This blog constitutes the project website for Fashion Talk, a Grundtvig partnership project with partners from Austria, Germany, Italy and Portugal. This project has been funded with support from the European Commission. This publication reflects the views only of the authors, and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
Migrant background + disabled = a successful designer: Camilla Skovgaard
Friday, July 27, 2012
Fashion Talks in Frankfurt
For those of us who missed the Berlin exhibition of Fashion Talks: The exhibition is in Frankfurt now at Museum für Kommunikation (Museum for Communication) until September 2nd, 2012: http://www.fashiontalks.de/english/index.html .
Their Blog is really interesting and full of exciting fashion pictures, though not in English but in German language only. The graphic above is the header of the blog - nice!
The Museum is also offering workshops for children and young adults - perfect holiday programme!
Fashion Talk meets Fashion Talks
Sunday, June 10, 2012
Viennese success story: young Turkish women offer fashion services
The store is in a rather run down, multi-cultural area in the 16th Viennese district - so not specifically an area where fashion services are in demand (one might think). First it looked like one of these innumerous studios for nails and cosmetics, but these two ladies are very successful and really creative and clever in their way how to "sell" their fashion dedicated services: They organise their marketing via the web and online instruments like Groupon and their service orientations seems to be honored by the market: a full appointment book and eight (!) employees is not so bad for two women younger than 30. From their education they are a hair dresser and a "nail designer".
Was their migrant background any specifically good or bad? Did it help, does it bring additional clients? Was it a barrier? "No", says Melek, one of the young ladies, "not in my opinion. We come from a very modern Turkish family and were free to do what we want as a profession", but she admits that their job and how they organise it is rather unusual for Turkish families of their social background and young women. Their clients are 80% Austrians and the rest mainly Serbs and other nationalities. And the success factors? Melek is not sure, but she states that the service is the most important thing and that they try to be a meeting point for those interested in fashion and fashion services.
It seemed that doing something with beauty in this area with so many empty shops and neglected houses covers a need of people living there. Is it possible, that fashion can have a social component in a surrounding which is disconnected from the wealth and glitter of the big city? May be these are the success factors for their business: Melek and her sister cover a need of the people in their district, and they are extremely ambitious. They simply WANT to do something in fashion and found their individual way to do it in a surrounding which is neither very attractive nor fashion orientated.
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
project results
This overview serves as a center for downloading the individual documents:
Project Flyers
English
German
Portuguese
Italian
Country reports:
Austria (German)
Germany - general (German)
Germany - Berlin special (German)
Italy (Italian)
Portugal (Portuguese)
Summary of Country Reports (English)
Student reports:
Outcome of meeting in Tolmezzo (Italy)
Outcome of meeting in Berlin (Germany), Italian students
Outcome of meeting in Berlin (Germany) , Portuguese students
Outcome of meeting in Lisbon (Portugal)
Outcome of meeting in Vienna (Austria, blog article)
Other results:
Presentation of the country report from Portugal
A song text written during the night activities in Berlin
Friday, April 20, 2012
Young people with a migration background as consumers or designers of fashion
Introduction
People with a migration
background, especially juveniles, unfortunately are often associated with a low level of education, low-paid jobs and at least crime. But in fact they have a
great chance to benefit from their multicultural background, their language
skills and their skills in intercultural communication.
Many immigrants use these advantages to make creative
work, although in Germany it is not easy for young immigrants, even with a high
graduation, to find a traineeship.
Especially for women with a migration background it is hard to find work
in Germany.
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Monday, April 16, 2012
Fashion in running events
The day before the last project meeting in Vienna the biggest running event of Austria happend: the Vienna City Marathon.
During the meeting we spoke about fancy clothes of runners and I achieved to get some pictures - not from Vienna but from Berlin Marathon 2011. (in Vienna the weather was rather cold and nearly rainy).
Some may call it crazyness, others call it fashion, probably all will find it funny!
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Young adults with migration background and fashion
Fashion Talk made an interview on fashion with Bülent (Turkish background), Rocco (from Slovenia) und Sergej (German-Russian background) on their experiences with fashion in Vienna/Austria. The three young adults (all 18 years old) were asked to identify the differences between fashion items in their personal surrounding in Germany and those in Vienna/Austria. Fashion Talk partner Karin Drda-Kühn (KDK) from Association Culture and Work did the interview - and was surprised what the young men found out:
KDK: Was there anything different or special in fashion in Vienna? Did you see different or the same clothes as in Germany?
Bülent: Pretty the same, there were not many differences. It is the same as in Germany, you can clearly see at the clothes what the people are, as in Germany.
KDK: May be the differences are not in the clothes but with fashionable things like shoes, jewellery, scarves, hats?
Sergej: No, not really, all stuff which we know from Germany. May be some of the shops have other names but the stuff is the same. Especially from chains. We were at some chains and it is really the same which is somehow strange because this is another country.
KDK: So there was absolutely nothing new for you in fashion items?
Rocco: I could not see differences in the clothes, but there was this shop with the iPhone cases, this was really different, a shop full of cases in all colours and many different patterns, we made a picture from the shop window:
Bülent: Yes, I bought one, not so expensive, it makes the iPhone in a way special, I like it.
KDK: Was anything else exiting for you which had to do with fashion or fashion items?
Rocco: There was this advertisement at the metro station, which was really funny when I found out, first I did not understand it. It looked like Superman in cinema, but it meant something else…
Sergej: It has something to do with cleaning the roads, it is written that those who broom the streets are heros, this is how some guys explained it to us. It was so funny because first I thought this is an advertisement of a special group of people and that they can be identified by orange T-Shirts under their clothes.
Bülent: It’s really funny, a kind of garbage fashion, but you have to understand it.
Rocco: There was something else which we did not understand, this was this street lamp with a knitted wrapping:
Sergej: It was at a staircase to Mariahilferstraße. May be this is also a fashion item, but not for people but for street lamps. Who knows, at least a lot of people were watching it.
KDK: So in the end you found some examples of fashion which are different to what you know?
Bülent: Yes, in a way, but there was another thing, there were street musicians, not my style of music, but their outfit was cool, they wore blue boiler suits and helmets, very strange for musicians.
Sergej: This was cool, we wondered what it was good for and some guys who were listening said it’s just for getting visible and extraordinary. Good way to rise attraction, no doubt.
KDK: But getting better visible is something which has a lot to do with fashion, don’t you think so?
Rocco: Yes, of course, but may be not with boiler suits and helmets, but the guys were really cool with the music and the costumes, really.
(The interview was done and translated into English by Karin Drda-Kühn)
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Report Germany - Berlin special
It is written in German and is available for download by clicking on this image: