Hashtag Print | Womenswear Collection

Person in a white shirt and patterned pants, arms crossed, standing against a white brick wall.
Woman in a patterned button-up shirt, facing forward against a blurred outdoor background.
Person in a patterned coat and pants walking on wet pavement in red heels.
Person wearing a patterned blouse and black pants, shown standing in profile and close-up near a wall.
Woman in floral blouse shown front and back against a windowed urban wall
Person in white shirt and patterned skirt standing by a brick wall, holding a small object.
Fashion model in white shirt wearing a patterned teal, pink, and black scarf
Person in a white shirt and patterned pants stands on a sidewalk beside a building.
Woman in a floral dress standing outdoors beside a building, shown front and side views.

Flamingo Textile Print Design

Hashtag Print is my second textile design collaboration with Melbourne independent fashion label CHORUS.


What I love the most about our collaborations is that the end result is always surprising, outside of my graphical repertoire and conceptually very strong.

 

Hashtag Briefing


The concept behind the Hashtag Print is the ‘selfie’ culture and the trend for ‘outfit of the day’ shots on fashion blogs, analysing the difference between those shots that are always showing their faces, and those that cut their heads out of the picture due to shyness/insecurity/less interest in self promotion.



The print can look very retro and formal/grown up out of a subject matter that is very contemporary.


Hashtag design process


My friend the talented designer, Lauren Vilitati, has always been an inspiration for me. When this project came up she was the first person I thought of. I jumped on her social media accounts and decided to download a few images of her and started to experiment with simple line work capturing the main details.


The print combines faces with headless bodies forming a bold repeat. I remembered a folder with original sketches from my life drawings classes in Brisbane back in 2008. I scanned my drawings and re-worked them using the same simple lines as the portraits. The third element I introduced was organic forms from the Canna Indica plant. Lastly, a small detail to tie the whole idea together was the introduction of hashtags inside the textile print.


Check out my first and third fashion collections with CHORUS.


Services

Illustration

Textile design

Surface pattern design

Industries

Womenswear Collection
Fashion

Credits

Textile designer: Maria Montes
Client
: Cassandra Wheat
Fashion Label: CHORUS (AU)