Ladies and gentlemen, meet design jack-of-all-trades Courtney Marse. She’s a graphic designer, surface designer, apparel designer, textile designer and also teaches design at LSU. Her collection is the sole show for Thursday, March 19, during Southern Design Week in New Orleans, and Marse was gracious enough to answer a few questions for us about her designs.
Explain your process from idea to garment.
My process starts with developing non-traditional narratives. People and places inspire me. What many find interesting and inspiring in galleries, I find in people and places. When I travel, I visit the people, their intricacies and interactions, and places, the architecture and personality of a place. When I’m not able to travel, I do so through research and reading. After the story forms, I typically create watercolor and pencil illustrations to depict the story. The illustration is cut into an abstraction, which is used as a module to create a larger print. Parts of the original illustration are combined with the print to create designs that express the narrative that are then engineered to the form. It’s usually about this time that I’m pretty clear on what the silhouette should look like in order to further reflect the story.
This season, I’ve altered my process a bit to bring typography back into my work. I’m also focusing on refining silhouette with the hopes of moving toward production, so you’ll see familiar but limited silhouettes.