Gay pride shirts hot topic

broken image
broken image

She says they're for women for whom goth isn't just a phase. The Denver native describes the clothes she makes today as classic and sophisticated, but with a dark twist. 'But I joined a fashion group in Boulder, taught myself to sew, and we would do fashion shows. 'My first outfits were literally a bra with some fabric attached to the bottom because I didn't have a clue how to construct anything!' Hall laughs. Her designs have evolved since her college days (she graduated in 2011), when she started making clothes without really knowing how. So that's the direction I started to go in.' 'The more I started looking at things like horror films, I just liked it. 'It kind of unlocked something I always had an interest in but never really explored,' says Hall, whose birthday also happens to be on Halloween.

broken image
broken image

But a few years later, she took a deep dive into the gothic and metal subcultures that favor the dark side, and her fashion naturally followed. Since her college days at CU Boulder, she'd been designing clothes. When fashion designer Tyne Hall got into the goth aesthetic a few years ago, she finally felt at home.

broken image