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01/2009 - Philadelphia University Student Receives $25,000 Grant |
Using Martex Fiber / Jimtex Yarns Jessica Steele, a senior
fashion design major, was awarded a prestigious $25,000 Geoffrey Beene
National Scholarship Jan. 7 at the YMA Geoffrey Beene Fashion
Scholarship Dinner in New York.
“This is huge, it’s really
exciting,” said Steele, who was one of four student winners announced
at the dinner. “I think everyone appreciates the work that goes into
winning this award ? the balance between school and working on the
scholarship case study. It’s great to see that hard work pay off.”
This
is the second year in a row that a fashion design student from
Philadelphia University has won the selective industry award. This
year’s other winners are from Parsons The New School for Design,
Cornell University and Iowa State University.
“We are extremely
proud of Jessica for her commitment and dedication to her chosen
field,” said Clara Henry, director of Philadelphia University’s Fashion
Design Program. “She demonstrated an extraordinary degree of focused
energy and grace under very stressful and competitive circumstances,
while at the same time managing a full roster of classes. She never
wavered from the professional that she is ? she truly exemplifies the
Philadelphia University spirit.”
In addition to the $25,000
award, Steele and two other Philadelphia University fashion design
students, Rebecca Krane and Kate Schnitzer, won YMA scholarships of
$5,000 each.
“We congratulate all three winners ? Jessica,
Rebecca and Kate ? for their professionalism and commitment,” Henry
said. “I expect great things from each of them as they make their mark
in the fashion industry.”
This is the second year the YMA
awarded $25,000 scholarships to the top students in the country. The
scholarships were funded in part through a bequest from the estate of
famed designer Geoffrey Beene. The annual scholarship fund dinner is a
top industry event attended by designers and fashion industry
officials. This year, honorees included designer Zac Posen, and the
event was hosted by Tim Gunn, a host of Bravo’s Project Runway and
chief creative officer for Liz Claiborne Inc.
Steele, 21,
expects the prestigious award to open some doors for her when she
enters the fashion industry after her May graduation. Her plans
include moving to New York, where she hopes to work for a small fashion
house, perhaps a firm like Nanette Lapore, where she had an internship
last year. Steele studied in London last spring and, as a sophomore,
had her children’s designs modeled in Philadelphia University’s 2007
Fashion Show. Eventually, she would like to start her own fashion line.
Scholarship
applicants had to complete a detailed case study to design a
sustainable apparel brand that could sell at a mass market level ? in
other words, at a sustainable price point. “This feeds into the larger
trend of going green,” noted Steele, who had a little over a month to
turn the project in before Thanksgiving.
Steele designed a
menswear line with a young, urban caché to sell at Macy’s. Her brand,
called Steele Plains, featured natural clothing for a “globally
conscious, modern young man who wants to wear trendy designs and who is
also environmentally responsible,” she said. To make the line
sustainable, she proposed using organic and natural fibers, sourcing
some work locally to cut down the carbon footprint of shipping the
products, but also planned to source some manufacturing internationally
to keep costs down. She used fabric samples from Martex Fiber Corp., a
Philadelphia firm that recycles factory-floor scraps for use in new
textiles.
On Dec. 21, Steele found out she was one of eight
finalists and went to New York on Jan. 5 to present her case study
before a panel of judges. Two days later, at the awards dinner, Steele
waited nervously for the announcement and then she heard her name
called. “It was really exciting,” she said, “and a little
overwhelming.”
Casey Saccomanno ’08 received a $25,000 YMA
Geoffrey Beene Fashion Scholarship in its inaugural year in Jan. 2008,
as well as a $5,000 YMA scholarship. Philadelphia University fashion
design students Janelle Frank and Sandra Huffaker also won YMA
scholarships of $5,000 each last year.
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