April 14, 2010
April 3, 2010
Finally - Another Female in the House!
March 25, 2010
Join DC Threads for a Private Tour of the Textile Museum's Contemporary Japanese Fashion: The Mary Baskett Collection
The Textile Museum has graciously offered to host, for DC Threads, a private tour of two extraordinary exhibitions: Contemporary Japanese Fashion: The Mary Baskett Collection and the Fabrics of Feathers and Steel: The Innovation of Nuno. The Contemporary Japanese Fashion exhibit includes avant-garde garments from the collection of Mary Baskett, an art dealer and former curator of prints at the Cincinnati Art Museum who has been collecting and wearing Japanese high fashion since the 1960s. The Nuno exhibition features 18 examples from the Nuno studio, dating from the time of the company’s founding in 1984 to the present day. Nuno (meaning “functional fabric” in Japanese) integrates the techniques, materials and aesthetics of traditional Japanese textiles with cutting-edge technologies in order to create some of the world’s most innovative and influential fabrics.
When? Saturday April 3rd from 11:00am -12:00nn
Where? Textile Museum 2320 S Street, NW Washington, DC 20008-4088 Phone: (202) 667-0441
How Much? a $5 donation to the Textile Museum
How Do I Snag a Spot? We need to limit registration to 20 enthusiasts - so register SOON for this event at our registration page here.
February 22, 2010
"Fashion Fights Poverty" & the Wilson HS Clothing and Textile Program - A Seamless Match Made in Design Heaven!
Thursday, February 25, 7 to 10 PM
L2 Lounge, 3315 Cady's Alley NW (between 33 & 34 off M)
Washington, DC
Suggested donation $5
Come on out and represent DC Threads at this event!
January 22, 2010
Drumming in Ghana

January 17, 2010
"Instead of Dying, I Learned to Sew"


"Much to her relief, however, she found herself rejected by the prospective groom [after her parents tried to arranged her marriage]. His family had concluded that the slight and cultured May Asaki would not make a suitable wife for a chicken farmer.
Her mother quietly arranged for her to move to Los Angeles to attend a fashion and dressmaking school. May Asaki had been sewing for most of her life and designed her first dress, for a younger sister, when she was 12. In high school, she made clothes for her teachers.
Decades later [following internments during WWII], her skills as a seamstress would launch her on a globetrotting career with some of the greatest ballet stars in the world...."

"I really love the technique of sewing more than anything else…the seamstress is the one who knows fashion from the inside! That's the art form really, not fashion design, but the technique of how it's done."
January 15, 2010
Please Keep Haiti In Your Hearts and Head
January 13, 2010
The Traveling Ghana Pants


January 5, 2010
It's Back!


