Joanna Giudice trend-setting fashion art education
Diane Von Furstenberg is known for the wrap dress. Yves Saint Laurent for putting women in “power suits.” Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel for the iconic little black dress.
For her senior honors thesis at the C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University, the 21-year-old art education major from Centereach, N.Y. created wearable art — ten outfits made entirely out of items that most throw in the trash on a daily basis. Her collection includes a variety of pieces and styles, including a metallic vest made out of two VHS tapes, a black strapless dress and zigzag belt made from a trash bag and VHS tape, a metallic shawl made from four cassette tapes, a yellow and red circle skirt made from 65 “Shop Rite” bags and a stunning red corset made from 40 plastic bags.
“I love to see people’s reaction when they see it,” she said. “At first glance you can’t tell they are made out of plastic.”
Her work was acclaimed at “ReImagine: An Eco-Fashion Art Show” at C.W. Post in October, featuring her creations on living models. An appearance at the campus Fashion Show followed, and word began to spread. Today, Del Giudice has begun accepting orders for custom pieces and taught a class in trash-to-fashion at Half Hollow Hills East High School. She met Tim Gunn of the Bravo TV series “Project Runway” at a book signing, and the show’s season seven contestant Anthony Williams wore one of her ties at a costume party at Hillwood Art Museum at C.W. Post.
“It’s about getting the idea and concept out there for people to see,” she said. “It truly isn’t just reduce, reuse and recycling. It’s reimagining – up-cycling, transforming and giving something old, new life.”
Working without patterns, Del Giudice crochets her creations using “plarn,” a type of yarn created by cutting up and tying together plastic bags. She estimates that each piece takes about 20 hours, depending on its complexity. The more complicated the item, the more bags she uses — a purple and beige dress was constructed from about 60 Stop & Shop supermarket bags.
Source : www.fibre2fashion.com
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