Textile design is a little odd in some regards, as the product is  generally not yet the finished product. It only becomes finished when  other designers decorate rooms with the material, design clothes with it  or use it to cover car seats. 
 Above all, textile design is a very varied field – a material is not just  the sum of various properties, but is also a complicated interplay of  different characteristics that all have an impact. It can best be  compared to a fabric itself: the individual fibres are not decisive, and  the overall amount of it present is not critical either; instead, what  is important is the way the fibres go together and the substance, colour  and characteristics they have. It is this combination that ultimately  decides on both function and quality.  
Textile design is very complex, but not at all complicated. You can  touch, feel and look at the material, and even smell and listen to it  too! It is emotional and functional at the same time. 
 Textile design presents conceptual challenges that have to meet certain  practical requirements in the context of the demands that society places  on design. This involves historical references, current factors and  visionary ideas too. On the other hand, the course requires very  detailed specialist knowledge in all disciplines that deal with surfaces  in order to be able to meet challenges in a case-specific manner. 
 Prof. Bettina Göttke-Krogmann






































![Alfred Stieglitz, Georgia O’Keeffe – Hands, 1919. Gelatin silver print, 9 7/16 x 7 1/2 inches. Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, The Georgia O’Keeffe Foundation. [2003.1.4]](https://www.burg-halle.de/home/_processed_/c/3/csm_475209_06d2a9500d.jpg)





















