
The "Himikalas Virtual Showroom and Gallery Exhibition," a project seeking funding from the Creative BC Interactive Fund. The initiative is a collaboration between the Fashion Innovation Centre (FIC), led by Roz McNulty and Dr. Ian Lochhead, and Indigenous designer Pam Baker (Himikalas). The project aims to create an immersive five-room virtual environment showcasing Baker's couture collection and artwork, optimized for Oculus Quest, to be exhibited alongside a physical gallery - containing Himikalas Couture and Pam Baker’s art.
Real and Immersive Art
The Himikalas Virtual Showroom and Gallery Exhibition
A Creative BC 2025 Innovation Grant Proposal
Project Overview and History
In March 2025, Roz McNulty and Ian Lochhead of the Fashion Innovation Centre approached Pam Baker, owner and designer of T.O.C. Legends House of Design (located on the Capilano Indian Reserve), Squamish/Kwakiutl/Tlingit First Nations, about creating a prototype FIC Virtual Showroom for the T.O.C. Himikalas Couture collection.
Pam Baker/Himikalas agreed to review a proposal and participate with garments, accessories, and artwork to be scanned and placed in the virtual showroom—supporting a true beta test using authentic garments and assets.
Ian Lochhead, CTO of the Fashion Innovation Centre, created a five-room virtual showroom with interactions and animations viewable through the Oculus headset.
Roz McNulty, CEO and Project Manager, recreated 3D apparel samples in CLO 3D, making them interactive within the showroom.
In early June, Roz met with Pam to review the accepted proposal and select the garments and assets to be scanned. Creating a virtual showroom requires the same careful preparation as a physical one—curating artwork, mounting, and layout.
Together, they decided to apply for the Creative BC Innovation grant to produce the Himikalas Virtual Showroom and Gallery Exhibition, which will combine Pam Baker’s real-world gallery of clothing and art with the Fashion Innovation Centre’s immersive showroom, using multiple headsets in the same physical gallery.
It’s a strong cultural and technological collaboration. The gallery venue will be determined upon grant approval. There is potential to present the Himikalas Virtual Showroom and Gallery Exhibition during Indigenous Fashion Week, offering a unique blend of tradition, design, and innovation in a shared space.
Community Engagement Plan
Commitment to Indigenous and Under-Represented British Columbia-Based Fashion Designers, and Vancouver’s Tech Community
The Himikalas Virtual Showroom and Gallery Exhibition is a collaborative initiative grounded in Indigenous leadership and developed to uplift under-represented fashion designers in British Columbia. Led by Indigenous designer Pam Baker (Himikalas) and the Fashion Innovation Centre (FIC), the project integrates physical and virtual exhibitions to celebrate cultural identity, community-based design, and innovation in immersive media. The initiative also contributes to the advancement of Vancouver’s immersive tech ecosystem by demonstrating applied use of VR in cultural and creative industries.
Community Collaboration and Cultural Protocol
Indigenous-Led Direction: Pam Baker, of Squamish, Musqamaqw Dzawada’enuxw, Kwaguilth, Tlingit, and Haida ancestry, co-leads the project. Creative and cultural decisions follow community-informed protocols to ensure respectful and accurate representation.
Designer-Centered Collaboration: Developed in collaboration with Pam and her network, the project also creates a model for engaging other Indigenous and British Columbia-based designers in future exhibitions.
Cultural Attribution: All scanned garments, accessories, and artworks will be properly credited and contextualized, based on input from participating artists and communities.
Women-Led Technical & Creative Leadership
The project is led by Roz McNulty, CEO of FIC, ensuring women's leadership is central to both creative and production efforts.
Dr. Ian Lochhead, CTO and partner at FIC, oversees the immersive and technical implementation.
A spatial computing expert based in VR innovation within the region.
Additional roles in scanning, modeling, and virtual production will be filled by Indigenous and BC-based women creatives and technicians.
Public Engagement, Capacity Building & Tech Community Involvement
Exhibition during Indigenous Fashion Week: Launching during Indigenous Fashion Week, the project highlights Indigenous and BC-based designers on a prominent public stage.
Community Access Days: Targeted programming will engage Indigenous youth, schools, and design students across BC.
Mentorship & Learning: Youth and emerging designers will gain exposure to spatial storytelling, digital garment simulation, and immersive media workflows.
Vancouver Tech Community Support: The project contributes to local innovation through development and demonstration of immersive VR showrooms, fostering cross-sector dialogue between fashion, heritage, and spatial computing. It is part of the growing ecosystem of creators participating in initiatives such as Vancouver Spatial and other XR-focused meetups and collectives.
Legacy and Continued Impact
All virtual assets and environments will be preserved for future use via FIC’s digital museum platform and Pam Baker’s community and educational networks. We intend for the FIC Virtual Showroom to travel to schools and institutions around the world.
This prototype creates a sustainable model for Indigenous and BC-based digital fashion exhibitions and supports Vancouver’s role as a leader in meaningful immersive content creation.
Overview of the Himikalas proposal and Existing Assets
This grant is a proposal for Creative BC Interactive Funding Grant.
An ask for additional funds to further develop the Himikalas Interactive Virtual Showroom and the Gallery Show and Exhibits.
Wages will not be in kind but paid when the grant money is received from Creative BC - upon being awarded the grant. The money will go to the various expenses, and contract salaries in the interactive budget template.
There is no money contributed by the team to the project. Just existing software, hardware, garments, artwork. FIC will provide the headsets for the interactive VR experience.
Pam Baker will be showing the same garments and artwork in the real gallery space that is rented out and planned for in the budget. Other contractors will be added in the future including graphic designers, accountant, community manager and possibly even sponsorship.
The goal is that we get the funding to show the designs and artwork of Pam Baker/Himikalas
and the interactive Himikalas Virtual Showroom by Roz McNulty and Dr. Ian Lochhead
of the Fashion Innovation Centre
Creative Team Biographies
Roz McNulty
CEO Fashion Innovation Centre
Digital Magician
CLO 3D Consultant
Pam Baker / Himikalas
Designer
Artist
Entrepreneur
Ian Lochhead PHD
CTO Fashion Innovation Centre
Spatial Data Scientist
XR Researcher. Unity Developer
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Roz McNulty is the CEO of the Fashion Innovation Centre (FIC), a leader in merging technology with the apparel industry. With a background in design, small manufacturing, and a touch of the film industry, Roz is passionate about using immersive technologies to drive sustainability and efficiency in fashion.
Under Roz’s leadership and with her business partner Ian Lochhead, FIC has created groundbreaking Virtual Showrooms for the apparel industry, including an immersive VR Fashion Museum. FIC’s work spans across web-based and VR/AR headsets, with a recent highlight being the Apple Vision Pro Apparel Review Showroom prototype. One of their current projects is an immersive VR experience featuring a 3D runway simulation and interactive displays designed to showcase emerging designers.
Roz is an active member of Vancouver’s tech community, participating in groups such as Vancouver AI and Vancouver Spatial Developers. She also collaborates with 3D historical apparel experts, working to preserve and showcase fashion history in innovative virtual formats.
Fashion Innovation Centre www.fashionic.ca
FIC VR Fashion Museum www.vrfashionmuseum.com
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Designer, Artist, Entrepreneur
Himikalas (Hi-mi-ka-las) Pam Baker is a fashion Designer/Artist/Entrepreneur of Squamish/Kwakiutl/Tlingit/Haida. Owner of Touch of Culture, TOC Legends Designs and Copperknot Jewelry. Pam grew up on Capilano Indian "Xwemelch'stn" reserve in West Vancouver where she continues to inspire and mentor the youth. Pam received her BFA fashion design from Otis College of Art and Design in Los Angeles. Hi-mi-ka-las received two prestigious awards, N.A.M.S.B (menswear), and the Arthur Gilbert Award, top award in Evening wear. TOC Legends (Touch of Culture) is located on the Capilano Reserve.
Pam has showcased her work since 1988 and was one of the top designers selected to create regalia for the 2010 Olympic Games opening ceremonies. She is a graduate of the FIND program at Wilson School of Design, where she updated her technical skills in digital design and fabrication.
https://www.toclegendshouseofdesign.ca/
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CTO
Fashion Innovation CentreSpatial Data Scientist
XR Researcher
Unity Developer
Dr. Ian Lochhead transforms ideas into reality. A problem solver by nature, Ian incorporates design thinking principles and technical knowledge in 3D visualization to create eye-catching, functional virtual spaces.
Ian holds a MSc and PhD from Simon Fraser University, where he explored the utility of emerging technologies in 3D geographic information science and 3D visualization – focusing on the accuracy of 3D data capture workflows, the design and development of Virtual and Augmented Reality (VR/AR) interfaces, and the impact that VR displays have on our ability to perceive and comprehend 3D phenomena.
Ian has collaborated with diverse clients to deliver cutting-edge visualization tools, including projects exploring risk communication and emergency management, climate change, urban development, marine ecology, fashion, and cultural history.
Website: www.ianlochhead.com
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ian-lochhead
Media Links
Roz Podcast - the Himikalas Virtual Showroom and Gallery Exhibition
An 15 minute audio summary podcast of the Himikalas Virtual Showroom and Gallery Proposal.
Fashion Innovation Centre Virtual Showrooms
T.O.C. Legends House of Design, a fashion design house based in the Pacific Northwest that offers custom orders for indigenous fashion.
https://www.toclegendshouseofdesign.ca/
Pam Baker Video Interview on YouTube
Himikalas Pam Baker: Weaving Indigenous Heritage into Fashion | Matriarch Movement
Host Shayla Ouellette Stonechild interviews Indigenous fashion trailblazer Himikalas Pam Baker….
Himikalas Instagram
Virtual-Vancouver Artist Showcase 2009
From October 23rd, 2009 the Virtual-Vancouver Artist Showcase spotlighted Vancouver Artists in the mediums of painting, sculpture and photography within the real world Roundhouse gallery and the Virtual-Vancouver Roundhouse gallery.
Promotional video and editing by Roz McNulty Virtual Vancouver 2009 Showcase on YouTube