Maura Ireri is a recent fashion
graduate from ‘Centro de Diseño, Cine y Televisión’. For her final collection
she used patterns based on golden proportion that concluded in very simple,
meticulous and eye-catching white garments. With this collection, Maura proved
that the young crowd might be the boost that fashion in Mexico needs.
Maura by Homero Ramírez Picture courtesy of Maura Ireri |
Dressed in dark
colours and with her recognisable fringe covering her forehead, Maura opened the
door and let me in her flat. With a sweet smile and dark eyes, she guided me
through the place. It wasn’t the first time I was there, but I took a peek in
her room again, just to confirm how polished and neat she is with her room as
with her designs. White walls, orchids in a table corner, and a bit of an
angelical light coming in from the windows. We sat down on the main table, where
she had been painting her nails with a green-gold lacquer. She got back to what she was doing and I asked,
how did you get interested in fashion design?
She stopped painting
her nails and very calmly and with a smooth accent between her words, said, “everything started with drawing”. After
learning how to draw with her father who’s an architect, Maura drew outfits for
her friends just for fun. Then, she decided to take things a bit more seriously
and went on pattern-making and sewing courses when she was in high school. She also
chose to move away from her hometown, Uruapan, Michoacán, to come and study to Mexico’s
capital. “Because fashion was here”, justified
Maura.
In
Mexico City, there are three well–known fashion schools, one of which is Centro
de Diseño, Cine y Televisión (Center of Design, Film and Television) where Maura
studied. After the first year of studying photography, drawing and art history; while mixing with students from film, industrial and interior design, you focus
on fashion and textiles. Classes vary from knitting, screen-printing to fashion
history.
She also had the chance to study one semester in Barcelona, so I asked what was the biggest difference that she noticed. “In BAU (School of Design, Barcelona), there was much more freedom for design, they weren’t very responsible, but they were more experimental.” In Mexico, as she observed, teachers tend to restrict your way into a certain type of design, “and without realizing it, you are built in a more commercial, conservative path.”
Perhaps within
reason, because as Maura explained, “Mexico
is very conservative, people in Mexico City dare more, especially those in the
artistic scene, but the population in general prefer the jeans and the
t-shirt.” The lack of fashion culture, and the high amount of foreign cheap
shops like Zara, make it hard for someone to buy Mexican fashion. Then again,
in such a populated country and with a constant economical crisis, people worry
more about their basic needs. So, how can someone even bother to think about
fashion?
Garments from Maura's final collection Picture Courtesy of Maura Ireri |
Being in the fashion industry is not the best-paid job in Mexico, but how can it be when being a fashion designer is not a very respected profession? “In Mexico most people don’t understand the difference between a seamstress and a designer”, said Maura. What’s the biggest limitation you’ve had? She was quiet for a moment, then said, “the lack of support to show yourself as a new designer.” The process that it takes for a young designer to appear in a runway is rather slow. As a lot of you might know, little shops in trendy zones that sell Mexican fashion garments are the way to start as a designer. Then big platforms like Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week or IDM (International Designers Mexico) are the next step if you’ve made it in a big way.
How would you deal
with the lack of economical support towards designers? “I think until it happens to me, I’ll know,” she said giggling. So while she figures this out, and
gains more experience in fashion design, Maura is showing with her collection
that it’s possible to bring Mexican traditions into a contemporary design. “I took the ‘bejuco’ technique that chairs
are sometimes made of, it is very Mexican, and I applied it on a dress,” she
said referring to the black dress she wore the day she presented her final
collection.
Despite the lack of
costumers, fashion design is getting increasingly popular as a career in
Mexico, as more designers emerge into the scene. Giving Mexican fashion
students hope that it is a growing industry and it might be very different in
the near future. “In a few years, I hope
that it’s easier, so I can start my brand properly,” concluded Maura.
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Fashion in Mexico: Maura Ireri is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-SinObraDerivada 3.0 Unported License.
Creado a partir de la obra en http://fashion-aroundtheworld.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/fashion-in-mexico-maura-ireri.html.