I swapped the corporate grind in London for sun, sewing and self-employment — and built my dream business in Spain with zero experience.
Stock image: Woman sewing on a sewing machine, making a yellow and white Flamenco dress at her home.
Credit: adriaticfoto, Shutterstock.
She had no fashion degree, no business plan, and no clue how to make a flamenco dress – but that didn’t stop her.
Meet the woman who swapped the corporate grind in London for the sun-soaked streets of Granada and built her dream business from scratch, stitching flamenco costumes with zero experience and a serious pair of gonads.
From coding to costumes: German techie quits London rat race to sew flamenco frocks in Spain.
How a software developer swapped the City for the swirling skirts of Andalusia — and stitched herself a brand new life.
When Anke Herrmann asked herself a simple question one quiet evening
– “What would I do if there were no limits?” – she never imagined the answer would lead to a ruffle-filled, sleep-deprived, joy-packed life as a flamenco dressmaker in southern Spain.
But that’s exactly what happened.
The German-born ex-programmer once cut code for a major bank in London. Now she cuts fabric in the cobbled lanes of Granada’s Albaicin quarter, sewing vibrant, made-to-measure flamenco dresses for dancers across the globe. And she’s never looked back.
Software, Spain, and sewing dreams
In 2004, Herrmann ditched her comfy IT job, packed her bags, and set off for the sun-drenched streets of Andalusia with one clear goal: to “combine two passions – sewing and flamenco” into a business.
Not that she was your average seamstress. By her own admission in her Medium article, she’d never formally studied fashion design, had zero experience running a business, and knew nothing about flamenco dresses – “I just loved the figure-hugging fit and all the ruffles,” she confessed.
So what possessed her?
A flamenco CD. A summer dress. And a flash of inspiration.
“I was cutting fabric while listening to Camarón de la Isla when it hit me – I want to open a sewing studio,” she said.
No factories. No mass production. Just one-of-a-kind creations for real women who want to feel “like a million dollars.”
‘Plan A’: sack the job, sew the dream
The idea wasn’t entirely spontaneous. Years earlier, while planning a holiday to Peru, she signed up to learn Spanish through a company called Bilingual America. That course sparked a lifelong obsession with the language – and with Spain.
One trip to Granada and she was hooked.
“I fell in love with the place,” she said. “The Albaicín felt like time had got lost in its cobbled maze.”
But love wasn’t going to pay the rent. So she cooked up what she called “Plan A”: quit the job, move to Granada, and become a self-employed flamenco dressmaker.
Madness? Maybe. But method soon followed.
She tracked down top London tailor Imtaz Khaliq for private lessons. She made her first flamenco dress for dancer Anita la Maltesa in exchange for guidance. And she took the plunge.
Thanks to a forward-thinking boss at her bank, she even landed a remote work contract to fund the transition.
Skirts, stress, and sleepless nights
Her first proper commission? A dozen skirts for a flamenco school’s year-end performance.
Sounds glamorous? Not quite.
“I didn’t sleep for the last 48 hours,” she recalled. ‘I finished the last dress 90 minutes before the show. When the lights went out, I fell asleep in my seat and missed the entire performance.’
The footage of those dresses later became a cornerstone of her business — and proof she could deliver under pressure.
Since then, she’s designed and stitched hundreds of outfits for dancers from Spain and beyond. Her Granada studio, nestled in the shadow of the Alhambra, is now a hub of colour, fabric and creativity.
No regrets – just ruffles
Would she do it again?
“Most definitely,” Herrmann says. “Creating my own business pushed me in every possible way. It was the best thing I ever did.”
She now runs Flamencreaciones, a bespoke flamenco fashion brand, and mentors aspiring sewing entrepreneurs worldwide. Her message? If you’ve got a stitch of passion, you can make it work in Spain.
“Would I have done it if I knew how hard it would be?” she admits. “Probably not. But do I regret it? Not for a second.”
Taking the plunge and moving to Spain
Herrmann’s journey from keyboard to corset is raw guts and grit, and shows that going off the beaten track can pay off. Her story proves you don’t need a degree in design or a business plan approved by Dragons’ Den — just a vision, common sense, a bit of nerve, and the willingness to stitch through the sleepless nights.
So next time you see a flamenco dancer twirling in a cascade of colour, just remember: somewhere in the backstreets of Granada, a German expat is at her sewing machine — living proof that sometimes, Plan A is all you need to take the plunge.
Follow Anke’s journey:
www.flamencodressmaking.com
Got a story like Anke’s?
We’d love to hear how you built your dream life in Spain— get in touch with Marc: marc@euroweeklynews.com
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