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Showing posts with label embroidered dresses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label embroidered dresses. Show all posts

Friday, June 6, 2025

Portfolio of my Iryna Senyk dresses (1989-1992)

Maria Rypan & Iryna Senyk

I, Maria Rypan, was the designer of 27 embroidered dresses based on fashion sketches by political dissident and poet Iryna Senyk. 67 of her poems were translated and published together with her sketches and miniature embroideries in a book project by St Demetrius, Toronto branch of Ukrainian Catholic Womens League of Canada (UCWLC). I also produced the Première event showcasing these fashions as well as the White Aster of Love deluxe, a bilingual coffee table book about them in September 1992.

See my blog about the "White Aster of Love" Project (1989-1992)

The Iryna Senyk White Aster project was my baby for three years before I even became a member of the UCLWC, St Demetrius branch. It’s a shame for my design work to be tucked away in a tired portfolio case. I would like to share the creativity and inspiration behind dresses.

Who was Iryna? A bit about the “White Aster of Love” project


A young Iryna Senyk

Iryna Senyk, poet, former political prisoner who spent 34 years in Soviet hard- labor camps and exile, member of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) and the Ukrainian Helsinki Group (UHG), died on October 25, 2009 at the age of 83.

Indescribable suffering, hunger, degradation, failed to crush her invincible spirit. Christine Bolubash smuggled Iryna’s fifty embroidery-embellished fashion sketches out of Ukraine in 1989. Her St. Demetrius UCWLC branch agreed to publish a book of Senyk’s embroidery fashion sketches and poetry.

The poems were translated into English by Christine Borsuk so everyone could appreciate them. You will wonder, “How could someone who has gone through so much brutality can maintain such a strong spirit and foster beauty in her poems and embroidered miniatures?” She became an inspiration for the project participants.

In 1992 Iryna visited North America for the multi-media Première and Book Launch of her White Aster of Love. She returned to Toronto again, and then travelled on to Rochester, NY, to personally receive “One of 100 Heroines of the World” Award in 1998. Several ladies went along in their embroidered “Senyk Dresses” for moral support. I met Iryna again at the World Federation of Ukrainian Womens Organizations convention in Toronto.

Maria Rypan & Iyrna Senyk @ Heroine 98 display

Bringing Iryna's fashion sketches to life

I consulted with each UCWLC member who was willing to have an original “Iryna Senyk” garment sewn and embroidered. Iryna gave permission to change the colours in the embroidery. The ladies selected a Senyk fashion sketch and gave a wish list for the sort of style they would like for themselves. I then adapted embroidery to the dress styles and cross-stitched test swatches to fine-tune the ideal thread colours on the chosen fabrics. 

This project was interesting because a lot of cooperation emerged between the UCWLC members, many of them daughters or granddaughters of pioneers, and the new wave of immigrants to Canada. Some ladies sewed and embroidered. Others were embroidering for the first time in their lives. Still others appreciated that their outfits were embroidered by newcomers from Ukraine who earned a fair wage for the embroidery skills. Everyone had to finish their elegant outfits by the spring of 1992 so Oleh Iwanusiw could photograph the ladies, the “models”, at the Etobicoke Conservatory for the upcoming book.

My portfolio

Photo of Christne Bolubash & Iyrna Senyk with dress in progress

By photocopying multiples of Iryna’s charted embroidery, I came up with this solid panel design which Christine Bolubash cross-stitched herself on the upper dress bodice. The illustrated fine embroidery decorated the top of the flounce. Christine wore this ‘original’ dress as she presented Iryna Senyk with her deluxe White Aster of Love book at the Première.

Lillian Yuryk

Lillian Yuryk, our UCWLC wizard with words, chose this style on a blue crepe fabric. The bands of embroidery were angled to radiate from the neckline. We kept the sleeves plain.

Joyce Lesyk

Joyce Lesyk chose this sketch for her inspiration, but selected a dramatic angled inset for her dress. Since the female body is not square, I had fun resolving the tapered corner issue one cross-stitch at a time. Note how I pencilled the motifs on the waste canvas to help in stitching a pleasing design. One I got the corner resolved, I handed over the panel to be embroidered with the rest of the full pattern.

Maria Rypan & Joyce Lesyk, March 2025

I am thrilled that Joyce still wears this dress 33 years later to many of our events at St Demetrius the Great Martyr parish!! It brings a smile every time!

Helen Lesiuk

Helen Lesiuk’s dress was similar to Iryna’s sketch, but with full embroidered bands from the shoulder down. She asked to change the black to a khaki green colour for more subtlety on a buttery yellow crepe fabric. Helen’s semi-precious stone necklace adorned this classic dress beautifully.

Kae Stasiuk-Krochak

Kae Stasiuk-Krochak wanted a deep purple dress in the style of Iryna’s sketch. This required sampling a new palette of colours on the cool wool crepe fabric. I had to problem-solve the 90 degree angles for a pleasing square neckline. A thinner embroidery was stitched on the sleeve edge.

Stella Sereda, Dr. Maria Fischer-Slysh & Ann Boyko

Stella Sereda cross-stitched bands of embroidery on the inset of bodice of her simple classic soft ivory dress.

Ann Boyko embroidered the same design over her shoulders of soft rose crepe dress. Same charted embroider. Two totally different looks!

Dr. Maria Fischer-Slysh, a pediatrician and patron of Ukrainian studies and culture, embroidered her own pockets and collar to a chic white linen suit.

Sonia Hrycyshyn

Sonia Hrycyshyn chose a tunic over a folk-inspired underskirt. By photocopying Iryna’s charted designs a few times, I came up with a solid pattern and we were fortunate to fine a newcomer to embroider this challenge for Sonia. The outfit was stunning! A criss-crossed embroidered tie finished the outfit for the Première, but it also looked great with korali or a necklace.

Mary Prokop & Anne Jaczyszyn

Mary Prokop sewed and embroidered her very own dress. She did a great job cross-stitching the lapel of dress in orange DMC threads.

Anne Jaczyszyn looked tall in her embroidered dress thanks to the narrow trim along the inserted panel top to bottom. The blue cross-stitching continued along her hem and long sleeves. Iryna’s focal motifs really make this dress one of a kind!

Mary Jerome & Elsie Stieglan

Both Mary and Elsie were inspired by the same fashion sketch with a square neck. They even liked the same fuchsia purple thread colours so we have a chance to see how different it looks on black and white.

Mary Jerome preferred to have a blouse. She had an embroidered square neckline and trimmed sleeves. Her waistband is thoroughly cross-stitched.

Elsie Stieglan opted for a black cool wool dress with an embroidered square neckline and trimmed sleeves.

Virginia Bobyk Rygus & Kay Sklepowich

VIrginia Bobyk Rygus was inspired with the two piece sketch which was delicately embellished with embroidery. In real-life we skipped the puffy sleeves for a chic long-sleeved top tastefully embroidered.

Kay Sklepowich cleverly bought a teal suit and then embroidered Iryna’s charted design in fuchsia colours.

Frances Hunkewich

Frances Hunkewich chose a square-necked fashion sketch, but I had to play with the design to get a pleasing 90o corner. I also toned down the colours, per request. You can see runway photos of Frances, Sonia and Olga.

photo: Iwanusiw n girl n ABoko dresses_0081 ret

Bozhena Iwanusiw & granddaughter Nadia

Bozhena Iwanusiw chose to have diagonal bands across her dress as drawn. We changed the pattern to a stylized floral. I experimented with colours which would go with the soft rose. See the waste-canvas for an appreciation of seeming simple floral garland placement. Buttons with individual cross-stitched motifs trim the dress above the diagonal bands. 

Bozhena had a miniature version sewn for her granddaughter Nadia. The photos are from the runway, “Never let go of your mother’s hand” poem was set in the Spring season of the Première.

Olenka Coba & son Andrijko

Bozhena’s daughter Olenka Coba had embroidered around her peplum top inspired by Iryna’s fashion sketch. Her son Andrijko wore a shorts set with the top hem, sleeves and shorts trimmed with variations of same charted embroidery. 

photo: Wowk Olga dress i Haba Dzvinka grey_0101

Olga Wowk

Again, the same fashion sketch with two interpretations! Olga Wowk chose a classic cool wool T shift with a square neckline. The embroidery cascades vertically like Iryna sketched. Olga had a black jacket made and together and separately she has work this outfit many times.

Eugenia (Dzvinka) Haba embroidered the same design in charcoal threads on her grey wool dress. I was sampling how many thread yield the more effective embroidery. Dzvinka wore this dress often and is buried wearing it in October 2024. May her memory be eternal!

Olga Krawec & Olga Sanajko

Both ladies liked the asymetrical neckline in Iryna’s fashion sketch. But how different the looks are!

Olga Krawec, president of our UCWLC branch and realtor, opted for a violet wool dress with embroidery in bright Kosmach-like colours. This suits her sunny personality.

Olga Sanaijko chose a two-piece outfit in a very soft salmon color. I spent a lot of time playing with colours that would do the charted pattern justice in real life. It came out very elegant and reserved. 

Maria Rypan

Being the designer who worked with everyone, I ran out of time and simply embroidered a hand-me-down dress from my great aunt. Thanks to the ability to slit and curve waste canvas, I managed to get the embroidery to curve all around the neck and front wrap. Note my embroidered earrings with motifs on fabric-covered button.

Anne Cromoshuk

Anne Cromoshuk embroidered light silvery motifs all over her navy jacket. Anne photo holding the White Aster of Love illustrates Toronto Star’s article before the Première. Unfortunately, Anne passed away before the gala fashion so we are grateful we have this memory of her.


Lillian Yuryk and I were interviewed by the Toronto Sun on Sep 6, 1992. We are grateful for this article.

This project has been an incredible honour and challenge. As I am writing this 33 years after the Première of Iryna Senyk’s White Aster of Love, I believe this project is still relevant.

It deserves to published and made available on the internet for inspiration.

Monday, October 27, 2014

"SPRING CHORDS" Festival-Contest

Spring Chords Festival & Contest

NEW DATE: May 20, 2015 at 4:00 pm
Ivano Frankivsk, vul Depovs'ka, 97 
20.05.15 о 16,00год.,м.Івано-Франківськ,вул.Деповська,97


While in Ukraine in August 2014,  Maria Chulak, the chair of 'Rossa Karpat' (Cathpathian Mist), a community organization promoting folk art and craft in Prykarpattya invited me to help to promote this festival so there could be an international presence.

I agreed and here are all the details and application form in English and in Ukrainian

Maria Chulak, founder of "Роса Карпат" (Carpathian Mist),
and organizer of the the "Spring Chords", III Prykarpattian Festival-Contest
Next spring there will be a III Prykarpattian Festival-Contest of Designer Outfits with Folk Motifs --"SPRING CHORDS" in Ivano Frankivsk, Ukraine. You can see and read about the first and second festivals on the internet. I'm showing a few photos from the previous shows.
Dress sewn from a fabric with woven motifs.  II Spring Chords
Participation is FREE, however, the shipment of submission garments or travel are at your OWN expense. The application deadline is March 20, 2015.

The Third "SPRING CHORDS" (Весняні Акорди) Gala is scheduled for May 22, 2015. In the framework of the festival -contest there will be master classes, press-conferences about the festival results, formal finale, awards ceremony and a  gala concert.

This is a wonderful opportunity to participate in a festival designed to promote contemporary clothing inspired by traditional folk art motifs. While it's nice that that the producers are gearing this towards students and young professionals in Ukraine, I personally do not see what age has to do with it. It's the love of the folk arts, design and imagination that should be celebrated here.

The idea is to create contemporary fashion with motifs taken from folks arts and embroider, weave or embellish with beadwork (embroidery or beadwoven 'gerdan' accessory).
Outfits modelled at II Spring Chords Festival
There are many parcel and courier services to Ukraine. Shipping time needs to be built in so the submissions arrive in Ivano Frankivsk by May 10, 2015. No entries will be accepted without prior application.

A fashion show and gala will be held May 22nd at Hotel Nadia. There is a contest component to this with judging in four categories: One Garment; Costume; Collection; Accessories.

Collection presented at II Spring Chords Festival
I would like to see many entries from USA and Canada participating in the next Festival-Contest.

This is a very doable project! All it takes is to file an application by Mar 20th; send your outfit(s) to Maria Chulak by May 10th for fitting a model and prep for the show; plan a trip to Ukraine with a stop in Ivano Frankivsk for the Gala SPRING CHORDS Festival-Contest on May 22, 2015.

The personal trip would be an awesome for the Festival and your soul. Need any more excuses?

The benefits are numerous. If you participate, you become an "international" designer, creator and supporter of contemporary folk arts in Ukraine. If you have something suitable, I believe you can send a few outfits (don't forget the application form) to Ivano Frankivsk. There have been many great contemporary embroidery events recently in USA, i.e. at the Ukrainian National Museum. We have been doing this for a long time in North America.

'Sorochka' chemise at I Spring Chords Festival
Final walk of outfits and costumes at the II Spring Chords
HISTORY
The competition originated with the goal of developing and simultaneously supporting young talent, creativity and growth professional level of a fashion designer.  The festival enables an interregional exchange of artistic values, preserving of traditions and acquaints youth with Ukrainian folk culture. This form of artistic competition strengthens the love of folk arts and creativity, preserves spirituality, ethnic independence, and is a renewal of moral values.

The main goal of the festival-contest is to give students and young professionals opportunities to express their fantasy, demonstrate expertise and visualize garment styles based on folk traditions. “Spring Chords” helps applicants make the first steps in a professional career, enables the development of a nationally-focussed creative individual. 

Participation in the competition gives youth a chance to demonstrate their artistic potential to professional designers and is a natural starting point for further cooperation with well know fashion designers.
SPRING CHORDS Festival creates the conditions for creative collaboration between collectives and master craftsmen – representatives of the traditional national culture; enables the rebirth of national holiday rituals and customs, propagation of better spiritual  values of the Ukrainian people,  love of the native land; helps connect youth to Ukrainian folk art; encourages the preservation and support of the historic-cultural and natural riches of the Carpathian land. 


Participation in the  “Spring Chords” Festival-Contest is free.
Participant’s work and information about them will be included in the Festival catalog.
The creative work of the designers will be evaluated by a competent jury:  designer, art scholars, craftspeople, artists, expert-analysts.

    Categories:
One garment;
Costume;
Collection;
Accessories.
Entries should be created on the basis of folk traditions and be adorned  by  embroidery, weaving, bead embellishment.
Entries should demonstrate the designer is aware of the current fashion trends and direction.
Entries should be created using quality materials, in keeping with the technological requirements.
Entries should be oriented for the consumer.

EACH PARTICIPANT COVERS THEIR OWN SHIPPING and TRAVEL EXPENSES
All participants will receive certificates from the festival-contest “Spring Chords”; 
Contest winners (in each category) will be awarded with memorable souvenirs.

Information about “Spring Accords’ will be available through the internet; in the press, media, information services, other mass media with rights to feature the event. 


Here are all the details and application form in English and in Ukrainian

In the framework of the festival -contest there will be master classes, press-conferences about the festival results, formal finale, awards ceremony and a  gala concert.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Iryna Senyk Memorial - White Aster of Love


TORONTO - I had a chance to talk about the White Aster of Love project at the "Метелики спогадів" memorial tribute for Iryna Senyk on Dec 6, 2009. Pictured with me is UCWLC member Bozhena Iwanusiw who often visited Iryna in Ukraine and attended her funeral Oct 27, 2009 in Lviv. I'm holding my portfolio of embroidered garments created from Iryna's 50 fashion sketches smuggled out in 1989.

The publication of White Aster of Love and its gala multimedia book launch in 1992 was my most satisfying accomplishment to date. I was commissioned by UCWLC St. Demetrius branch in Toronto as the fashion designer to help interpret Iryna Senyk’s unique fashion sketches into wearable art. I consulted with 27 women and helped each one recreate a dress style based on the sketches, as well as embroidered samplers trying out their colour schemes. Then I designed and produced the bilingual deluxe book shown below. Iryna’s poetry was translated into English and each one was illustrated by her unique charted miniature embroideries. On Sep 27, 1992, each lady modeled her dress at the premiere fashion show which included a montage of Iryna's poems, transparencies of her fashion sketches and show of original embroidered creations at the Marriott Hotel Ballroom in Toronto. Iryna's presence at the Book Launch was our dream come true because after all, it was her poetry and fashion sketches. Afterwards, 1,000 books were shipped to Ukraine for distribution to schools and libraries. The Premiere show was repackaged into a traveling slide show which made its rounds around Ontario, Montreal and Detroit, USA.

Iryna Senyk, poet, former political prisoner who spent 34 years in Soviet hard-labor camps and exile, member of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) and the Ukrainian Helsinki Group (UHG), died on October 25, 2009 at the age of 83. Indescribable suffering, hunger, degradation, failed to crush her invincible spirit.

May Her Memory be Eternal!

"Вічна її пам'ять"