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School of Fashion (bachelors) :

Ravleen Kaur

My Portfolio : Click here

I am Ravleen Kaur currently pursueing Bdes. in Textile Design in World University of Design , SONIPAT , HARYANA . I am a textile design student who learns best through actually doing things and working with my hands. I enjoy exploring different techniques and understanding fabrics through practice rather than just theory. My work usually focuses on surface design, detailing, and creating something that feels visually balanced and meaningful. I try to adapt my designs to feel more Indian and realistic when required. I like keeping my designs structured while still adding a storytelling element to them. I pay a lot of attention to finishing and techniques like embroidery, especially Kantha, and I try to solve problems that come up during the process. I have also worked on fabric prototypes and understand basic size grading and construction, which helps me see design from both a creative and practical point of view. I am currently gaining experience in a design studio environment, where I am learning how the industry works, from concept to final production. I am still growing as a designer, but I focus on improving my skills, making my work more refined, and developing my own style.

Graduation Project

Project Title - Interior Lifestyle Tokyo
Project Sponsor - PREETY SINGH DESIGNS

This project is based on Japanese minimalism, focusing on simplicity, symmetry, and cost-effectiveness while keeping the wabi-sabi philosophy in mind, which appreciates imperfection and subtle beauty. The aim is to create clean, balanced designs with depth achieved through minimal interventions. The project explores how Indian craftsmanship can be adapted to create a modern textile language with a European aesthetic touch. The concept of weaving is expressed through embroidery, where structured elements like grids and stripes mimic warp and weft. Textured fabrics such as handwoven cotton, rib, and waffle surfaces enhance the tactile quality. Kantha-style embroidery is a key feature across the designs, used in a minimal, repetitive manner to build texture rather than heavy decoration. Overall, the project reflects a fusion of Japanese restraint, Indian craft, and European warmth in a contemporary form.