Q&A with Tabitha St. Bernard-Jacobs

590
CMYK Tabitha St. Bernard speaking at the Prindle Institute for Ethics on Women's Empowerment NATALIE BRUNINI THE DEPAUW
CMYK Tabitha St. Bernard speaking at the Prindle Institute for Ethics on Women's Empowerment NATALIE BRUNINI THE DEPAUW

Tabitha St. Bernard-Jacobs was invited to DePauw University by the Prindle Institute of Ethics to serve as the speaker of the Dorothy Garrett Martin Lecture hosted at 7:30 p.m. in Kresge Auditorium on Oct. 24.

The DePauw sat down with St. Bernard-Jacobs for a one-on-one interview about her success as a New York City fashion designer and as an organizer of the Women’s March in Washington D.C. Answers have been edited for length and clarity.

The DePauw: Some of the readers might not know about the Women’s March. What is the mission of the Women’s March and what role do you play in it?

Tabitha St. Bernard-Jacobs: The Women’s March is an intersectional movement of women who stand together as a collective voice against injustices. We fight for gender etiquette. It was a movement that started after the election, but it is based on issues that have been affecting women for a long time. When one of my friends from the fashion industry started a (Women’s March) page on Facebook, I reached out to her to ask if she needed help. The Facebook page blew up almost instantly. We then each picked an area we wanted to focus on; an area of need in the Women’s March. I picked Youth and Family because I have a son, and family is very important to me. I was often silenced as a teenager and I want to make sure young people do not feel that way. I want to make sure they know there is a space for them in the Women’s March.

TDP: Speaking as someone who doesn’t know a lot about fashion, how on earth do you begin to launch a clothing line?

TSBJ: I actually design two lines of clothing: Tabii Just and LIVARI. There’s the practical ‘how I put it into motion,’ and then there’s the existential. The existential ‘how I put it into motion’ was I spoke it into existence. I wanted to do a fashion line and I knew nothing about starting a company or how to run it. I just started talking about it every chance I got, and eventually people started offering help.

TDP: How do your two lines differ?

TSBJ: Tabii Just is zero waistline clothing that’s made in New York City. It is a dress line; we mostly do silks. It’s very wearable clothing that can be worn by a variety of body sizes. LIVARI is ethical clothing for the empowered woman. It is more of a designer line; there are some red-carpet pieces.

TDP: How did you get interested in fashion?

TSBJ: I’ve always been into fashion. I never really thought of it as a career because it wasn’t a possibility as a child because I grew up poor in Trinidad. But I’ve always been interested in clothes and was always making stuff. When I had to make a decision in my mid-20s about what I wanted to do with my life, fashion was that thing. I knew very little about it, and very little about careers in fashion. I just knew I wanted to work in fashion in some way. So, I started working at it. I’ve always been the type of person when I want something, I go after it, and then I work really hard to make it happen. 

TDP: As the organizer of the Women’s March and as a major fashion designer, how do you balance all of it?

TSBJ: Truthfully, I don’t get a lot of sleep and I go to bed around 2 a.m. every night. I also have a very understanding family. My son is used to all this, and he goes to a lot of the Women’s March stuff with me. From a very young age, he’s known the deal. The key is to have quality time with him and my husband. I think for every mom, it is a juggling act.