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Usha Felicitates Harshita Adikari with Best Garment Construction Award at NIFT Graduation Show 2025
Usha Felicitates Harshita Adikari with Best Garment Construction Award at NIFT Graduation Show 2025

Hans India

time15 hours ago

  • Business
  • Hans India

Usha Felicitates Harshita Adikari with Best Garment Construction Award at NIFT Graduation Show 2025

Hyderabad June 2025: Usha International, India's leading sewing machine brand, felicitated the winner of the 'NIFT Best Garment Construction Award 2025' during the Graduation Show of the National Institute of Fashion Technology (NIFT), Hyderabad. Since 2000, Usha has annually presented this prestigious award to recognize and encourage budding fashion designers with exceptional talent as they step out into the world to make their mark. This year, the award was conferred upon graduating fashion design students across 15 NIFT campuses nationwide, including New Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Gandhinagar, Bhubaneswar, Patna, Kangra, Kannur, Jodhpur, Shillong, Srinagar, and Raebareli. The best student creations across five disciplines – Accessory Design ('Design Showcase'), Fashion Comsmunication ('iDeΩΩ'), Fashion Design ('FashioNova'), Fashion Management Studies ('Bottomline'), and Leather Design ('Leaxotica') – were showcased at the Graduation Show 2025, celebrating exquisite craftsmanship that captured the diverse and evolving design sensibilities of NIFT's graduating cohort. The event was graced by several distinguished guests, including Smt. Shanta Kumari, IAS, DG, MRC MRD; Smt. Divya, CEO, SERP; and Smt. Shikha Goal, IPS, among others. As part of the showcase, Harshita Adikari was honoured with the coveted 'NIFT Best Garment Construction Award 2025', receiving an Usha Janome Allure DLX sewing machine and a certificate of excellence. Commenting on the occasion, the Usha spokesperson said, 'We are proud to be associated with NIFT, an institution that nurtures and hones the creativity and innovation of the next generation of fashion leaders helping them channelise and leverage their potential. Each year, we celebrate the remarkable talent of these young designers and remain committed to empowering them by offering platforms that help transform their vision into impactful designs.' Usha International has consistently set new benchmarks in the industry by introducing technologically advanced sewing machines tailored for modern consumers. Usha Janome Allure DLX, the innovative, state-of-the-art sewing machine won by Harshita Adikari has automatic needle threading, with an LED sewing light, a feed drop lever for embroidery, 13 built-in stitch functions, and 21 applications including buttonhole stitch, rolled hemming, stretch stitching, embroidery, zip fixing, quilting, smocking, etc. A sturdy base provides 3x stronger stitches vis-à-vis other machines. Usha Janome Allure DLX sewing machine also has a free arm for circular stitching, and two dials for pattern and stitch length selection.

Fashion Institute of Technology Fall 2025 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion Institute of Technology Fall 2025 Ready-to-Wear Collection

Vogue

time12-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Vogue

Fashion Institute of Technology Fall 2025 Ready-to-Wear Collection

Sixty-seven members of the Fashion Institute of Technology's graduating class presented 82 looks in five categories—sportswear, children's wear, knitwear, intimate apparel, and special occasion wear—at the Future of Fashion show. The event was sponsored by Macy's, which will also put into production the designs of a number of students they selected. Over the past few years, students at design schools around the globe have been engaged with a progressive agenda. The work of this class was notably tamer in terms of palette and silhouette, and with no obvious explorations of gender. In fact, the manosphere was nowhere present—which can be partly explained by the fact that menswear at the school is only offered as an associate degree and is not included in the BA show. That's not to say that students shied away from topical subjects, (more on that to come), but as Troy Richards, dean of the School of Art and Design shared, 'what I feel like I've experienced this year was an almost overcorrection from some of the progressive politics that we were advancing.' Concurrently, in the aftermath of the pandemic, the dean has noticed that the students have 'reengaged with material…we've seen a rapid improvement in their hand skills and an interest in a variety of textures, of materials, of structure.' All of these qualities were present in the work of Allison Margaret Smith (looks 1 and 3), who kicked off the show with pieces made using raffia, straw, jute, and balsa wood, from a collection that she hoped would 'connect with the vast landscapes of America and pay tribute to the resources this land has provided for all its inhabitants.' Photographs of Pittsburgh's evolution from the Carnegie Museum of Art's Photography Collection were the starting point for Austin Marshalek's knitwear (looks 52 and 53), while Nathaniel Samuel's Belle Epoch-ish opera coat (look 80) was designed as a 'love letter' to New York. Roots and family continued to motivate students like Evelyn Hernandez (look 6) from Mexico who dreamed up a leg shawl, and Jegu Kim who presented a pretty and poufy ensemble that reinterpreted elements of traditional Korean attire (look 18). Jennifer Sze, the daughter of a stone mason, referenced her father's tools and materials in a sculptural pleated ensemble in shades of blue (look 60). Amanda McVey considered 'the traditions of the Scottish diaspora' by hand-shaving a plaid pattern into a shearling topper (look 26); Leyi Huang borrowed from 'religious practices of ancient Tibet' (looks 75/76) for her evening looks; and Bilegbayar Senegedorj was 'inspired by the shamanic traditions of the Mongolian steppe' (look 19). Borrowing from the tale of 'Şahmeran,' about 'the mystical and transformative power of the serpent,' Servan Bilici transformed a traditional jacket and pants into something delicate and unexpected (look 23).

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