Lucinda Chambers partners with Business of Fashion for Online Styling Course

Benn98

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I'm seriously considering taking this up. :innocent: I mean, it's only £195 and adding something worthwhile to your resume is always a plus. I'm sure she won't only teach us 101 ways to pile as many items possible.

Introducing Lucinda Chambers’ Fashion Styling and Image Making Course for BoF

We are proud to introduce our latest online course with the renowned fashion stylist, launching today.

By Osman Ahmed
November 21, 2017 05:25

LONDON, United Kingdom — Today, styling is one of fashion’s most sought-after professions. As traditional media and commerce is shifting, however, the role of the stylist is evolving. Luscious magazine editorials, catwalk shows and billboard advertising campaigns still remain the most visible elements of a stylist’s work, but other opportunities have emerged in today’s fashion world for a new generation. The vocation is no longer as elusive and exclusive as it once was.

That’s why BoF has partnered with legendary stylist Lucinda Chambers to create an online course that explains the craft, process and opportunities around styling in today’s fashion industry. Chambers has spent 36 years at the forefront of magazine publishing as fashion director of British Elle and British Vogue, where she established long-lasting relationships with some of the world’s leading photographers, including Patrick Demarchelier, Nick Knight and Paolo Roversi. Throughout her career, she has also worked closely with fashion houses such as Marni, Prada, Jil Sander and Chanel. As recently as this month, she styled Pharrell Williams and Imaan Hammam for the December 2017 cover of US Vogue.

Fashion Styling and Image Making is Chambers’ online guide for aspiring stylists, advising how to develop concepts and research; organise shoots; work between editorial and commercial clients; and develop a dynamic portfolio that will help getting that elusive foot in the door.

“Today, the opportunities are endless,” says Chambers. “When I started out, it was a very different thing. We actually weren’t called stylists — we were called fashion editors — and you were always really affiliated to a publication. These days it’s quite rare that you only work for one publication, and in that respect the net has been thrown incredibly wide.”

Online courses and classes — now embraced by leading institutions like Harvard, MIT, Oxford and Cambridge — have broken down major financial and geographical barriers to knowledge-sharing and can do the same in fashion education. Fashion styling is a notoriously un-academic vocation that is often learned on the job, by assisting fashion editors and freelance stylists. This course aims to bridge the gap for those who are interested in pursuing a career in image-making, available to anyone with good access to the Internet, far from traditional fashion hubs and top institutions.

“I would love to say that I came out of the womb with an incredible sense of fashion or style or passion or sense of what I wanted to be doing in life and that would just be lying,” says Chambers, who has also enlisted some of her long-term collaborators, such as hair stylist Sam McKnight, makeup artist Val Garland, set designer Shona Heath and agent Beverley Streeter for advice from industry leaders. “When you’re thinking about the sort of stylist you want to be, creating your own identity, what your vision is, what your worldview is, I don’t think you have to decide that too quickly.”

Whereas once, styling would be limited to magazine editorials, advertising and catwalk, today there are plenty of opportunities within e-commerce, celebrity styling, video content, social media, books and independent zines. “It is a craft and a skill that you can learn,” Chambers affirms. “You don’t have to have been the most extraordinary, radical, amazing-looking, highly-intelligent, beautifully-dressed fashionista to do this job. What I would hope for and wish for is that you can start off with a tiny jag of interest in something, a slight curiosity or feeling that maybe this is for you.”

Chambers is the ideal guide for aspiring stylists, and the self-directed course is available to anyone around the world. “I hope people take away a feeling and a sense that it’s completely doable, that styling isn’t something that’s remote and beyond your reach,” Chambers adds. “It’s something that is a craft that can be learnt and if you have passion, it’s completely achievable.”

Source: Businessoffashion.com
 
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It sounds like it will cover the sorts of things that a stylist needs to know to get started as an aspiring stylist. It seems to be about the business end of it. how to plan it all out and how to actually get the gigs .... rather than just teaching her own taste and concepts (which cannot actually be learned and each stylist must have his/her own vision, anyway). This one actually might be worth the money, if it can teach you how to make money as a stylist.
 
It sounds like it will cover the sorts of things that a stylist needs to know to get started as an aspiring stylist. It seems to be about the business end of it. how to plan it all out and how to actually get the gigs .... rather than just teaching her own taste and concepts (which cannot actually be learned and each stylist must have his/her own vision, anyway). This one actually might be worth the money, if it can teach you how to make money as a stylist.

I was just being facetious, Bette. Had a look at the overview and it actually does look like a good investment. Also, it comes with accreditation which is a plus. Will without a doubt start this in January.
 
Nah ... I didn't take you the wrong way. :flower:

I was just adding my positive thoughts, because most of the time I pontificate about how most styling courses are not useful nor are they worth the money.

This one actually sounds good.
 
I'm seriously considering taking this up. :innocent: I mean, it's only £195 and adding something worthwhile to your resume is always a plus. I'm sure she won't only teach us 101 ways to pile as many items possible.



Source: Businessoffashion.com

Hi, Benn! I am curious if you started to study on this course.

If you don't mind, share your experience, please.

I am looking for decent possibility to improve my knowledge, so i am wondering it would be a nice choice or not.

Thank you in advance
 

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