Fashion Show
Tuesday, September 20th

Fashion Show to Highlight INTC in St. Louis
this September
North Carolina State’s students will present fashion
and apparel made from nonwoven fabrics
The worlds of nonwovens
and fashion will come together in a truly unique fashion show to be presented
during the International Nonwovens Technical Conference (INTC) in September.
In this event, 10 students working towards a Textile and Apparel Management
degree at North Carolina State University’s College of Textiles -- six
undergraduates, three graduate students and one Ph.D. student, along with advisor
Dr. Cindy Istook and Project Manager Stacey Frederick -- will demonstrate the
fashion aspects of these primarily “technically inspired” fabrics.
Organized and co-sponsored by INDA, Association of the Nonwoven Fabrics Industry,
and TAPPI, Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry, the annual INTC
is the pre-eminent global technical meeting for the nonwovens and engineered
fabrics industry. INTC 2005 will be held at the Millennium Hotel, St. Louis,
Mo., September 19-22. Ian M. Julian, Director of Synthetic Fibers, Chemical Market
Associates, Inc. will provide the keynote speech on energy costs.
Certain to be one of the highlights of the four-day Conference, the Fashion
Show is the result of a collaborative research project between North Carolina
State’s College of Textiles and the Freudenberg Nonwovens Group begun during
the Fall of 2004. Students designed the garments, made patterns, fitted prototypes
and constructed the ensembles.
The Fashion Show will display garments designed and modeled by North Carolina
State students using Freudenberg, DuPont, and PGI nonwoven fabrics. Students
and garments will be available for discussion and review during the table-top
session Wednesday night.
“The show is considered technical because we will be discussing the
issues of using nonwoven fabrics with woven patterns as well as other differences
and challenges when designing with nonwovens,” explains Kate Dutton, one
of the three graduate students participating in the project. “We hope to
show the industry that one day nonwovens could have a place in the fashion apparel
market.”
INDA President Rory Holmes welcomes the unique and ambitious undertaking
to the Conference. “INTC is all about developing new technologies to produce
more advanced finished products. Attendees will have a chance to see nonwoven
fabrics in actual fashion designs and this event will add some excitement and
flair to the conference.”
“I commend and applaud the North Carolina State students and their
advisors who have worked on this project and who will bring a little bit of fashion
to the world of nonwovens and technical textiles at INTC this year,” Holmes
adds.