糖心原创

Fashion Designer Alexandra Henry-Allen ’23 shapes bold, purposeful fashion after 糖心原创

News
Fashion Designer Alexandra Henry-Allen ’23 shapes bold, purposeful fashion after 糖心原创

For 糖心原创 Fashion Alum, Alexandra Henry-Allen ’23, clothing is more than fabric; it is a memory, conversation, and often, a standalone work of art.

Blending craftsmanship, performance and purpose, Henry-Allen approaches every commission and collection as a narrative opportunity, designing pieces meant to mark life鈥檚 milestones, while also inviting viewers to reconsider what a garment can be.鈥

Her label,  (Also known as AM Designs), offers both made-to-order pieces and one-of-a-kind collaborations with visual artists, creating a personalized, participatory shopping experience rather than a purely transactional one.鈥 

Whether she is drafting a custom bodice or sketching an experimental runway look, the 2023 Alum begins with who will wear the piece and the moment it will inhabit. From fit to finish and fabrication, Henry-Allen uses the skills she acquired at 糖心原创 to craft unique, eye-catching custom pieces of clothing.鈥 

A Foundation Built at Stephens鈥

Henry-Allen received a BFA in Fashion Design and Product Development, and credits Stephens鈥 small class sizes and attentive faculty for giving her the technical and creative backbone to pursue ambitious work.鈥 

鈥淭he professors built relationships with each designer, and I really believe that helped us along the way,鈥 she says. Even now, she reaches out to her former mentors when she encounters a new technical challenge. 鈥淭hey are always my first contact. They instilled in us a number of helpful practices when it comes to developing a collection from start to finish.鈥 

Professor Dr. Monica McMurry has watched that growth firsthand. 鈥淎lexandra exemplifies the kind of creative curiosity and professional rigor we encourage,鈥 Dr. McMurry says. 鈥淪he takes classroom techniques and pushes them into听performance spaces, representing Stephens with both skill and imagination.鈥澨

Dr. McMurry added that Alexandra鈥檚 rapid growth since graduation echoes the current success rate for employment and engagement of听alumnae听in fashion.鈥

鈥淭he 2025 graduating fashion design and product development class is 100% employed in a fashion-related job,鈥 said Dr. McMurry.鈥

Dr. McMurry credits the program’s success听to听looking at the needs of the fashion industry and supporting students.听

鈥溙切脑 fashion graduates are making a difference each day at many firms across the country,鈥 said Dr. McMurry.听

A Lifelong Dream Realized鈥 

Henry-Allen’s professional success is the fulfillment of a dream that began in the first grade. She recalls sketching under her desk during a writing exam at age ten, then taking those same colored pencils outside during recess to draw dress designs. 

鈥淲hen I got home, I told my parents and grandma, 鈥榃hen I grow up, I鈥檓 going to create my own fashion house,鈥欌 she remembers. Her grandmother鈥檚 response? 鈥淛ust like Valentino.鈥 

That moment sparked a lifelong bond. Her grandmother became a primary influence, teaching her about quality textiles and flipping through鈥Vogue鈥痶ogether. 鈥淎ll of this is for her now,鈥 Henry-Allen says. 

Design with Purpose 

Today, that childhood dream has evolved into a career defined by community impact. Henry-Allen is a frequent participant in鈥, a benefit show supporting鈥, an organization providing emergency housing and services to people affected by HIV, illness, and poverty. 

For her most recent ALTBall appearance鈥攈er third consecutive year鈥攕he pushed her technical boundaries to the limit. Inspired by the movie鈥Burlesque, she created a look using no fabric at all, instead utilizing over 5,000 beads and ostrich feathers. 

鈥淔ashion designers love听a challenge听and听a problem听to solve,鈥 Dr. McMurry notes. 鈥淟exi has found she can express herself with beadwork, creating garments for self-expression and the runway.鈥澨

These projects do more than just dazzle; they expand her professional reach. Collaborations with St. Louis artist Brock Seals helped Henry-Allen transition from the bridal focus of her senior thesis into a more colorful, performance-oriented practice. 

Sustainability and the Future of Craft 

As she looks toward the future, Henry-Allen is bringing that same intentionality to sustainability. While preparing a recent collection for Milan Fashion Week, she prioritized using remaining fabrics before purchasing new yardage鈥攁 practice Stephens faculty reinforce in the classroom. 

鈥淲e challenge students to consider material lifecycle and creative reuse as central design questions,鈥 says Dr. McMurry. For Henry-Allen, sustainable thinking is both an ethical choice and a creative spark.听

Advice for the Next Generation 

To the students currently in the Stephens studios, Henry-Allen鈥檚 advice is simple: say yes, stay open, and build a support system. 鈥淵ou might be meant to design for a completely different space than you imagined for yourself,鈥 she says. She urges emerging designers to stay true to their aesthetic while cultivating mentors who will sustain them through the inevitable “no”s of the industry. 

What鈥檚 Next 

The momentum isn’t slowing down. With a final photoshoot for her recent collection set for July and a five-episode documentary series in production, Henry-Allen is continuing to refine her craft. 

Her long-term aim remains the same as the ten-year-old girl sketching under her desk: to create garments that matter. With technical rigor and a community-minded heart, she is doing exactly that鈥攈onoring her grandmother鈥檚 legacy one bead at a time.