Arts Thread

Alexandra Shortall
Fashion Design BA

Edinburgh College of Art

Graduates: 2023

Specialisms: Womenswear / Party/Eveningwear / Textiles - Knit

My location: Manchester, United Kingdom

Alex Shortall ArtsThread Profile
Edinburgh College of Art

Alexandra Shortall

Alex Shortall ArtsThread Profile

First Name: Alexandra

Last Name: Shortall

University / College: Edinburgh College of Art

Course / Program: Fashion Design BA

Graduates: 2023

Specialisms: Womenswear / Party/Eveningwear / Textiles - Knit

My Location: Manchester, United Kingdom

Website: Click To See Website

About

I'm Alexandra Shortall, a graduate designer who specialises in womenswear and knitwear design. My personal love for the ocean has led me to explore why I and fellow 'thalassophiles' feel so drawn to the great blue. This research, and my personal connection to my thalassophile customer, combines to create a collection that transports you straight to the sea. As well as designing for fellow lovers of the ocean, I wanted to insure my collection was designed for the modern woman. I designed my graduate collection for women who feel connected to nature, spirituality and to their femininity, but at the same time are strong, ambitious, and proud. I have often found that women are expected to sacrifice parts of their femininity in order to claim a space in the workforce. I wanted to design a collection that celebrated both sides of my customer, allowing her to protect the softness of her character while remaining strong. It was this inspiration that led me to explore contrasting materials, looking to metallic silks and satins to reflect the soft ebbs and flows of water, as well as the soft femininity of my customer. Then, experimenting with how I could create the same movement in rigid materials of metal and glass, representing the strength and protection my customer seeks from her clothes.

Reinventing business wear- Hugo Boss Competition entry

Specialisms:

Womenswear

What does it mean to be a modern woman in the workforce? Often it can mean sacrificing your softness or femininity to get ahead. I wanted to reinvent business wear in a way that celebrates the wearers' femininity in the workforce- allowing her to be both soft and strong, protected and powerful. To do this I have tackled a range of contrasting materials from soft satins and structural wools, to the unconventional materials of glass and metal. Through these materials I explored and celebrated the contrasting rigidity and fluidity of the female form- in all the diverse shapes and sizes it comes in.