Fashion / Style / Women's

Fashion Major? Here’s How to Get Your Sorority’s Support!

Fashion Major? Here’s How to Get Your Sorority’s Support!

Being a fashion major in college while you’re inside a sorority is a special kind of balancing act. You have those late nights sketching silhouettes and obsessing over fabric weight, and then you have mixers and group chats, work to do on philanthropy events and everyone buzzing about what to wear on the weekend. The fun part? These two worlds don’t have to compete for your attention.

Campuses are packed with opportunities for personalized clothing, from custom merch to themed event outfits, and being a fashion major puts you in a unique position to shape how your sorority shows up and stands out. If you do it right, your sorority can become your biggest collaborators, your hugest supporters and your main hype squad. 

When your work connects to everyday student life, group identity, and shared events. Support tends to feel natural rather than force, which is exactly what you want. You don’t have to turn every chapter meeting into a pitch deck for this to happen, of course, but if you want to bring the girls on board, here’s how to do it:

Fashion is useful, not ‘extra’

Fashion is often very much a misunderstood field. People hear ‘fashion’ and think ‘clothing’ but it’s so much more than that; which is why it’s your major. You can see the joy and the delight that comes with this area of your life. Instead of leading the conversation with runway dreams or abstract concepts, show your girls how you have the skills that solve real problems. Sororities are often image-focused, and that means consistency and being as put-together as possible for events. When you position your knowledge as something that helps everyone’s confidence and polishes their look, you’re going to get their attention. Suddenly, your major is practical and not so niche. Especially true when it comes to personalized clothing that represents your chapter. Custom pieces always feel more intentional and very on brand for college events.

Offer help before asking for support

As is standard in life, you should always offer your help first before asking for it. Support is way better when it’s mutual, right? Well, before you ask your chapter to show up for you and your projects, find some small ways to contribute your skills to the group. Help with outfit styling and recruitment and give input on colours, especially those that photograph well. You can even suggest ways to elevate event looks without blowing the budget too wide. When people see you adding intentional, natural value, they’re far more inclined to back you when you need them. The result? No awkward asks required. 

Your projects need to feel inclusive

If your assignments allow you to be flexible, weave them into the world you’re in with your sorority. Designing a capsule collection inspired by campus life or reimagining sorority merch through a more fashion-forward lens can spark interest without making it the entire focus. The key is not forcing involvement but inviting curiosity. When your sorority sisters recognise elements of their daily experience in your work, they can connect better to it and therefore, connect better to you.

Be a storyteller, not a professor

You may absolutely love the technical side of fashion but not everyone will want a lecture on seams. When you’re sharing what you’re working on or pitching to your sisters, come at it from the point of telling a story. Talk about the mood of the clothing and the fabrics, the inspiration behind the colour choices. Talk about how a piece can make someone feel. This approach really does work well when you’re explaining why a custom piece matters beyond just wearing it once. All of these things invoke feelings and sensations rather than bore their brains out about stitching styles. They’ll care way more with emotion than technicalities.

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Crack onto social media

Everyone has a strong online presence in your college’s Greek Row, so make a point of getting involved in the sorority social media, too. When appropriate, let your work appear organically on these platforms. Outfit features, content from the ‘making’ of those pieces and even just passing mentions on what you create generates buzz and conversation. This isn’t about promotion overload, just visibility. The more familiar your work feels to others, the more the support comes naturally. 

Open yourself to feedback

You don’t necessarily want to hear poor feedback, but you need to. Someone might tell you that a design you spent time on is cute when you’re trying to create something groundbreaking. You can’t take this too seriously, nor can you change your work to suit people’s tastes. You always will have an audience and you don’t have to appeal to everyone out there, right? So, make sure that you stay true to yourself while you ensure that your fashion choices don’t exist in a vacuum. Learning how others interpret your designs makes you better at what you do, not weaker. 

Turn events into low-pressure fashion moments

Sorority life is packed with themed events and formals. There are casual get togethers, workouts and parties to be had throughout your time there. These are all opportunities for you to roadtest your sketches brought to life in fashion. Get feedback from clothes you’re wearing and whether it’s a new accessory or styling concept, you can test those items and see what people make of them. These are all experiments that can help you to tighten up your assignments and get you ready for exams.

Let people support you in a way that makes sense for them

Not everyone will see your vision your way and that’s okay! Support is not always there in the form of praise or deep interest. Sometimes, it’s a shared social post or a friend wearing your design to a formal event. Accept the support in whatever form it shows up because it really does all count. 

Celebrate the smaller wins out loud

If you finish a collection or nail a presentation, share that with your sisters. You don’t have to brag and it wouldn’t be bragging anyway, but share your good news. They’ll want to cheer your progress and be beside you while you find success in what you do. That’s what your sorority is there for and they can’t support what they don’t know about.

Being a fashion major is exciting and your chapter doesn’t have to understand every design choice you made to support you – they just need to feel included. Don’t forget to ask what others are studying, too, so that you can work together to be excellent. College is a shared experience, and having personalized clothing can be one of the most visible ways that you can be creative, preserve your identity, and make your community come together.

Read more fashion articles at ClichéMag.com
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About Author

Lisa Smith

Love lifestyle and fashion. Being an editor actually allows me to learn about all of the latest trends and topics.