By Laura Trethewey
At a showing of recently discovered films by the late Vancouver artist Kate Craig, I ran into a gang of girls who worked for Lululemon. I should have known. The screening, followed by a dance party, enforced a strict dress code of pink and leopard print all night. Lululemon design assistant Niamh McManus still managed to stand out from the crowd, hoisting a giant leopard print shoe that doubled as a seat over her shoulder.

VITALS: Niamh McManus, design assistant, Vancouver
Tell me about your job as a design assistant at Lululemon.
I work on the Run line. The line’s lead designer comes up with the direction for the season and I pull images and help create a theme. The lead designer then looks at all that trend info and decides what the direction is. Then we start production, and make samples and detailed technical drawings. After that, we collaborate with technical designers, pattern makers and product developers to create the final product.
Is working in fashion as competitive or glamorous as it seems?
There are a lot of people who want to be in the industry because of that perceived glamour. It’s hard for me to say because I was handed a good opportunity right out of school. Everyone works long days. It can’t be a nine-to-five job because you care – and that consumes your life. But I try not to think about the harder aspects of my job. One of my fears of working in fashion is the relentless pace. At the same time, you still have to squeeze creativity out. Creativity is delicate. I’m paranoid that if I’m not gentle with it, then one day it will just leave.
Getting hired out of school? That still happens?
I know a lot of people who have had a harder time than me. What I’m learning now is that design is only the tip of the iceberg in apparel. There’s not much room in fashion for designers compared to all the other people you need to create a product. For instance, there’s 17 of us on the design team at Lululemon. On the production side there’s around 60. I always thought during design school that starting my own line was my goal, but I think that I couldn’t be as successful if I had my own business straight out of school. There’s just too much to learn. U
Laura Trethewey is riding the train from Toronto to Vancouver and meeting regular Canadians along the way for our Job Training series. Every city she stops in she’ll ask one regular person about what they do for a living. Unlimited is posting the conversations on our interactive map.
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