I have been studying fashion illustration and pattern construction throughout the fall of 2014. Most of the time was consumed by pattern making: By given measurements constructing patterns based on using a design principle developed by Danish engineer Moesgaard, then cutting it in paper and putting it together w pins into a paper garment. Well, and then a couple of hours a week were spent on fashion illustration.
Illustration for a sun suit collection.
Maria Callas' face on a body drawn from imagination.
Sun suit sketch.
I used a face from Gustav Klimt's painting of Adam and Eve for reference for this illustration. Her face just vaguely resembles Eve's face.
This is a smaller piece of the mood board I created for my sun suit collection. With lemon cakes, my great grandmothers blue and white china teacup half filled with coffee on the wooden porch of the country house; pears, lemons, bees, seashells, seahorses, retro cotton swimsuits, victorian lace, 18th century corsets and a photograph of my grandmother Anna-Greta Blomqvist in her swimsuit in the 1950's, in a rowing boat ,surrounded by the dark water and tall firs of northern Sweden. My grand dad Rune photographed her. The idea of the swimsuit collection is rather that of a sunbathing suit one: Made to wear sitting under pine trees, sipping coffee in the quiet of nature distant from cities; strolling through the woods with beams of sunlight filtered through the canopy, chatting to friends and dipping your feet in the water. The cut of the sun suit is inspired by fashion of the 1950's, the Italian renaissance and victorian costume. It's a big mash up, but if done right, I think it could look good.
Sketches of sunbathing suits
I borrowed this flower from Sandro Botticelli, so to speak, it being one of Venus' flowers being thrown at her in the painting "The Birth of Venus". In times of having very little time to come up with ideas, I tend to look to renaiassance painters for inspiration.
This little portrait ( school work) is something I made while having tea in the garden of Villa San Michele on Capri, high up on that beautiful rock of an island. I walk through the house and gardens. I drink green tea. The sea reflects the afternoon sun as a white light, and Vesuvio appears vaguely across the water like a violet bulge. It's very quiet. The sea lies far below us. This high up the wind makes odd and comforting noises. American ladies at the next table, too, draw pictures in their sketchbooks. I imagine the history of San Michele and the island. The Phoenecians, the ancient Greeks and Romans. All sorts of artists visiting. Oscar Wilde. Birgitta Stenberg. And philantropist Axel Munthe himself. I'd like to know more about him.
Pearl and crystal crown - made for an arctic mermaid. Inspired by the arctic enviroment. Wooden beads painted w oil paints, some of them resembling bird eggs.
I had to snap a selfie wearing the crown, of course, amongst tooth paste stains and all.
The beautiful arctic maid, wearing a fur made from polar teddybears: She turned out a bit like a mash up of Lady Gaga and a mythological creature of nature.
Turning wood into real pearls and eggs. True story.