a-porter garments which are marketed in chic boutiques and mushrooming retail chain stores. Among them: Tarun Tahiliani, Rohit Bal, Ritu Beri, J.J. Vallaya, Abraham & Thakore, Malini Ramani, Manoviraj Khosla etc. These new generation fashion gurus have set their sights on national and global markets for their highly creative textiles and off-the-peg garments. Not surprisingly they are constantly looking for textile and garment designers endowed with creativity, resilience, self-confidence, and talent. Most textile design institutes of learning in the country require Plus Two as the minimum qualification. Thereafter aptitude tests which evaluate artistic ability, spatial perception, and aesthetic and colour sensitivity are administered to applicants. The selection process also evaluates attitude, motivation, and interest together with academic qualifications, general awareness, scientific, and technical aptitude. STUDY PROGRAMMES. The duration of study programmes in textile design ranges from two to five years. Polytechnics run by state governments as also private sector edupreneurs offer two to three-year courses in one or more specialised areas of industrial design including textile design (commonly offered by women’s polytechnics). Some art colleges offer specialisation in textile design as a component of their bachelor of fine arts (BFA) degree courses. Among them: • Sir J.J. School of Arts, Mumbai • College of Arts and Craft, Lucknow • Kala Bhawan, Shantiniketan • Lalit Kala Institute, Jabalpur • College of Art, New Delhi • Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi • Allahabad University, Allahabad • Apeejay Institute of Design, New Delhi • Pearl Academy of Fashion, Delhi, Jaipur and Chennai NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF DESIGN. The most comprehensive study programme in industrial design (which includes textile design) is offered by the National Institute of Design (NID), Ahmedabad. Christened the School Leaver’s Professional Education Programme (SLPEP), it is of five years duration during which students go through a mandatory foundation course followed by optional specialisations, one of which is textile design. NID has devised a three-prong admission programme. Initially it scrutinises application forms to evaluate factors such as motivation, interest, attitude, and perception for a career in design as revealed by applicants’ answers to questions set out in the form. After careful scrutiny, shortlisted applicants are summoned for an admission test which evaluates competence in mathematics, science, social studies (secondary school standard) and drawing/sketching. Applications for SLPEP are advertised in October, the written test

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