When Josephine Wapp retired in 1975,
Sandy Fife Wilson (
Muscogee) took over instruction of her traditional techniques course and offered "Traditional and Contemporary Fashion Design" to include current fashion trends. Fife's students formed the Full Moon Fashions group and began targeting non-native women as prospective buyers for their products. In 1982, when
Wendy Ponca (
Osage) took over the fashion design courses at the IAIA, she renamed them
fiber arts in accordance with other accredited university curricula, offering three levels of instruction. She founded the Waves of the Earth Fashion Group and required her students to participate in the fashion shows of the IAIA, giving them an opportunity to show their creations and discover how to market their works. Ponca changed the direction of Native American fashion by allowing the designers to determine whether their works would include traditional influences and media. She taught them garment design, structural integrity, and color theory, but allowed students to interpret how they used the lessons. Ponca's approach was to ignore demands to make designs fit stereotypical definitions of Indigenous identity. Instead she encouraged creativity and innovation, like utilizing
mylar, a space-age material to create designs which reflected the Osage connection with the sky. The fashion show of the
Santa Fe Indian Market, hosted for nearly two decades by fashion expert,
Jeri Ah-be-hill (
Kiowa), quickly became another venue to showcase the students' work, using the body as a venue to display designs, rather than galleries.
Native Uprising, initially called
Native Influx was founded in the 1980s as a collaborative association of Indigenous artists, designers, and models, who were alumni of IAIA, with the express purpose of building a contemporary, Native fashion design movement and allowing members to profit from their fashion shows. With New as an advisor and Ponca as the coordinator, the group included many members who made a name for themselves in fashion, for example
Marcus Amerman (
Choctaw), who acted as the stage director and
RoseMary Diaz (
Santa Clara Pueblo), who majored in fashion design and creative writing, before turning to writing about fashion. In 1981,
Margaret Wood (
Navajo/
Seminole) of Arizona, known for fashion design as well as for her
quilts, published
Native American Fashion: Modern Adaptations of Traditional Designs. The book was the first treatment of contemporary Native American fashion and remains the sole in-depth treatment of the subject. Also in the 1980s, Indigenous designers like Luanne Belcourt (
Chippewa-Cree) and Myrtle Raining Bird (Chippewa-Cree) operated their company
Sitting Eagles, marketing custom-made garments on their reservation to high-end buyers.
Jeanette Ferrara (
Isleta Pueblo) opened a design studio known for coats and vests incorporating cotton, wool, and velvet, and
Ardina Moore (
Quapaw/
Osage) founded
Buffalo Sun in Oklahoma in 1983.
Geraldine Sherman (
Lakota) designed for non-native marketer and anthropologist
Helene Hagan to produce garments featuring Native American iconography. Hagan marketed them, stressing their spiritual and symbolic meaning. at the Santa Fe Indian Market 2014. Demonstration of the difference in dance regalia and experimental fashion. Healthcare professional and fashion designer,
Marjorie Bear Don't Walk (
Chippewa-
Salish) designed high-end couture for working women and displayed her fashions featuring appliqué techniques at conferences. Shed ran a
mail order business, allowing customers to provide her with their preferred materials which she then worked into her designs. In 1984,
Selina Curley (
Apache-Navajo) founded a design firm, Traditions by Selina, aimed at preserving the traditions of her heritage. Her typical designs are based on the Apache camp dress with a full, ankle-length skirt and long sleeves. The
Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, located in Santa Fe, New Mexico, hosted
Talking Threads: Contemporary Native American Fashions in 1986. The exhibit featured designs by
Joyce Begay-Foss (Navajo), Loretta Tah-Martin (
Apache-
Ponca) and
Michelle Tsosie Naranjo (Santa Clara-Navajo-
Laguna Pueblo-Mission), among others. The following year, the
Red Earth Festival was established in
Oklahoma City, showcasing creations by non-native designer
Michael Kors, along with
Phyllis Fife (Muscogee), to demonstrate that Native clothing was part of mainstream fashion. Fife was part of a group of native designers known as the
Fashion Drums of Red Earth, who have made the fashion show of the Red Earth Festival an annual event, demonstrating that native clothing is wearable for every day and not simply as ceremonial costuming. Also in 1987,
Patta PT Joest (Choctaw) established her firm Patta LT with the label
Dancing Rabbit, to create high-fashion, producing contemporary garments with design elements from
Southeastern Woodland tribal heritage. They included Cherokee tear dresses and
Seminole patchwork vests, incorporating features such as
Plains Tribes-style beadwork. Her line also included innovative bras and
lingerie as well as
broomstick skirts. The
Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990 was passed by the
United States Congress. It specified that for artists to market their works as Native American, they must be enrolled in a state or federally recognized tribe or be certified by a tribal council as a member and must disclose their affiliated tribe. The law aimed to curtail the misappropriation of Native American designs by non-Natives wishing to capitalize on the Indigenous market. For Indigenous Americans, their symbols, such as the
headdress have ceremonial and sacred properties. Inappropriate use of such objects, like the 2014
Next Top Model use of the headdress for non-Native models and its use in Dallas by
Chanel for their ''Métiers d'Art'' show, were all too frequent occurrences. Though the law made it illegal to sell items by those not affiliated as a tribal member, little could be done when designs, symbols, or names were usurped. The law, written to protect the tribes and their cultures as a whole, does not cover individuals, with the result that there is no protection for the works of fashion designers. As part of their tribal tradition, symbols of various tribes are not typically
trademarked, but one exception is the name "Navajo", which was legally trademarked in 1943. ==1991–2010==