Elizabeth Galloway Fashion Academy
Elizabeth Galloway Fashion Academy
ELIZABETH GALLOWAY
Elizabeth grew up inspired by her grandmother, a dressmaker, teacher and a huge influence on Elizabeth’s life. She made Elizabeth’s clothes and Elizabeth would watch her work in fascination. With an ingrained love of clothing, Elizabeth started learning from a very young age to make her own clothes, as taught by her grandmother. Later, she was able to make whatever she wanted, whenever she wanted it. Her mother provided the patterns and the fabrics on the strict condition that Elizabeth had to use them carefully and that she had to wear what she made. This gave Elizabeth a wonderful sense of freedom of self-expression, not being bound by what was available in small-town shops at the time, and also gave her a sense of independence. At the same time, the rigorous rules that her mother placed on her instilled in Elizabeth the importance of not wasting anything and the follow-through to make sure things were designed and constructed well, to ensure that they fit comfortably and stylishly. Elizabeth’s childhood experiences, as taught to her by her grandmother and mother, grew into a love of being able to teach others to make their own clothes and achieve their own sense of expression, empowerment and independence.
HOW IT ALL STARTED
Elizabeth started teaching women to sew in Pretoria so that she could achieve some financial and emotional independence for herself and help other women achieve the same. During this time Elizabeth was running a brand and selling clothes, whilst at the same time providing informal skills training in pattern-making and garment construction. Ten women who were housewives worked with her, meeting once a week in informal spaces such as theatres, church halls and school halls, as a means of enjoyment and earning an income to become more self-sufficient.
As a single mother, Elizabeth moved to Cape Town and worked to set up a similar informal initiative, also going into historically disadvantaged areas such as Cloetesville, Idas Valley and Kayamandi to find women who showed an interest and wanted to sew. Many of these women wanted to learn the skills then go back into their communities and sew and sell garments for themselves, so Elizabeth helped them to do this, teaching a group of adult women once a week.
The shift to younger learners happened when one of the women asked whether her daughter, who had just finished matric, could join, and Elizabeth started training her, following which other young people joined. Elizabeth was still teaching informally and renting space but it was at around this time that she approached the bank in order to buy some land. At that time, Technopark in Stellenbosch was just a vast open field and Elizabeth was one of the first to build on what is today a thriving business hub for Stellenbosch and the surrounding areas, with a large number of buildings have sprung up all around her over the years.
Originally, it was difficult for Elizabeth to get approved plans because building requirements in Technopark stipulated that 200m2 was the minimum size build, but there weren’t the funds at the time to build to that extent, so a small square block of 100m2 was built with the promise to build bigger later on. It was 1996 and the Elizabeth Galloway Academy of Fashion was born. Two years later Elizabeth built the second floor, and over a period of time expanded across, followed by the adjoining building next door, as more and more students came through the doors and the school started to establish its reputation for thorough training whilst providing individual attention to students.
CONTEXT
There wasn’t an overarching strategy at the time of the academy’s inception. “The story of the Elizabeth Galloway Academy of Fashion is a personal story of survival – when I started the school it was about working towards having bread on the table, and about helping other women gain some financial independence. I didn’t have a grand vision.” As the numbers grew the academy started to take shape organically. Some people at the time thought that starting school was crazy in the climate of Western Cape clothing manufacturing industry decline at the time. This was due to cheap Chinese imports in conjunction with local manufacturers focusing on exports and eroding their local client base. However, Elizabeth knew there was still an opportunity, and in spite of the decline in local manufacturing, the academy started to thrive.
PERIOD OF GROWTH
The young people Elizabeth was teaching wanted a qualification that they could take to potential employers, so Elizabeth needed to find ways to formalise the training she was offering. Having heard about the international City & Guilds accreditations in the UK, the process was started off getting those qualifications in Fashion Design in place in 1998. Elizabeth was in her 30’s then and travelled for the first time abroad to take a portfolio of student work across to City & Guilds of London in order to convince them to accredit the academy. Impressed with the work at Elizabeth Galloway, they did.
INVESTING IN THE FUTURE
As Elizabeth was aware, external circumstances are always changing and you have to stay relevant and up to date. She, therefore, from the outset, supported and encouraged her teaching staff to become more highly qualified, core to her aim of focusing on individual growth and empowerment.
Elizabeth’s philosophy of investing in staff and their professional development continues to be core to the values of the academy, just as much as staff are invested in the Elizabeth Galloway students and their future career success. From 2004 to 2011 Gideon Malherbe and Elizabeth managed the academy together. A number of the academy’s staff have been with Elizabeth and continuously developing and passing on their expertise to students for many years. Inez, Elizabeth’s oldest daughter, joined the management of the academy in 2009 in a Human Resources capacity, after having studied at UCT. She was made a director in 2011 and now oversees the running of the academy with a combination of fashion and business expertise.
A FAMILY FASHION BUSINESS
Today, Elizabeth and Inez work hand-in-hand at the academy, each bringing their unique strengths and perspectives to the academy. Elizabeth has always valued the freedom and self-expression that designing and sewing have brought her, and she has a passion for passing that on to students at Elizabeth Galloway. For her, fashion is about individuality, which is something the academy embodies at its core in the culture of the school. “It’s important to not just follow but to think. It’s not just about glamour, but about what fashion represents, and clothes are intensely personal – they are the closest thing you put next to your body.” From a strong practical training in Fashion Design, Elizabeth also recognises the growing need for a balance of vocational and theoretical and business grounding in fashion: “Vocational training has its place and it’s an important place, and so does an academic education. You need to understand both the academic world and the world of the artisan, in order to grow an industry.” Elizabeth believes that you need to be able to see the wider picture, so the academic side is growing in importance at Elizabeth Galloway, initiated primarily by Inez.
Inez sees fashion from an academic perspective as an incredibly interesting field, be it from a sociological, historical, agricultural, technological, economic, psychological, or environmental perspective: “It is a frivolous, beautiful and fun thing – fashionable clothing – but with a very serious and truly global impact on all above-mentioned areas of life. It can also be a political hot-spot for advocating for labour rights. In a job scarce country and economy, you also do not need much to make and sell a garment and become on some level economically independent. A garment is a simple thing which requires simple machinery and processes to make, yet fashion is widely impactful in society.”
Both agree that regardless of the field of fashion that students enter into after they graduate, it is vital that they understand the world of fashion beyond design. The diploma courses take students on a journey “From concept to consumer” to ensure that they develop a strong grounding in the entire process and value chain, and as a result, graduates are highly sought after by industry. As the fields of fashion expand, many students decide to work in retail areas such as buying and visual merchandising instead of design. Elizabeth and Inez jointly emphasise that as a designer there is a strong need to understand the business of the industry and the economy, and that equally in a retail managerial capacity, students still need to understand some of the nitty-gritty aspects of design
DEVELOPING A SENSE OF IDENTITY
Regardless of which path students decide to pursue the following graduation, the academy maintains its approach of building confidence in young students to be themselves and express themselves. “It’s about the individual, every staff member, every student. Rather than selling ourselves on the perceived glamour of the industry, we focus on individual drive, passion and industry impact. Students and staff carry the brand, so by caring about each individual we hope to share in their success,” says Elizabeth. Because of this approach, the academy believes in giving young people an opportunity who might not have the right portfolio and once enrolled, giving students freedom, space and a nurturing environment. At the same time, the training is demanding and the academy aims to simulate an industry environment in order to ensure graduates are highly equipped and work-ready. It is equipped with and trains students on industrial machines so that they can understand the real processes, potential and limitations of garment quality involved and be well prepared for starting their careers. For the same reason, internships are also a core component of the academy’s programmes, through long-established alumni and broader industry links.
Due to its solid reputation in the South African fashion environment and the quality of graduates, Elizabeth Galloway attracts and produces some of the best students in the country, which shows in the national competitions that the academy’s students enter into. The Academy encourages students to develop their skills and gain experience by entering various industry set design competitions. Over the years Elizabeth Galloway has regularly produced finalists, and also a number of winners, in Vukani, Foschini Young Designer Award, Nokia Talent Search, Elle Rising Star, SA Fashion Week Student Competition, and G12 Runway. Academy students have also been invited to exhibit at Design Indaba Emerging Creatives, as well as the Cape Town Fashion Council Graduate Exhibition. This not only promotes the institution but ensures industry exposure for the individuals involved. Fostering talent takes time and patience, according to Elizabeth: “We get some brilliant students and often brilliant people are extremely difficult, so they also need space and nurturing. We won’t set anyone up for failure, so we give all our students a great deal of freedom and will do whatever it takes to ensure they succeed including mentorship and extra classes if they need them.”
IMPACT
In the world of South African and international fashion, Elizabeth Galloway students form part of the industry. “Then you realise the importance of what you do. Our students now make a big impact even though we’re just talking about clothes,” comments Elizabeth. In everything it does, the academy is about making a positive difference in people’s lives and about leaving a lasting legacy. For Elizabeth, it is important that students make an impact once they leave the academy, whilst understanding the challenges they may face in the future, so innovation and sustainability are core areas of focus embedded in the curriculum. Inez highlights that “there is a global trend towards sustainable use of materials and resources, and the fashion and textile industry doesn’t have a good environmental track record. It’s important to us to study sustainable value chains and teach good business practices, and as an educational institution we are forever moving more and more in that direction.”
LOOKING TO THE FUTURE
As Inez takes on increasingly greater responsibilities for the direction and running of the academy, the baton gets passed from mother to daughter. Elizabeth is reflective about the history of the school being intricately tied up with her own individual journey – both the highs and lows of business and the personal highs and lows. Looking back on how the academy has evolved, Elizabeth is highly optimistic about the future: “My vision for the future is a legacy that continues to make an impact on the industry, grow individual talent, and empower women in communities, always driven by new and fresh ideas.” This is where Inez is able to make an invaluable contribution to the academy. “For now, my wish is really that the business goes forward in a sustainable manner for my daughter, and that it’s a space where people feel happy and comfortable; A place where people can be themselves, and learn what they need to learn to make their hopes and dreams a reality.” Both mother and daughter are proud of what their students achieve. According to Inez, “It’s remarkable what our students are able to do within the short space of time that they are here.”
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