MFIT Assistant Curator Elizabeth Way, editor of the book "Black Designers in American Fashion" (Bloomsbury, 2021), and authors Kristen E. Stewart, Katie Knowles, and Darnell Jamal Lisby discuss the significance of Black American fashion makers from the nineteenth century to the late twentieth century. Black designers have always impacted American fashion culture, and these scholars' works reveal their erased histories
Dr. Monica Miller and Eric Darnell Pritchard, in conversation about Patrick Kelly at The Museum at F...
Between the 1920s and the 1970s, American economic culture began to emphasize the value of consumpti...
The exhibition focused on dress practices amongst black people in Britain from the late 1940s to 200...
Elizabeth Way, associate curator at The Museum at FIT, presents on her book, Black Designers in Amer...
82 pagesIn this study I examine the experiences of contemporary Black fashion designers through thei...
Elizabeth Way at The Museum at FIT's annual fashion symposium, Black Fashion Designers, held on Mond...
Black Style is a dialogue on dress and textiles associated with the African diaspora. It looks at di...
The fashion industry has been criticized in recent years for its lack of racial diversity. While the...
Elizabeth Way, in conversation with Teri Agins, Dario Calmese, and Constance White at The Museum at ...
Throughout American history, Black women have been treated as the most inferior group. Social status...
As an archaeologist with experience in textile craft, I have developed a critical and analytical per...
During the Fall 2012 New York Fashion Week preview, only two African American designers showcased co...
The article reviews the book Slaves to Fashion: Black Dandyism and the Styling of Black Diasporic I...
On February 27, 2018, author Constance White joined Dr. Valerie Steele to discuss the influence of b...
This dissertation examines such varied sources as Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Eastman Johnson’s genre paintin...
Dr. Monica Miller and Eric Darnell Pritchard, in conversation about Patrick Kelly at The Museum at F...
Between the 1920s and the 1970s, American economic culture began to emphasize the value of consumpti...
The exhibition focused on dress practices amongst black people in Britain from the late 1940s to 200...
Elizabeth Way, associate curator at The Museum at FIT, presents on her book, Black Designers in Amer...
82 pagesIn this study I examine the experiences of contemporary Black fashion designers through thei...
Elizabeth Way at The Museum at FIT's annual fashion symposium, Black Fashion Designers, held on Mond...
Black Style is a dialogue on dress and textiles associated with the African diaspora. It looks at di...
The fashion industry has been criticized in recent years for its lack of racial diversity. While the...
Elizabeth Way, in conversation with Teri Agins, Dario Calmese, and Constance White at The Museum at ...
Throughout American history, Black women have been treated as the most inferior group. Social status...
As an archaeologist with experience in textile craft, I have developed a critical and analytical per...
During the Fall 2012 New York Fashion Week preview, only two African American designers showcased co...
The article reviews the book Slaves to Fashion: Black Dandyism and the Styling of Black Diasporic I...
On February 27, 2018, author Constance White joined Dr. Valerie Steele to discuss the influence of b...
This dissertation examines such varied sources as Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Eastman Johnson’s genre paintin...
Dr. Monica Miller and Eric Darnell Pritchard, in conversation about Patrick Kelly at The Museum at F...
Between the 1920s and the 1970s, American economic culture began to emphasize the value of consumpti...
The exhibition focused on dress practices amongst black people in Britain from the late 1940s to 200...