Resumes
Summary Statements for Entry-Level Fashion Resumes
If you are writing an entry-level resume, your summary statement can make a big difference.
It is one of the first things a recruiter sees, and it quickly tells them who you are, what you can do, and what kind of role you want. For entry-level job seekers, a strong summary helps make limited experience look more focused and relevant.
What Is a Resume Summary?
A resume summary is a short introduction at the top of your resume, usually 2-3 sentences, that highlights your background, relevant skills, and career direction.
A strong summary should quickly answer:
- Who are you professionally?
- What skills do you bring?
- Why are you relevant?
- What role are you seeking?
What a Strong Entry-Level Summary Should Include
1. Professional identity
Start with who you are professionally.
Examples:
- Fashion Design student
- Entry-Level Fashion Designer
- Fashion Merchandising graduate
2. Relevant education or specialization
For entry-level candidates, your education is often one of your strongest qualifications.
Examples:
- Fashion Design student at FIT
- specializing in apparel design
- focused on product development
3. Key technical skills
Use real, job-related skills, not just personality traits.
Examples:
- CAD sketching
- technical flats
- draping
- Adobe Illustrator
- trend research
- tech packs
4. Industry knowledge
Show that you understand the work.
Examples:
- concept development
- sample review
- collection development
- market research
- commercial awareness
5. Clear career goal
End with the kind of role you want.
Examples:
- seeking an entry-level fashion design role
- pursuing an assistant designer opportunity
- seeking a merchandising internship
Keep It Short and Specific
A strong summary should be:
- brief
- clear
- keyword-rich
- tailored to the role
Avoid vague phrases like:
- hardworking
- passionate
- motivated
- team player
Those words are much stronger when backed up by real skills.
Simple Formula
A strong entry-level summary usually looks like this:
Who you are + where/how you trained + key skills + target role
Example
Creative and trend-aware Fashion Design student at the Fashion Institute of Technology with hands-on experience in concept development, CAD sketching, technical flats, draping, and garment construction. Strong understanding of silhouette, fabrication, color, and market research, with experience supporting the design process from inspiration through sample review. Seeking an entry-level fashion design opportunity in New York City.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- being too vague
- making it too long
- using too many soft skills
- forgetting keywords
- not tailoring it to the role
Final Thought
The perfect entry-level summary does not need to say everything. It just needs to quickly show employers:
- who you are
- what you can do
- where you want to go
That kind of clarity can make your resume much stronger.
And if you are job searching in fashion, keep your StyleCareers.com profile complete and up to date so you are ready for the right opportunities.
Chris Kidd is the owner of StyleCareers.com, StylePortfolios.com, StyleDispatch.com, FashionCareerFairs.com and FashionRetailCareers.com.





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