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In fashion, there are no accidental routes. Sometimes a new career begins not in a studio, but in a New York subway. That’s how Ukrainian designer Tetiana Bazylska — with experience in Chinese factories, European trade shows, and 3D-footwear innovations — discovered her new point of growth in America.
It was there, on the subway ride to Manhattan, that Tetiana observed a city living in the rhythm of sharp suits and strict dress codes.
“I remember those crisp white shirts, dark suits, strict lines. It seemed like everyone was supposed to look the same. But each person carried their own identity, their own story and life, a trace of the culture and place where they were born — their own ‘self,’” says Tetiana.
Her morning route lasted an hour, as she commuted to the office — where she was then working as a footwear designer. Behind her was a substantial background: a career with Ukrainian fashion companies, hands-on experience at manufacturing facilities in China, business trips to European industry exhibitions, and training in digital design at Footwearology Lab in Barcelona — an innovation hub founded by trend forecaster Nicoline van Enter. Her work even appeared at the international footwear exhibition MICAM Milano SS23.
But it was New York that pushed her forward — and made her rebuild herself.
(Courtesy)
A New Point of Focus
Inside that same New York subway, she saw not a dress code but a cultural code. That’s where the idea of her future collection was born: to merge the structural language of office tailoring with the quiet presence of Ukrainian heritage. To reveal identity not through declaration — but through shape.
Her dream of creating her own clothing collection had been brewing for years. But it was in the New York subway that her future collection found its concept: we are both similar and different at the same time. A tribute to memory, identity, and gratitude to America for its diversity and its possibilities.
Florida and the New Point of Growth
After New York, Tetiana moved to Florida. The calmer pace of the state finally allowed her to invest time in what she had long postponed because of work: studying garment construction, diving deeply into Ukrainian national costume, and researching her own approach to design.
She set up a small home studio, completed professional courses, and created her first mini-collection — seven looks where structure meets subtle ethnic detail.
It was no longer an experiment. It was a new professional trajectory.
America as a Space of Possibility
America doesn’t promise ease. But it offers a clear truth: if you have experience and a voice — you will be heard.
Relocation, war, adaptation — all became a catalyst for change. From a distance, Tetiana allowed herself something she hadn’t before: to become a designer with her own artistic vision.
In this country, identity doesn’t need to be simplified or explained. It becomes part of professional capital.
America doesn’t ask you to abandon your past — it invites you to turn it into a resource.
Clothing as a Form of Memory
When Tetiana speaks about her collection, she rarely begins with fabric. She begins with story — with what shapes her as an artist: home, fields, land, mother, childhood memories, handcrafts, traditions, and modern form.
Ukrainian motifs aren’t decorative quotations to her — they are a visual language.
Fashion works with lines and textures the way literature works with metaphors. And Tetiana translates memory into that language.
It’s not nostalgia. It’s presence: “I am here. I am from Ukraine. And I continue to create.”
The Aesthetics of Diversity
Contemporary American fashion is not just about New York runways. It is a cultural discourse — about visibility, identity, freedom. That’s why the stories of immigrant designers resonate so clearly here. They expand the palette, bring context, introduce new codes.
Tetiana works precisely within that space. She does not oppose tradition and modernity. Instead, she searches for balance — where office sharpness blends with ethnic references; where European craftsmanship meets American freedom of interpretation.
The result is a fashion language that is both structured and emotional.
Identity as a Professional Instrument
To Tetiana, fashion is not a display of silhouettes. It is a search for voice. Her path — from Chinese factories, working with Ukrainian brands, exhibitions such as MICAM Milano SS23, to digital design studies at Footwearology — has formed a foundation that today allows her to speak with clarity and depth.
Creating her first clothing collection wasn’t a commercial step. It was an act of strength — a return to herself through craft. A way to rebuild agency and direction.
America makes such stories possible. Here, among cultures, accents, and ideas, individuality is not a vulnerability — but an advantage.
That is why Tetiana’s journey is not an exception.
It is an example of how personal history and professional mastery can merge into a new form of creative expression.
Presented by DN NEWS DESK
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