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Actors Resume Career: Resumes for Fashion Designers

Resumes for Fashion Designers

Fashion designers need to write and structure their resumes in a way that is conducive to the needs of the industry. Find out how and see examples.


 
 
 


 

Although we usually tend to focus on acting careers around here, we definitely want to address the issues that affect all other types of artists. For example, we have discussed the how & why of writing a fashion model resume.

You may find it difficult to find a lot of examples of resumes for fashion designers on the web, because the fashion design industry is actually smaller than you would think and because much of it has not yet taken to the internet. However, it is important for a fashion designer to locate and look through a few fashion designer resume samples to get a good sense for what types of things do and don’t belong on it.

As you begin to put together your fashion design resume, there are a couple of things you’ll want to keep in mind.

A Fashion Designer Is An Artist

When you put together your resume and your portfolio of work, you will rightfully feel like an artist. Your designs are your artistic work. You use your own natural creativity to do it and the creativity that you have honed through your work and training, and no one else in the world would ever design a particular piece of clothing the way that you have designed it. So when you put together your fashion designers portfolio, you will want to play to your uniqueness. Show them the subtle ways that you do things differently than anyone else so that they can appreciate you as a creative force.

A Fashion Designer Is An Entrepreneur

However, fashion design is also a business and if you are making it in this business or if you are want to know how to make it as a fashion designer, you must know that you are a business-person and all of your fashion design experience, even what you do as work for hire, is an entrepreneurial activity. You are like a brand to be built up, and your fashion design portfolio and networking skills are what build that brand. So you want to write your fashion designer’s resume in such a way as to maximize your brand potential. Again, you are capitalizing on your uniqueness, but now you should be thinking of your designs less as art and more as advertisements. What does each design say about you and your abilities? Prioritize your accomplishments based not only on how proud you may be of them, but on how profitable a spin they can put on your design expertise.

Fashion Design Is A Production Art

Finally, the way to find work as a fashion designer is not to pretend you’re already a brand name (even though you are a brand), but to recognize that a fashion designer is a production artist. A fashion designer resume and portfolio must portray the designer as someone who can reliably and consistently produce these creative works of entrepreneurial value. You got all that? You are all three of these things at once. That’s how to make money as a fashion designer.

As I mentioned in the beginning, you’ll want to check out as many examples of resumes for fashion designers as you can, and especially to focus on what parts of those resumes work to the designer’s advantage and disadvantage in each of the three areas we’ve outlined. Use those resume and portfolio samples that you find to hone your own fashion design resume so that it will make you look artistic, business-savvy, and productive all at once.


 
 
 


 

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