1. You Don't Need a Science or Commerce Background

Fashion designing is one of the rare career paths that genuinely doesn't care which stream you came from. Whether you took Science, Commerce, or Humanities in Plus Two, the entry requirement is the same: curiosity, an eye for detail, and willingness to learn. This makes it one of the most accessible creative careers straight out of school, with no prerequisite subjects standing in your way.

2. The Industry in Kerala Is Actually Growing — Not Just in Theory

Kochi has been steadily building a reputation as a regional fashion hub, with more design expos, styling showcases, and homegrown labels launching every year. This means the old assumption — that you have to move to Mumbai or Delhi to "make it" in fashion — is no longer entirely true. Students starting out today have local industry visits, internships, and networking opportunities that simply didn't exist a decade ago.

3. Multiple Course Lengths Mean You Can Start Immediately

Unlike many degree programs that lock you into a rigid 3-4 year structure, fashion education offers flexible entry points right after 12th — diplomas typically running 8 months to a year. This means you can be industry-ready and building a portfolio well before your friends in traditional degree programs have even picked their electives.

4. It Builds a Genuinely Transferable Skill Set

Fashion design training isn't just about sketching and stitching — a well-structured program builds skills in branding, visual communication, software tools, styling, and even basic business and marketing. These are skills that transfer directly into adjacent careers too: visual merchandising, content creation, brand styling, textile design, or even launching your own small business later.

5. Portfolio-Based Hiring Levels the Playing Field

In most traditional careers, your degree and grades do the talking. In fashion, your portfolio does. This is genuinely good news for school leavers — a strong body of work built during an 8-month diploma can open doors just as effectively as someone with a longer academic background, provided the training was hands-on and the work is industry-standard.

6. You Get to Start Working — and Earning — Younger

Because diploma programs are shorter than typical degree courses, students who start fashion design right after 12th can realistically be working, interning, freelancing, or even soft-launching a small label by the time their peers are still in their second year of college. For families and students who value an earlier start to financial independence, this is a meaningful advantage.

7. Mentorship From Real Industry Professionals Is More Accessible Than You'd Think

Good fashion institutes in Kerala increasingly bring in mentors and program directors with actual international and brand-side experience — not just academic faculty. Learning pattern-cutting and draping from someone who has worked with global labels gives students an understanding of real industry standards from day one, rather than catching up on this only after graduating.

Shape the Future of Fashion

Get the mentorship, studio experience, and connections you need to succeed. Apply to Marklance School of Fashion today.

Apply for Admissions 2026