That's great fashionistasista, congratulations! I've been emailing pretty much all the major fashion magazines in Sydney about work experience/interns and absolutely nothing so far so quite frustratingAll my work experiences etc were back in 05 when i started this thread - and now (thankfully!!!) i work at a magazine publishing house here in syd.
My advice to you is to opt for work experience, then when you are there see if they have any openings for an internship. Basically you come into the mag once or more a week . Unfortunatly you work for free, and you can be working there (free) for up to a year - but if an entry level position comes up - such as coordinator, picture editor, even junior reporter or fashion assistant depending on other background experience - the interns usually have a good chance of getting that job!
Good luck with the move!
F
any tips or advice on how to pursue career as a fashion stylist or a fashion editor from oklahoma, USA??
Moving is a good idea because eventually you will have to. But hey take the route I am and just go to a local uni and get together a writing or lookbook portfolio. Find photographer friends to do tests shoots with. And get snipets and other littler work around where you live in local mags or newspapers. Then try and get an internship or assistant job anywhere, I mean anywhere. You need work experience under you. And if you ant to be an editor write, write, write, and more writing.
You don't need any specific degree to be a fashion editor. Anna Wintour never went to university, and Andre Leon Talley studied French Literature at Brown. However, the former was born into publishing and ALT was in with Warhol and Diana Vreeland among others.
Honestly, any job in fashion journalism is going to be tough if you aren't already really wealthy and/or well-connected. Most editorial assistants in New York make around $18-22,000 a year, which is practically impossible to live on in the city. AW picks up most of her interns and assistants at Barnard and isn't particularly nice to them either.
None of this should stop you from pursuing your dream, though. A great degree in journalism from maybe Columbia or the London College of Fashion coupled with some impressive internships would be a great start.
You need a degree in this day and age to be any type of editor. Anna Wintour was born into publishing. Carine Roitfeld got lucky. Her partner was a designer and she made contacts through him. That's very rare though.
If you want to make it in this business, go to school, keep your head up and be optimistic.![]()
I wouldn't advise any youngster to spend three years getting a degree in journalism because it remains one of the few professions for which no academic qualifications are needed. You can either do it or you can't. I'd be more inclined to advise would-be fashion journalists to read something useful like Law, specialising in copyright law, or something equally pactical as a fallback position for the day they realise that fashion magazine writing alone will never pay the rent. If nothing else, they'll be equipped to take defaulting publishers to court...
A "fashion editor", BTW, is usually a stylist with a masthead title rather than a journalist, whose title is more likely to be "features editor" or "fashion features editor". You don't need to be wealthy but you do need to be prepared to "moonlight" in order to bolster your meagre salary. Being well-connected is certainly helpful. All journalists need connections. Some budding journalists do get starts because they are well-connected. Some of them even rise to editorial positions. But they have to be very good to last.
OK, so I can think of some male and female editors whose oral skills got them where they are today but the flipside of that is a complete lack of respect from the professionals in the business. Generally, even if you bluff your way into journalism or leapfrog there because mummy's pal is editor of NOUVELLE VAGUE or HEMLINE, you'd better be able do the job because if you're useless, you won't last. If you're pretty, talented and fairly amoral, you will last as long as your looks last. ALT, BTW, is where he is and stays where he is because he is actually one of the best Fashion commentators. He wouldn't have hung around at the Studio had he not been talented. Warhol & Co did a lot of things but tokenism wasn't one of them.
PK
To say 'a degree is not useful if you want to pursue x career', unless that career is plumbing etc, is always an oversimplified judgement. Education isn't essential for anything, other than a small number of professional occupations, but it can be useful for countless things...
^ Exactly, getting a degree doesn't mean you're creative and/or qualified, it just means you did your homework.
A degree in journalism is as useful as t*ts on a bull. A degree in Law, psychology or something similarly practical is very useful to anyone considering a career in any area of the arts, for want of a better way of putting it, as it provides a useful fallback position. Degrees do not have much to do with education unless they are Classics-based. A degree in journalism or media studies is not "education". It is almost as much of a scam as those ads you see in newspapers and on subway trains inviting people to become freelance writers. It really is a waste of three years. It's about as respected as a degree in sociology. But if you disagree, that's your prerogative. I'm simply expressing an opinion based on hard experience in the real world rather than what a bunch of failed hacks-turned-teachers tell starry-eyed teenagers...
PK
i just have to add...
the title of 'Fashion Editor' requires NO ACTUAL WRITING...
If you repeat trite Daily Telegraph half-truths, like a degree in sociology being worthless, it's fair to say your knowledge of higher education is incomplete, to put it generously.
FYI, while journalism may not have much vocational value in the UK (which is not to say it doesn't have value to individuals), in the USA 54% of newspaper newsroom employees have undergraduate degrees in journalism and Columbia's graduate school of journalism has produced some of the the States' most celebrated journalists and Pulitzer prize winners. One look at Columbia's faculty, all of whom are journalists on national publications, puts paid to your conception of professors as 'failed hacks'.
While the 46% who got into journalism without an expensive Ivy League education might take the other side of the debate, it's clearly far more complex that you make it out to be.
PS: Classics with a capital 'C' means the study of the ancient Mediterranean. Perhaps you need to brush up on your editing skills? I hear there are some very good courses...