Exploring Fashion Themes
Lesson Overview
Lesson Title: Introduction to Fashion Themes
Unit Title: Fashion Theme Exploration (Lesson 1 of 6)
Key Stage: Key Stage 4
Year Group: Year 10
Curriculum Area: Art and Design — AQA GCSE Art and Design Specification (Fine Art or Textile Design endorsable)
Duration: 60 minutes
Class Size: 1 student
Location: UK-based secondary school
Curriculum Links
This lesson addresses the following AQA GCSE Art and Design Assessment Objectives:
- AO1: Develop ideas through investigations, demonstrating critical understanding of sources.
- AO3: Record ideas, observations and insights relevant to intentions as work progresses.
Lesson Objectives
By the end of this lesson, the student will be able to:
- Understand what a fashion theme is and why themes are important in the design world.
- Identify and critically analyse a range of fashion themes across cultures and time periods.
- Reflect on personal interests to begin selecting a theme for their fashion project.
- Develop a visual starting point (mini mood board) around a chosen theme.
Success Criteria
Students will have:
- Demonstrated engagement with various fashion themes during discussion.
- Selected a personal theme with thoughtful justification.
- Created a clear and visually engaging mini mood board that reflects their initial ideas.
Resources Required
- Printed examples of historical and contemporary fashion themes (e.g. 1960s Mod, Punk, Futurism, Afrofuturism, Nature-Inspired, Baroque, Minimalism, Avant-Garde, Streetwear, etc.)
- Mood board template (provided on A3 paper)
- Access to magazines, textiles, coloured paper, drawing materials, and scissors
- Personal sketchbook
- Reflection sheet (teacher-provided)
Teacher Preparation
- Curate a set of 8–10 printed visual references showing distinct fashion themes.
- Prepare one or two example mood boards based on different themes.
- Ensure workspace is set up for hands-on creative engagement.
- Prepare key questions to prompt personal reflection.
Lesson Structure
0–10 mins: Introduction & Hook
Activity:
Present two contrasting fashion garments on the board (e.g. a Vivienne Westwood punk ensemble vs. a Dior 1950s silhouette). Ask:
- What do these garments communicate?
- When do you think they were designed and why?
- What kind of person do you imagine wearing this?
Objective: Get the student thinking about the concept of clothing as storytelling and self-expression.
Mini-explanation:
Introduce the idea of fashion themes – recurring ideas that designers explore throughout a collection (e.g. identity, rebellion, femininity, environment, technology). Link this to art movements and culture.
10–25 mins: Visual Exploration
Activity:
Spread theme image packs across the table. Student is encouraged to:
- Examine the images
- Sort them based on visual/style themes
- Choose three that resonate most and explain choices
Prompting questions:
- What stands out to you in these designs?
- Which do you connect with emotionally?
- Can you think of a fashion or art style you've seen before that links with these?
Learning Focus:
Critical exploration and selection of themes based on emotional/visual impact.
25–40 mins: Individual Theme Selection
Activity:
Student reflects on personal interests, cultural background, musical tastes, passions, and experiences. Teacher prompts with:
- Are there aspects of your identity you'd like to explore through design?
- Could a memory, place or social issue form the basis of your theme?
Task:
In sketchbook, student completes a short brainstorm around potential personal fashion themes (mind map or visual spider diagram).
Example prompts for theme ideas:
- “Rebellion in the digital age”
- “Urban decay meets nature”
- “Dreams, rituals and identity”
- “Reclaiming cultural heritage”
40–55 mins: Mini Mood Board Creation
Activity:
Student creates an A3 mini-mood board combining images, colours, textures and words related to their chosen theme.
- Use magazine cut-outs, swatches of fabric/paper, sketch detritus
- Incorporate sketches or doodles showing first impressions
Teacher Role:
Facilitate conversation around student’s choices. Help refine and encourage bold visual thinking. Provide visual references from established designers who have worked with similar themes.
55–60 mins: Reflection & Plenary
Verbal Feedback Prompt:
- What did you learn about fashion themes today?
- How do you feel about your chosen theme?
- What would you like to find out more about?
Written Task:
Student completes a short reflection sheet explaining their chosen theme and why it is relevant and exciting for them to explore.
Homework / Extension
Task:
Collect additional imagery or artefacts over the week that relate to their chosen theme. These will feed into a full-scale mood board in the next session.
- Encourage non-traditional sources: film stills, song lyrics, architecture, objects
Assessment for Learning
The teacher will assess progress against the following indicators:
| Objective | Evidence |
|---|
| Understanding of fashion themes | Participation in discussion, completion of brainstorm |
| Analysis of styles and ideas | Justification of chosen theme |
| Generation of visual ideas | Quality and creativity of mini mood board |
| Personal engagement | Reflection sheet detail and tone |
Next Lesson Preview
Lesson 2: Expanding the Mood Board
Student will develop their mood board with more depth, including found materials and observational drawings to prepare for initial design development.
Differentiation & Personalisation
- As this is a 1-to-1 session, the teacher can flexibly adapt to visual, verbal, or tactile learning preferences.
- If the student is less confident expressing themselves verbally, they may describe images while building the mood board.
- Provide targeted support if student struggles with theme selection by narrowing choices or modelling examples.
Inclusion & Cultural Sensitivity
- Encourage themes that reflect personal identity — cultural heritage, gender, subcultural interests, etc.
- Use inclusive and diverse references when showing designer examples.
- Respect and validate student choices – reinforce that all themes are valid if they are meaningful.
“Wow” Factor Ideas for Future Lessons
- Invite a local fashion designer or textile artist to do a short video call or record a message about how they begin designing from a theme.
- Use augmented reality apps (e.g. to layer student mood boards onto virtual mannequins in future sessions).
- Plan a DIY runway for the final lesson, showcasing concept garment ideas even via mood boards or fashion illustrations.
Teacher Reflection Notes (Post-Lesson)
- Was the student excited by theme-building?
- Did they express personal meaning?
- Did the 1:1 context deepen engagement?
Document observations to better structure next lesson.
End of Lesson 1
“Fashion is the armour to survive the reality of everyday life.” – Bill Cunningham
Let the exploration begin.