Postgraduate students to showcase their work at Heriot-Watt School of Textiles and Design

Designs for new products and services, textiles, interiors and fashion garments are among the projects on display at this year’s postgraduate degree show at Heriot-Watt’s School of Textiles and Design in Galashiels in the Scottish Borders.

The Masters Degree Show 2024 features projects from 30 students from countries including the United States, Sri Lanka, India, China, Nigeria, Scotland, Pakistan, Poland and Turkey.

The show is open to the public for one day on Friday 9 August (10am to 4pm), following a private showing on Thursday 8 August for industry partners and friends and family.

Visitors can enjoy the show for free at the High Mill Building in Nether Road, Galashiels, the converted textile mill where the school is based.

The students showcasing their work are graduating from four postgraduate degrees – two Master of Arts (MA) programmes and two Master of Science (MSc) programmes. The MA programmes are Fashion and Textiles Design and Interior Architecture and Design. The MSc programmes are Design Management and Fashion and Textile Management.

MA Fashion and Textiles Design student Rebecca Welsh, from Dunlop in East Ayrshire, Scotland, has created woven cotton textiles that celebrate the life of her late father, David.

“I used objects owned by him as the main source of drawings for my sketchbook,” Rebecca explained. “Each item has a memory tied to it and colours, motifs and patterns in my textile designs evoke those memories. One of my motifs is a frog, which is inspired by an origami frog dad made for me while we waited in accident and emergency when I was younger, after breaking my arm.”

Rebecca previously studied a four-year Bachelor of Arts in Design for Textiles at Heriot-Watt’s School of Textiles & Design and it was during her final year of this degree that her father was diagnosed with terminal cancer.

“He passed away shortly after my graduation in 2018,” Rebecca said. “I wanted to continue weaving through my Masters degree because I wanted to create a positive memory after such a difficult final year. Dad also helped restore a loom for me – he was a civil engineer and was fascinated by the technical process.”

Rebecca’s textiles are designed to be used for tote bags and small handbags, and feature bands of colour combining different check, tartan and geometric motifs.

MSc Design Management postgraduate Shamita Harsh, from Dehradun, a Himalayan valley in India, designed a career acceleration pathway for women in the workforce, using the skills she learned in product and service design.

The pathway has six career progression steps, including goal setting, leadership training and access to resources such as career accelerators and mentorship, and is based on Shamita’s own experience at work as a journalist and communications strategist.

“I led teams and projects in previous roles, but this wasn’t recognised or reflected in my pay,” Shamita said. “I didn’t have adequate access to career guidance or mentorship that could help with career goal setting.

“I wanted to research career accelerators for women that would bridge this gap and would be accessible to young women professionals from underrepresented groups.”

Chelsie McNab from Peebles in the Scottish Borders is a single mum who returned to Heriot-Watt to study an MA in Interior Architecture and Design. She previously completed a four-year Bachelor of Arts in Interior Design at the university.

Chelsie has created a design for a sustainable high school in Peebles. Her approach uses a discipline called biophilic design, where nature is integrated with architecture and urban planning to improve well-being.

“The critical element of my project is a river-centric design connected to the River Tweed through organic shapes and flows throughout the space,” Chelsie explained. “This includes walls with living greenery and encouraging herb gardens in the school’s interior.

“Enhancing connections to nature in this way helps to improve learning experiences and mental health.”

Chelsie completed her degree while looking after her two-year-old son, Mason, and now hopes to work with an architectural firm. She said: “Becoming a single mother and trying to fulfil my career was a challenge.

“But time management and forward-planning helped me through it. I am deeply grateful to Heriot-Watt University for helping to foster my creativity over five years while I navigated the challenges of being a single mum.”

Cath Clark, Postgraduate Programme Director at Heriot-Watt School of Textiles and Design and Assistant Professor for the MSc Design Management degree, said design skills were more important than ever in industry.

“Designers are key to the success of an organisation,” she said. “Businesses continually have to rethink and reimagine what they do – especially as technology accelerates – and design expertise can give them crucial competitive advantage. 

“So design graduates are becoming increasingly valuable to businesses, because they’re problem solvers. Our Masters students have shown huge creativity in their work this year and we’re looking forward to showcasing that.”

Julian Malins, Executive Dean at Heriot-Watt School of Textiles and Design, said: “Our Masters Degree Show celebrates our postgraduate students and their work and is an important event for us.

“It recognises the tremendous commitment our students have made to their skills and careers.  It’s also an opportunity to showcase the talent of our students to industry and to our community here in Galashiels and further afield. We wish all our Masters students the best of luck in their careers.”

Masters students at Heriot-Watt’s campus in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates are also completing their School of Textiles and Design degrees.

Postgraduates at Heriot-Watt School of Textiles and Design include students with undergraduate degrees looking to enhance their qualifications and skills and working professionals looking to progress their careers.

The School is a centre of excellence in design and dates back to 1883, when classes in weaving, dyeing and chemistry were introduced to train workers for the local textiles industry.

Honorary Graduates include the late British fashion icon Dame Vivienne Westwood.  The school’s degree programmes prepare students for roles in industries including fashion design, interior design, textile design, product and service design, digital design and fashion marketing.

The Scottish Borders is at the heart of Scotland’s luxury textile and design industry and is home to manufacturers including Barrie, one of Scotland’s oldest cashmere knitting manufacturers. It was acquired in 2012 by French luxury fashion house Chanel.

Masters Degree Show 2024, Heriot-Watt School of Textiles and Design

Dates:         

  • Thursday 8 August – 2pm-7pm – private showing for industry partners and friends and family. Register here: Masters Degree Show Opening
  • Friday 9 August –  open to the public, 10am-4pm.

Address:       Heriot-Watt University, Scottish Borders Campus, High Mill Building, Galashiels, TD1 3HE

Entry:           Free – no tickets required

More information in the Postgraduate students section of our Degree Show 2024 page.    

Students to showcase their work at Heriot-Watt School of Textiles and Design 2024 Degree Show

Around 150 students from more than 15 countries are to showcase their work in the 2024 Degree Show at Heriot-Watt University’s School of Textiles and Design.

Fashion garments, textile designs, interior design projects, digital designs, fashion marketing and design management work will be among the final year projects on display at the High Mill building, a converted textile mill in Galashiels in the Scottish Borders, where the school is based.

A spiky silver jacket and other fashion items around the theme of men’s mental health; an immersive room that introduces visitors to Lagos in Nigeria; fabric designs inspired by Scottish landscapes and folklore and interior designs for a community arts hub in Perthshire are among the projects on display.

The 2024 Degree Show will launch with a private showing for industry, staff and friends and family on Friday 31 May, before opening to the public between Saturday 1 June to Friday 7 June.

Students from countries including Italy, India, Egypt, Spain, Scotland, Hungary, Croatia, Nigeria, Poland and Ireland are taking part in the event.

Matea Mandarić, 22, from Croatia is in the final year of her Bachelor of Arts (Honours) degree in Fashion at Heriot-Watt School of Textiles and Design.

Her Degree Show project has involved creating a series of fashion garments around the theme of men’s mental health and with the slogan, ‘Boys don’t cry.’ Her centrepiece outfit features a silver puffer jacket with large fabric spikes on its hood, worn with partitioned tartan trousers linked together with metal chains (top)..

“There’s this idea in society that men are meant to be macho and not cry,” Matea says. “It’s particularly prevalent in the Balkans region where I’m from. So I wanted to start a conversation around men’s mental health and use menswear as a sort of protection against society’s expectations. 

“I’ve created a jacket that’s protective and soft on the one hand, because it’s filled with very soft stuffing. But on the other hand, it still looks quite fierce because of the spikes.”

Matea has designed and stitched all her Degree Show outfits from scratch over the last year, despite never having threaded a sewing machine before starting her course four years ago. She now hopes to study an MA in costume design for performance at London College of Fashion.

“Heriot-Watt has really helped me build the skills I need to feel more confident in my design practise,” Matea says.

Eguvwe Yugbovwre, 36, from Nigeria is studying a postgraduate Master of Arts degree in Digital Design and Innovation.

Her final year project is an immersive room where visitors can experience some sights and sounds from the city of Lagos in Nigeria. The project uses interactive video, audio and projection mapping – where video projectors are used to beam moving images and light onto surfaces like walls and floors.

“The idea is to introduce people to the rich life and culture of Lagos, where I’m from,” Eguvwe explains. “I carefully selected iconic buildings, places and cultures unique to Lagos to be featured in the space.

“These include the city’s iconic yellow and black buses and buildings like the National Theatre in Lagos. This was built in 1977 during Nigeria’s military regime to celebrate African arts and culture and, interestingly, is shaped like a military soldier’s cap.”

Eguvwe has a background in animation and would now like to develop her project, called Lasgidi Streets, into a “fully immersive cultural experience that can be enjoyed by people worldwide.”

Kai Parker, 24, from Glasgow in Scotland is completing a Bachelor of Arts degree in Design for Textiles.

She has developed a series of textile prints based on Scottish landscapes and folklore, using different printing techniques including screen printing and digital printing.

“My collection is called ‘Cianalas,’ which is Scottish Gaelic for a sense of longing or belonging to a place,” Kai says. “I’ve used watercolour to reflect Scotland’s natural beauty.

“My designs are inspired by Scottish heritage and include quirky animals, organic shapes and joyful motifs. My animal motifs were inspired by Scottish folklore tales about creatures like Kelpies and Selkies, which take form as seals and horses in my prints. I’ve also used playful illustrations of birds, inspired by Scottish crossbills and robins. I remember learning about these sorts of folk tales in school, which evokes a sense of nostalgia.”

After graduating, Kai will be taking her work to New Designers, an annual graduate design show in London that showcases emerging design talent.

Fourth year Bachelor of Arts in Interior Design student Laurent Meharry, 24, grew up in Glasgow but has family roots in France and Italy.

His Degree Show project is a proposed community arts hub based at Perth Art Gallery in Perthshire.

Laurent says: “Designing a studio and exhibition space has always been a dream of mine and my Degree Show project is my vision for a new sustainable art hub in Perth and Kinross.

“My goal is to create a space that promotes sustainability, attracts visitors to help boost the local economy and strengthens international ties with artists. The space would showcase various disciplines including painting, sculpture and fashion. I wanted to breathe new life into the Perth Art Gallery building, which was constructed in the early 1800s.”

After graduating, Laurent is interested in pursuing a career in museum curation and exhibition design. “I would love to work with historic landmarks, revitalising their interiors in a sustainable way to bring them into the 21st century,” he says.

Other students showcasing their work at Heriot-Watt’s 2024 Degree Show include:

  • Reema Baagagah, 22, from Yemen, a BA Fashion student who has designed a garment called Sitara, a two-sided embroidered cape that can be worn over the head or as jacket.
  • Lucy Parnell, 37, from Dumfries and Galloway, a Bachelor of Science (BSc) Fashion Technology student whose Degree Show project explores how clothing can adapt and contract with us as we age.
  • Anam Waqar, 35, from Pakistan is a postgraduate MA Digital Design and Innovation student. Visitors to her immersive installation can use iPads to project their own work onto the floor.

The students showcasing their work are graduating from six undergraduate programmes and six postgraduate programmes at Heriot-Watt School of Textiles and Design.

The undergraduate degrees are Bachelor of Arts Honours degrees in Fashion; Fashion Technology; Design for Textiles; Communication Design; Interior Architecture & Design and Fashion Branding & Promotion. The postgraduate Programmes are Master of Arts in Fashion and Textile Design; Digital Design and Innovation; Fashion and Textile Design with Industry Placement and Interior Architecture and Design and Master of Science (MSc) degrees in Fashion and Textile Management and Design Management.

The show opens to the public on Saturday 1 June with a Degree Show Open Day. This includes a live fashion show and academic-led workshops, including ‘Abstract Collage Creations’ and ‘An Introduction to Embellishment through Creative Stitch’ and behind-the-scenes facilities tours.

Fashion students at the Degree Show will model some of their work in walk-through pods with interactive lighting. At Heriot-Watt’s campus in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates,  School of Textiles and Design students will also showcase their work.

David Cavallaro, Head of Discipline and Project Lead for the Degree Show at Heriot-Watt School of Textiles and Design, said: “The Degree Show is a vital part of the year, where students get to showcase all their hard work and also how they’ve evolved and learned.

“It’s an important stepping stone in their career journey, whether they’re continuing their study or going into industry. Students and staff start preparing for the show months in advance, so it’s very exciting for us to see it all preparing to launch.”

Julian Malins, Executive Dean at Heriot-Watt School of Textiles and Design, said: “We are consistently amazed by the talent of our students across so many different disciplines, and our 2024 Degree Show demonstrates that.

“What’s particularly remarkable about our cohort this year is their diversity, with so many countries and backgrounds represented. This says a lot about the appeal and status of our degrees – and also the commitment of our staff, who work incredibly hard throughout the year.”

Heriot-Watt School of Textiles and Design is regularly named as one of the best places in the UK to study fashion and attracts fashion brands, textile companies, design agencies and other industry scouts to its degree shows.

The School is a centre of excellence in design and dates back to 1883, when classes in weaving, dyeing and chemistry were introduced to train workers for the local textiles industry.

Honorary Graduates include the late British fashion icon Dame Vivienne Westwood.

The Scottish Borders is at the heart of Scotland’s luxury textile and design industry and is home to manufacturers including Barrie, one of Scotland’s oldest cashmere knitting manufacturers. It was acquired in 2012 by French luxury fashion house Chanel.

The Heriot-Watt School of Textiles and Design 2024 Degree Show takes place at:

Heriot-Watt University, Scottish Borders Campus

High Mill Building, Galashiels, TD1 3HE

  • Friday 31 May 2024, 2pm-4pm – private viewing for industry and press.
  • Saturday 1 June to Friday 7 June 2024, 10am-4pm – show open to the public.
  • To confirm your attendance at the Degree Show Open Day 2024 and to sign up for workshops on the day, please register here.