My design concept is drawn from two core threads: modular, play-driven silhouettes and memory-evoking textiles. Building on Jonathan Chapman’s idea of emotional durability, the project looks beyond material choices to ask how a garment can invite care and longevity through interaction and feeling.
Modularity turns clothing into a flexible system rather than a fixed object. By assembling and reconfiguring parts, the wearer becomes an active participant, shaping silhouette and identity in everyday use. In parallel, textiles rooted in my Beijing childhood explore a “dream-core” nostalgia formed amid rapid change, where familiar textures and symbols linger as quiet echoes. Tactility, rhythm, and crafted surfaces aim to trigger recollection and intimacy. Brought together, these two threads propose sustainability as a relationship: garments that people play with, keep close, and keep for longer—not only because they are responsibly made, but because they hold meaning.