Delight Technical College, Nairobi. (@tailoringkenya) 's Twitter Profile
Delight Technical College, Nairobi.

@tailoringkenya

Delight Tailoring Fashion & Design School

The Pinnacle of Sartorial Excellence: Training Elite Designers.

Reach us +254 722 533 771
Nairobi, Kenya

ID: 953308972987150339

linkhttps://delight.ac.ke calendar_today16-01-2018 16:52:25

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What if fashion education wasn’t just about garments… but about the planet? 🌍 The fashion industry is one of the most resource-intensive industries in the world. Water waste. Textile pollution. Landfills overflowing with discarded clothing.

Delight Technical College, Nairobi. (@tailoringkenya) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Now imagine something different. A classroom where: • Zero-waste pattern cutting is normal • Upcycling is innovation — not a trend • Slow fashion is strategy — not sentiment • Ethical sourcing is non-negotiable That’s not idealism. That’s leadership.

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At Delight School of Tailoring & Fashion Design, sustainability isn’t a chapter in a textbook. It’s a design philosophy. Because how you design matters just as much as what you design.

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Our students don’t just learn how to sew. They learn how to: 🌱 Reduce waste before production even begins ♻️ Transform discarded textiles into value 🧵 Construct garments built to last 📈 Build brands rooted in ethics — not excess

Delight Technical College, Nairobi. (@tailoringkenya) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Here’s the real question: Will the next generation of designers be remembered for aesthetics… Or for responsibility? Because trends fade. Impact lasts.

Delight Technical College, Nairobi. (@tailoringkenya) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The future of fashion will not belong to the fastest producers. It will belong to the most conscious creators. Those who understand that sustainability is not limitation — it’s innovation.

Delight Technical College, Nairobi. (@tailoringkenya) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If fashion can shape culture… It can also protect the planet. And that shift doesn’t start on the runway. It starts in the classroom. ✂️🌍 #SustainableFashion #CircularEconomy #FashionEducation #KenyaFashion #FutureOfFashion #DelightSchool

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Following trends blindly is the fastest way to disappear. Many emerging designers fear one thing: “I don’t want to be irrelevant.” So they chase. New silhouettes. New colors. New aesthetics. New algorithms.

Delight Technical College, Nairobi. (@tailoringkenya) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Strong designers don’t ask: “What is trending?” They ask: “What does this trend mean — and how does it align with my identity?” That shift changes everything.

Delight Technical College, Nairobi. (@tailoringkenya) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A trend might represent: • Nostalgia • Power • Minimalism • Sustainability • Cultural pride • Rebellion But interpretation is where originality begins.

Delight Technical College, Nairobi. (@tailoringkenya) 's Twitter Profile Photo

For designers in Kenya 🇰🇪, this is powerful. We design within: • Deep textile heritage (kitenge, kanga) • Urban youth culture • Climate realities • Storytelling traditions Culture-rooted design travels globally.

Delight Technical College, Nairobi. (@tailoringkenya) 's Twitter Profile Photo

At Delight Fashion School, creativity is structured — not accidental. Students learn to: ✓ Research trends professionally ✓ Translate rather than duplicate ✓ Balance art with commercial viability ✓ Develop a signature identity

Delight Technical College, Nairobi. (@tailoringkenya) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Let’s make this real: If your next collection removed every trending element… Would your design identity still be recognizable? 👇 Designers — answer honestly. #FashionBusiness #DesignIdentity #KenyaFashion #CreativeCareers #TailoringKenya

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Products are not designed to sit still. They are worn, carried, folded, exposed, and used repeatedly. Designing for real use is central to creating leather products that last and to succeeding in RLSD Africa 2026. #rlsdafrica2026 #slowfashion

Products are not designed to sit still. They are worn, carried, folded, exposed, and used repeatedly. Designing for real use is central to creating leather products that last and to succeeding in RLSD Africa 2026.

#rlsdafrica2026 #slowfashion
Real_Leather (@rlsd_africa) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A product designed to last must also be designed to be repaired. Replaceable components, accessible seams, and thoughtful construction extend product life and reduce waste. Tlhokomelo #rlsdafrica2026 #slowfashion

Delight Technical College, Nairobi. (@tailoringkenya) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Fashion Fact: The small pocket inside many suit jackets was originally designed to hold a pocket watch in the 19th century. Even though watches moved to the wrist, the pocket stayed. Some details in tailoring survive for over 100 years. ✂️ #FashionHistory #Tailoring

Fashion Fact:

The small pocket inside many suit jackets was originally designed to hold a pocket watch in the 19th century.

Even though watches moved to the wrist, the pocket stayed.

Some details in tailoring survive for over 100 years. ✂️

#FashionHistory #Tailoring
Delight Technical College, Nairobi. (@tailoringkenya) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Fashion Fun Fact: A well-tailored suit can contain 30–60 individual pattern pieces. Each piece controls structure, movement, and fit. That’s why professional tailoring is far more complex than simply “sewing clothes.” #Tailoring #FashionDesign