
Fashion Styling for Film and Television: How Delight Graduates Work in Kenya’s Screen Industries
By Delight Technical College | School of Tailoring, Fashion & Design | 2026
Kenya’s film and television industry is growing rapidly and every production that goes into principal photography needs costume and styling support. From local drama series and feature films to advertising productions and corporate videos, the demand for fashion professionals who can work in screen production contexts is growing alongside the industry itself. For Delight Technical College fashion graduates, the film and television sector represents one of the most exciting career frontiers, one that draws directly on their fashion skills while exposing them to the creative world of screen storytelling.
🎬 Fashion Roles in Film and Television Production
Costume Designer:
The head of the costume department on a film or television production. Responsible for researching, designing, or sourcing all the clothing worn by characters ensuring that every costume serves the story and is appropriate for the period, character, and production design.
Wardrobe Stylist:
Works within the costume department to style contemporary productions, selecting and assembling clothing and accessories from existing wardrobes or purchased/borrowed sources rather than designing from scratch.
Costume Maker:
Constructs garments for productions, applying the same garment construction skills taught at Delight to the specific requirements of screen production (durability for repeated use, ease of quick changes, camera-appropriate materials).
Wardrobe Assistant:
Supporting the costume department on set, maintaining garment condition between takes, managing continuity, assisting with quick changes, and managing the costume inventory.
🎭 What Screen Fashion Requires Beyond Garment Skills
Continuity Management:
In film and television, continuity is critical. If an actor’s costume changes between shots in the same scene, editors cannot cut the shots together. The wardrobe department is responsible for maintaining exact continuity, photographing every costume detail at the start of each scene and checking against that record before every shot.
Screen Behaviour of Fabrics:
Not all fabrics work well on camera. Fabrics with a fine herringbone or houndstooth pattern can create a strobe effect (moiré) on screen. Pure white and pure black can cause exposure problems. Highly reflective fabrics can distort lighting. Screen fashion professionals understand these technical considerations and make material choices accordingly.
Character Psychology Through Costume:
Every costume in a film or drama tells the audience something about the character who wears it, their social status, personality, emotional state, and journey through the story. Fashion professionals working in screen production must think like storytellers as well as makers and stylists.
Working Under Production Conditions:
Film sets operate under intense time pressure. Quick changes between takes, urgent last-minute adjustments, and problem-solving under pressure are routine. Screen fashion professionals must be both technically skilled and calm under pressure.
🎓 How Delight Prepares Fashion Graduates for Screen Work
Delight’s fashion curriculum builds every foundational skill required for screen fashion work:
- Advanced garment construction- the technical precision that screen work demands
- Fabric knowledge- understanding how different materials behave and photograph
- Fitting and alteration- adjusting garments quickly and accurately on real bodies
- African costume expertise- understanding traditional Kenyan garments for period and cultural productions
- Cross-school film collaboration- fashion students already work with Film Production students on campus, providing direct experience of the screen production environment
💼 Getting Into Screen Fashion
- Assist a working costume designer- the apprenticeship model is standard in the industry
- Build a portfolio that includes screen-relevant work- film stills, production photographs
- Network within Kenya’s film community- industry events, film festivals, and social media
- Develop broad garment skills- screen productions need professionals who can handle any garment type
“Fashion design is the art of clothing real people. Costume design is the art of clothing characters (people who do not exist). At Delight, we train the skills that serve both arts equally well.”
📍 Delight Technical College | Muindi Mbingu Street, Opposite Jevanjee Gardens, Nairobi | +254 722 533 771 | www.delight.ac.ke



