Tatyana Nikitina: “Great design should empower the wearer – and teach the next generation how it’s made”

Tatyana Nikitina: “Great design should empower the wearer – and teach the next generation how it’s made”

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This fall, fashion’s strongest storyline isn’t a mega-drop – it’s the quiet authority of craft. Across studio capsules, boutique racks, and editorial sets, a small-batch revival is reshaping what we buy and who teaches skills behind the seams. Here, designers are measured by pattern intelligence, construction clarity, and the honesty of production kept close to home.

Tatyana Nikitina is one of the voices defining that shift – a designer and children’s sewing education methodologist. As founder of NEEDTONE, she brings lingerie-level precision to custom capsules, runs a U.S. atelier for short runs, and teaches young makers the language of pattern, fit, and finish. Her credits include celebrity wearings, editorials, and commissions from founders launching labels.

In the studio, Nikitina builds each piece from the pattern up, fits rigorously, and finishes clean – then documents the process like a lesson plan. For her, “custom” isn’t excess; it’s intention: garments made to last, adjusted to the body, and produced on U.S. soil with a clear paper trail. That logic powers her classroom, where safety, seam libraries, and a first-wearable milestone turn craft into confidence.

We spoke with Tatyana about the rise of small-batch design, why sewing literacy belongs in schools, and how a pattern-first mindset empowers wearers and the next generation of makers.

FWD: When people ask what your aesthetic is, you often answer with three words: “Pattern first, always.” What does that look like in the studio, beyond the slogan?

Tatyana Nikitina: It means I don’t start with fabric or trend boards – I start with balance lines. I draft the block, walk the seams, check the hang on a toile, and only then pick fabric. When the pattern is intelligent, everything else is easier: the cut reads cleaner, the body moves naturally, and the wearer stops adjusting their clothes every five minutes. Fit becomes the story, not the struggle.

FWD: Small-batch is having a moment, but people still wonder: is it slower, or just more thoughtful?

Tatyana: More thoughtful – and paradoxically faster where it counts. In short runs, you don’t waste weeks correcting a mistake across 500 units. We fit on a body Monday, adjust the pattern Tuesday, and cut a new sample Wednesday. That loop gives you clarity and avoids inventory that nobody truly loves. Every seam has a job; nothing is decorative laziness.

FWD: You’re adamant about U.S.-based production. That’s a strong operational choice – what convinced you?

Tatyana: Proximity changed my work. I know the cutter’s name, I can tweak a neckline in the same afternoon, and I see the garment evolve in real time. Also, it’s community. The money we spend stays with local stitchers, pressers, graders. You can feel that accountability in the garment – the edge is cleaner, the pressing is right, the inside is as respectful as the outside.

FWD: You trained in lingerie construction early on. People assume that’s a different universe from daywear – how do you translate that rigor to a jacket or skirt?

Tatyana: Lingerie forces humility. A millimeter off at the cradle or strap becomes discomfort all day. So I bring that micro-precision to everyday pieces: stabilized necklines that don’t fight the body, underlayers that keep a bias slip honest, waistbands with ease exactly where the body asks for it. It’s quiet work, but the wearer feels it without knowing why.

FWD: Paint us a scene – what’s happening in your atelier this week?

Tatyana: On the table: a NEEDTONE capsule. There’s a modular jacket with removable sleeves; we’re testing the sleeve cap to keep the armhole clean in both modes. A bias-cut slip with hidden stability at the neckline so it doesn’t collapse by noon. And a zip-front skirt with a secret ease panel – camera-ready but commuter-proof. All drafted, fit, and sewn stateside. The wall has my non-negotiables: shoulder balance, neckline stability, clean interiors. Those rules have outlived several trend cycles.

FWD: Your clients range from founders launching labels to public figures and private customers. What are people actually asking for in 2025?

Tatyana: “Simple, but exact.” Fewer pieces, deeper relationships with each one. I’m seeing made-to-order uniforms of five or six perfected styles – same silhouette, different fabric stories through the year. People want honesty: a jacket that works on Zoom and at dinner, a skirt that sits all day without negotiation. Less theater, more truth.

FWD: You also teach children to sew – an unusual dual track for a fashion designer. Why bring kids into the pattern room?

Tatyana: Because sewing literacy is design thinking for real life. We start with respect – machine, fabric, self – then a seam library, then pattern logic, then a first wearable. When a nine-year-old zips up a skirt they drafted, their posture changes. They solve problems, they measure with purpose, and they treat clothes with care. I’ve watched kids who “hate math” fall in love with numbers when they see a seam meet perfectly.

FWD: Give us one classroom moment you still think about.

Tatyana: A student was terrified of the machine. We practiced on paper with no thread – just steering. Ten minutes later she was stitching straight lines on muslin like a pilot. When she finished her first wearable, she said, “I did the numbers.” That sentence lives on my wall.

FWD: Editorial credits and runway moments can look glamorous from the outside. What did those experiences actually teach you that filters back into your curriculum?

Tatyana: Deadlines are real, and “camera-ready” is earned, not improvised. I bring that sequence into class: brief → pattern → toile → fit → finish → credit control. Even kids understand a checklist. They learn that craftsmanship is a promise you keep under a clock, not a mood you wait for.

FWD: If a young designer is reading this and dreaming of their first drop, what is your blunt, practical advice?

Tatyana: Start with blocks that truly fit. Produce less but better. Keep production close while you learn. And document everything – specs, fit notes, QC checklists. Documentation is not bureaucracy; it’s a design tool that protects your idea from chaos.

FWD: What’s next for NEEDTONE – and for the classroom?

Tatyana: A steady rhythm of limited, U.S.-made capsules; more white-label support for emerging designers who need patterns that behave; and expanding the kids’ program with assistant instructors trained on my curriculum. My north star is simple: empower the wearer today, and teach the next generation how that empowerment is made.

Presented by: PR NEWS

You can view the original article HERE.

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