Tag Archives: design

None·of·Your·Business

I finally feel ready to start making concrete goals toward starting my own business, and I think I’ve secured a trusted team to help me along the way:  me, myself, and I.  In a few years I might be ready to spill the story of how I came to this conclusion.  It’s too fresh to share at the moment.  I need to wait, to see what happens before I divulge.  It begins with a motorcycle ride and ends with a spider bite.  Three, actually, in the shape of a triangle, on my left foot.  The rest of the story is none of your business.

On Wednesday I took a concrete step towards my goals by signing up for Renaissance Entrepreneur Center’s course on starting one’s own fashion business.  I was so excited and nervous to enter their space to share my story with everyone.  I even showed off and went first when we started introductions.

As the class progressed and the teacher told us to keep certain concepts in mind I realized that  I am a natural business woman (in terms of thinking about and envisioning…not in terms of making money…yet). The questions our instructor, who is amazing, asked us were ones that I’d already thought of and have thouroughly documented on this blog.  My natural curiosity and interest in the world and things around me means I constantly innovate.  It comes easily to me.  I have the added benefit of already knowing how to produce garments, and I have a product to sell that is more than a commodity – it’s fashion.

I want to explore this more, commodity clothing versus fashion, because it hasn’t been a distinction I’ve consciously made until now.  I entered a Master’s program in fashion and feared finishing it because  I swore the debt incurred from the degree would force me to take a job with Walmart, designing Muumuus.  I was afraid of designing commodities, because really there is nothing to them.  There is no art, no emotional content that goes into producing a white undershirt, or a pair of gym socks, or most of the clothing that the majority of us wear.  Commodities are interchangeable, although they sometimes reference real fashion, which is by contrast, very deep (at least to the person who creates it).

Fashion is our emotions imprinted onto our bodies.  Fashion elevates clothing to an expressive art form.  It’s where the drama lives, where joy explodes, where we tip toe around death and decay, where we imagine the future, where we sexually signal, where we confuse, where we explore, where reveal and conceal.

The way I, as a designer, relate to my emotions is present in my clothing design and construction.  So as I start to create my business I have to remember that I am making a brand of me.  It’s not just some clothing line, it’s me and all my love, me and all my insecurities, me and all of my stuff.  It’s how I relate and feel about my body, and your body; my mind, and your mind; my soul, and your soul.  Just as the mind and body operate together,  I don’t see the business and the personal as being separate.  The personal affects the business, and the business affects the personal.  I have worked for too many people not to know this truth.

So what are my desires, intentions, and values when it comes to creating my own apparel business?  Lets find out.

We got a series of handouts in class on Wednesday, so the following content will be coming from those prompts.

Your Name: Leslie Marie Channel

Business Name:  Article Brand Clothing

The problem you wish to solve:  I find most fashions available to me both boring and meaningless, the quality of most garments is also questionable.  There are no garments that tell my story, that I relate to, that make me feel safe and comfortable.  The cloth goods landscape is blighted.

Your business concept:  Fashion on the edge of art.  Conceptual fashion.

Your end-user:  Women (Possibly men since a lot of men ask me for menswear.  Let me tell you, it’s be ages since I’ve been around a man’s body.  I hardly remember what they look like. ) ages 20-50, who go for adventurous style/style that they can have adventures in.

Function/End Use (how it will enrich their lives): It will make them feel special and unique, the garments can be worn many ways giving them endless styling options, they will get more for their money, they can travel with smaller suitcases.

Where you are in your business development process:

Have samples of product (that I wear)

Have business license

What do you think your greatest challenge is in starting your fashion business:

C.R.E.A.M

Also time.  But time is money… or something like that….these things are entangled for me.  I give away my time to make money right now, and that takes away from time I could be spending to make better money for myself.  It’s time for me to leave my full-time gig behind (I am notoriously slow to change, especially when I’m enjoying or feel peaceful.  Had to be forcibly made to leave the womb and breastfed until I was two and a half.  What can I say.  I appreciate a good thing when I have it.  Don’t hate.)

How will you produce your product:

-Artisan crafted goods and small scale mass-production

Where do you want to produce your product?

-Locally made when possible

-Made in USA at the very least

How will you sell your product?

-Web

-Some boutique wholesale

How will you market your product:

-Face to Face to boutiques, sales reps

-Self-made web-based social media

How will you measure your success

-Achieving sustainability, able to pay myself a living wage. Additionally, I will consider myself successful when I have stable living and working spaces, and when I can afford to take yearly trips to help fuel my creativity.  Also important to me is the ability to stay flexible and nimble as a business, the ability to practice my craft with who I want when I want, and the ability to take creative breaks as needed.  One of the things that worries me about mainstream fashion is the breakneck pace (fall/winter, resort, spring/summer, pre fall).  I am not naturally a fast paced girl.  I tried to be all fasty fast once and my life exploded!  I like to take my time, experience things, think about what’s going on and then produce something amazing!  I can’t be expected to work at someone else’s pace.  Unfortunate maybe, but true.

And here are some statements we were asked to create -

Problem:  Fashion needs to be meaningful to our lives and our struggles, our successes and our triumphs, it needs to be relevant to what we’re experiencing and represent how we are transforming as a world society.  People no longer understand the sacred traditions – the craftsmanship, the dedication, and the training – that is required to make high quality garments.

Mission:  To create a line of clothing, produced biannually, that is both artistically expressive, innovative and high quality in construction, and culturally relevant/referential.

Vision:  To inspire and change the way people consume and interact with clothing by creating unique pieces that encourage thoughtful and individualized self-expression.

Values:  Artistic, Radical, Truthful, Inspirational, Cool, Loving Expression through clothing.

That’s my business.

Love and Enjoy!


He·art·work

Sunday, August 12th, 2012

11:47 AM

Jean Paul Gaultier Exhibit

de Young Museum



The Good Life: by Conscious Design

Reblogged from Fibershed:

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Meet Kacy Dapp, a modern day artisan whose life has been consciously crafted to balance the needs of the individual with the reality of the times we live.  Her personal passions are carved from a value system of self-sufficiency, community building, and a quest for simplicity.

Weaving, knitting, sewing, spinning, guitar and dyeing are all skills Dapp has explored in increasing and varying depth.  

Read more… 1,466 more words

I work with this lovely individual. So fortunate to share my time with thoughtful people who are on a path so close to my own. Love and Enjoy!

The·Panty·Factory – 2nd Edition

Pictures of a set I recently finished.

Triangle top.

X Marks the Spot briefs

Triangle thong.

I’m actually doing a headstand, but I thought turning the image upside down made it more interesting.

Love and Enjoy!


Busi·ness

Here are some business cards I’ve been developing over the past week or so.  I tried to do them on paper first, but that turned out to be a pretty big waste of time.  Things work so much better when I’m using Photoshop or Illustrator.  Shapes fall into place naturally and I always like the results.  Also, it’s so easy to play with layers and get different results that are interesting to think about.

I really like the star as the symbol for this dream I’m developing.  After my life fell apart, I started asking my family questions about when I was born, what was going on emotionally with all of my family members.  I’m the youngest, so I realize that I was born into a world that was ready made.  I had choice about very little, my family was already a tribe, I was just an addition.  I thought I could figure out who I was from the stories and memories my family had.

My eldest brother said this:

Well from what I remember, when you were born it was like a shining moment.  I was at Erik Taylor’s house and I remember Charlie telling me that you were a girl.  They didn’t know ahead of time.  Everyone was thrilled.  You were like a star (and always have been to me).

I’ve also come to see a lot in this image.  The star with the lines bisecting the points looks like a little person.  Arms, legs, head.  And then the lines lead you to the center of star, where there’s another star.  It speaks to humanity, to love, to reproduction, to the the continuation that is life.  It blows my mind how smart I am without even trying.  Hehe.

Some prototypes for your enjoyment.

Business card – Version 1.0

Where things started.  From here I found a font that I liked and then I got to have some real fun.

Really liking the look of this.  Looks like me – dark and sporty. Also, it’s starting to remind me of a spider web, a metaphor I can get down with.  All seamstresses and cloth workers have spiders, the weavers of the natural world, as their mascot.

Now I’m just showing off.  But seriously, I might have to get this drawn onto my body permanently.

Love, love, love.

I could go on like this forever.  For now…

Love and Enjoy!


And·We’re·Off

I officially started working on garment draping and construction last week.  Here are some photos of a camisole, counted as underwear and not part of the official garment collection, I started Sunday.  So far things are going okay.  I have to say that I’ve been a bit nervous about sewing again, even though I am super comfortable with it.  It’s been about 6 months since I’ve done any serious stitching.  I have this lingering fear that I’ll wake up and all of my skills will be gone.

The design for this garment is simple and sweet, but also a little naughty.  Kind of like me.  It’s made from the two end triangles of the flag.  The flags I am working with are an enormous 3 feet by 5 feet, so the scale and proportions of the garments I’ve been drafting are comically oversize.  I laugh with pure amusement while trying on the various mockups.  This is going to be so fun for me.

This triangle.

It’s made from a stretch nylon wickaway fabric, and is bound with a soft, knitted foldover elastic.  As you can see the sides aren’t sewn up yet, and the foldover elastic still has to be topstitiched.  I spent the better part of the evening trying to achieve a good-looking finish for the binding, but had no luck.  And I can’t stitch the sides till that part is done, so I am at a stand still with this garment until I do some problem solving.  I plan on buying some wholly nylon thread and using it in the bobbin.  I’ve heard this does wonders.  If not, it’s off to the sewing machine shop with me.  Might be time to buy that coverstitch machine I’ve been pining after.

I rather like the look of the garment with the sides unstitched.  I didn’t extend the binding far enough down to do it on this version but will probably apply that to a later camisole.  If I were to remake it again I already know what I would do differently – make the neck straps bigger (or attach one strap to some kind of closure)!  I can barely fit my head through.  Oh, well.  I’ll suffer a bit and look damn good while doing it.

You may have noticed that the garment doesn’t actually cover the apex (seamstress’ terminology for nipple).  I suppose this makes it a riff on the monokini.  That’s what makes it fun.

Speaking of monokinis, I should make a pair of undies that’s based on that idea.  Hmmmm….

Love and Enjoy!


Meeting Myself |Week of September 25th|

How do I recap this month?  I’m not sure, it’s been unlike any other month so far.

I first want to take a moment to thank everyone who regularly checks up on the blog.  Your viewership really matters to me.  You may not have noticed yet, but this project is my obsession.  It’s nice to know that there are some people are interested in being in my world, even if it’s for a short visit.  Thanks for the time that you spend with me here.

I tried to post something everyday this month, even if it was just an image or a video.  Some days I managed to get two posts in, which felt really good.  I’m getting used to making this a daily process, as we’re quickly approaching the celebration of the birth of Jesus.  It takes a lot of time, but I really love being on the blog, so I know I’ll be okay.

In webblog developments, I added a page called About·the·Blog, which describes the purpose of this site and provides ideas for navigating through the posts.  If you’re new to the site it’s a great way to introduce yourself to what I’ve been doing over the past ten months.

I spent the past few months trying to figure out how I would get access to the machines I need to make this project a reality.  I worried and fretted, and finally decided that one of the big points that I’m trying to make (to myself) with the project is that I can make beautifully meaningful art with whatever it is that I have.  I don’t need to go out and spend a bunch of cash on the newest, shiniest, most advanced piece of equipment in sewing technology.  I can find a way to make the things I already have will work for me.  As soon as I got comfortable with this thought, a co-worker offered me a piece of equipment that I really needed!  It’s truly amazing to watch things fall into place.  It makes me feel like this is what I’m supposed to be doing.  Brings me to tears sometimes.

I also found out about a space called Noise Bridge here in the Mission.  It’s a collective space that provides free access to all sorts of equipment.  They have some nice machines over there, so if mine fail to do what I need them to do or they break, I now have a backup plan in place.  Everything works out the way it should.

I’ll be going to LA next week to see Deborah Willis’ exhibit, Posing Beauty, at USC.  I am incredibly excited about this.  I spent a good part of this month applying for new jobs, so I initially thought that I wouldn’t be able to make it down south.  I even emailed someone at USC to see if they would be recording the panel they’re hosting on the 4th so I could see footage of it without having to actually attend.  I was promptly informed that USC doesn’t have the money to pay someone to record this event, so I decided missing the event wasn’t an option.  Now I’m tempted to record the damn thing myself.    I’ve been having to control my fantasies of meeting Deborah Willis and Carrie Mae Weems, who will also be in attendance and speaking on the panel.  These women are celebrities to me.  How could USC not have the money to record this event!!!  It’s ridiculous.

The design process is progressing slowly.  I think the longer I can wait to finalize the designs the better.  I am still taking in information from current fall lines aaaaand the Spring 2012 shows are happening right now, so I’ll probably be checking in on those after they end in early October.  Every piece has a solid concept behind it and I have a general idea of the shapes I’ll be using, now it all just has to come together.

I wanted to end this post with a song by M. Ward, one of my favorite recording artists.  I will probably do a post featuring his love songs soon.  They’re the best.  This song seems particularly applicable to this month.  I think life is trying to teach me to just to accept things as they come to me.  Que sera, sera.

The Brakeman is letting off some steam,
This has to be the slowest train that I have ever seen
and the Sandman’s waiting to deliver me my dream.

Guess I’ll lay my head against my elbow and the window

Watch the wheels go,

Watch the wheels go.

Roll on, roll on, oh little train
Brakeman blow your whistle
Throw your weight upon the chain.

Make way,

for whatever will be, will be

Between the Sandman, the Brakeman, and me.

And the Sandman’s waiting to deliver me my dream,

deliver me my dream,

deliver me my dream,

Today.

Guess I’ll lay my head against my elbow and the window

Let my wheels go,

let my wheels go.

Roll on, roll on, oh little train
Brakeman blow your whistle
Throw your weight upon the chain.

Now make way,

whatever will be, will be,

For the Sandman, the Brakeman, and me.

Roll on, roll on, oh little train,
Brakeman blow your whistle,
Throw your weight upon the chain

Oh make way,

whatever will be, will be

For the Sandman, the Brakeman and me.


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