The Bachelor of Arts in Fashion Knitwear Design Program prepares students to creatively address the fashion design process with a specialized upper division focus in knitwear design. The curriculum balances industry standards knit construction for full fashion knitwear as well as creative exploration of fiber and form for inspired design solutions. Students balance conventional design approaches with design innovation by mastering the hand loom as well as industrial knitting equipment and programming for fabric development, construction, specification, and cost analysis. They graduate having complet-ed design concepts for a collection and designing and producing fashion knit-wear garments that are featured at an exhibition attended by the industry.

REQUIRED CLASSES FOR BACHELOR OF ARTS (B.A.)

specifications and samples for a complete knitwear collection to be showcased at our annual indus-try-attended Bachelor of Arts Thesis Exhibition in the FIDM Museum & Galleries.

BDSN 3100A Advanced Practices in Color, Design, & 3-D Form

BDSN 3100B Advanced Theory in Color, Design, & 3-D Form

BDSN 3750 Advanced Garment Construction

GNST 2530 Principles of Kinesiology+

GNST 2530L Principles of Kinesiology Lab+

GNST 2630 Principles of Chemistry

GNST 3000 World Political History

GNST 3150 Research on Topics of Design History

GNST 3600 Future Trends in Society

GNST 3700 Multicultural Perspectives Through the Short Story

GNST 3750 Mapping Your World: Introduction to Global Production 3

GNST 3800 Icons of Culture: The Context of Meaning

GNST 3900 Issues in Contemporary Society

KNTD 3400 Fundamentals of Machine Knitting

KNTD 3700 Stitch & Color Design

KNTD 3800 Knit Garment Construction

KNTD 4200 Industrial Stitch Programming

KNTD 4400 Industrial Silhouette Programming

KNTD 4800 Knitwear Construction Studio

KNTD 4850 Knitwear Collection Design

MPDV 3600A Advanced Technical Illustration I

MPDV 3600B Advanced Technical Illustration II

TEXT 1750 Creating Fabric Structures (6 hours with Lab)

3

3

6

Total Units of Credit

What Our Students Learn In our program, students finalize design themes, silhouettes, and specifications using the latest technology. They research future trends and historic art and design movements to solve contemporary design problems. Working individually and in teams, students practice resolving design challenges with a global perspective taking into account cultural, political, socio-economic, environmental, regulatory, and ethical viewpoints.

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Why FIDM Our Industry Partner Projects allow students to collaborate on real-world design projects with industry leaders. As their final thesis project, students develop the concept,

Prerequisite: FIDM degree in Fashion Design or an external associate’s degree in a related field from an accredited college/university

One-on-one advisement is available to students from other FIDM Majors to consider eligibility for special admissions to this program. Contact the appropriate department chairperson.