Little Black-and-White Dress is a systems-based fashion research project that translates text-driven graphic logic into garment form. Developed as an extension of Rozita Sophia Fogelman’s ongoing investigation into ASCII, typographic abstraction, and rule-based visual systems, the project explores how minimal black-and-white structures can generate complex silhouettes, rhythm, and spatial presence.
Rather than approaching fashion as trend or ornament, the series treats the dress as an architectural surface—constructed through repetition, contrast, and modular pattern logic. Each composition is derived from text-based visual systems, reconfigured to articulate the body through balance, density, and negative space.
Operating at the intersection of graphic design, digital abstraction, and conceptual fashion, Little Black-and-White Dressfunctions as a visual study in post-material design. The work reflects a sustainable, screen-native practice that replaces physical patternmaking with real-time digital generation, emphasizing structure over decoration and system over style.
This project situates fashion as a research platform—where typography, computation, and form converge—bridging graphic design methodologies with embodied spatial systems.