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Good Morning Parents!

Today, I, Bhakti Wadehra of class 12-D will be presenting to you a short presentation on How a
garment is conceptualised and produced by a designer?

The first step followed by a designer is curating a moodboard. A moodboard is a collage that serves
as an inspiration to the designer while designing the garment. It highlights a specific visual style in
physical or digital form. ... Fashion mood boards can include magazine clippings, photographs, color
swatches, fabric swatches, texture samples, and more.

The second step of the design process is to use the moodboard to create sketches of the garment.
This is the process of communicating and conceptualise the ideas formed in the designers mind. It
begins with fashion illustration, drawing and painting and is used by designers to brainstorm their
ideas on paper or digital platforms.

The third step is selecting the fabric that will be used to produce the garment and source it.Fabric
selection is a crucial step in designing a project because fabrics are designed for specific
applications, a fabric manufactured for one purpose, may not be adaptable for another use. …

The fourth step of the design process is sampling the product and reviewing its fit. Sampling is a
process of making a product proto-type prior to starting bulk production. The sampling process covers
garment fit checking, fabric and trims quality checking, approval value-added processes, and approval of
complete finished garment.

Finally, the design has to get approved before going into productionAfter checking the fit of the garment
from sampling, a designer working under a label needs to get the sample approved by the authorities before
it can be sent into production. During approval, viability of garment in the market and overiew of the design
and fabric is conducted.

The last step of the design process is the production of the garments, Production describes the process by
which concepts are made into a saleable physical product. In most cases, this means going from a
small set of samples or prototypes to commercial quantities of the item or style, often across multiple
sizes, colours and patterns.

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