

BA Textile Design
About this course
Textile design is the art and craft of creating fabrics and surfaces through processes that include weaving, knitting, print, embroidery, and mixed media. It is a discipline with extraordinarily deep roots in human culture and a thoroughly contemporary relevance: textiles are everywhere, from the clothes we wear and the interiors we inhabit to the technical fabrics used in medical and aerospace applications. Textile design as an art practice sits at the intersection of the visual, the tactile, the structural, and the conceptual, demanding both technical mastery of materials and processes and a developed visual and creative intelligence. At Norwich University of the Arts, this four-year full-time programme develops your practice across a range of textile methods and approaches, from traditional craft techniques to digital design processes and sustainable material innovation. NUA is a specialist arts and design institution with a strong culture of studio practice and critical engagement with design history and theory. You will develop skills in pattern design, colour, surface decoration, and structure alongside an understanding of the textile industry and the many contexts, from fashion and interiors to performance and fine art, in which textile design operates. Studio culture is central to textile education. You will work in dedicated specialist studios, experiment with materials and processes, develop projects in response to briefs and self-initiated research, and present your work for critical review by peers and tutors. Building a body of work over four years, and developing a design practice that is distinctively your own, is the creative arc of the programme. Technical fluency and conceptual ambition are developed together. Graduates in textile design work as surface pattern designers, textile artists, weavers, print designers, and creative directors in the fashion, interiors, and home goods industries. Roles in costume design, set design, technical textile development, and design for digital platforms are also accessible. Many graduates pursue freelance practice alongside commercial commissions. Postgraduate study in textile design, fashion, art and design, or design research is another route for those who want to develop their practice at a higher research level.
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