Love, Emma makes functional fashionable for individuals with disabilities

Emma Biros, a UC special education alum, started an adaptive clothing line with style

When we think about entrepreneurs, we tend to picture impassioned people forged professionally by a top-tier business education.

To be fair this scenario is often correct – we need only look to the University of Cincinnati’s Linder College of Business and the empowering work being done by the school’s Center for Entrepreneurship to confirm this. But it's equally true that driven entrepreneurs with ingenious ideas can emerge from less-obvious corners of a learning institution's campus, producing stories that are as compelling as they are impactful.

This is certainly the case with Emma Biros, founder of Love, Emma, an adaptive clothing line established in Cincinnati. A graduate of the School of Education’s Special Education program, Biros developed the idea for her product line inside the walls of the College of Education, Criminal Justice, Human Services, and Information Technology's (CECH) Teachers-Dyer Complex, leveraging the full university experience to bring her dream into reality.

“I wanted to do everything that I could”

A New York native, Biros found her way to UC from her family’s home in Cleveland, where they moved when she was younger. In-state tuition was an obvious benefit, as was the university’s vibrant urban campus. “I was really interested in living in a city again,” she says. “Being from New York, I've always been drawn to the city.” 

She was initially attracted to the College of Allied Science’s Health Sciences' Pre-Occupational Therapy program, which her friend recommended and into which she initially enrolled. 

Emma Biros with two unidentified college students stand in front of a sign for Teachers-Dyer Complex at UC

Emma Biros, left, was initially drawn to UC because of its urban setting in the bustling city of Cincinnati. Photo: provided

But Biros didn’t really want to be an occupational therapist. She didn’t aim to be a special education teacher, either, but with a background in disability care — as far back as middle school she worked in special education classrooms, and she even started a disabled ministry at her church — she knew she wanted to learn new ways to improve lives. “I wanted to somehow fix the world for people with disabilities,” she says. “That was my thing.”

She changed her major to special education, which provided Biros with insight into work being done in this arena. “I would get a better glimpse into that world,” she explains. “I would be able to better understand those systems that they were in, outside of just what I saw for others. I would say that was that was my big draw.”

Finding purpose in transition work

Because she wasn’t pursuing a traditional education career, Biros was able to fulfill her student teaching requirements in CECH’s IDD Education Center. She initially worked in the center’s Collaboration for Employment and Education Synergy (CEES) program, a high school transition program that helps students with intellectual and developmental disabilities discover their strengths and prepare for the future. The work really spoke to Biros, who continued to explore roles in the IDD Education Center when they became available to her. 

 “I wanted to do everything that I could,” she says, “because I found something that I really loved, and it was transition — helping people with disabilities live lives that are meaningful outside of school. Transitioning into employment, finding meaningful work, transitioning into independent living — all their programs were centered around just making lives better.” 

Transition work spoke deeply to Biros. So did the dedication of the IDD Education Center’s staff, and she regards Cady Dart, CEES program director and associate director of employment services with the IDD Education Center, as an influential figure in her life. 

The feeling, it turns out, is mutual.  

“Emma is one of the most remarkable people I know,” says Dart. “Her passion for creating meaningful, sustainable pathways to employment for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities is truly contagious.”

"Her determination, integrity and deep care for the individuals we serve are evident in everything she does."

Cady Dart CEES program director

Dart was so impressed with Biros, in fact, that she introduced her to a local founder-to-be, Bryan Holland, who was seeking someone to run a nonprofit organization he hoped to start for people with disabilities to gain meaningful employment.

“I ended up being the founding director of Genesis at Work,” she says. “I created all of those programs, built and scaled the nonprofit. I absolutely loved it.” Unfortunately, after close to three years, the Genesis at Work Foundation’s funding fell short of meeting operating costs. “My heart was broken when the decision was made to dissolve it. Funding is hard, and having continual funding for a nonprofit, especially when you're just starting off, is hard to maintain. But I was able to take those programs that were built and brought them to another nonprofit where they are still running and driving today.” 

“She is passionate and driven in her mission to give people with disabilities all the opportunities possible for them to live happy, active and independent lives,” says Kathy DeLaura, managing director at Partners in Change LLC and a mentor to Biros since the pair’s initial meeting at the IDD Education Center’s 2022 Red & Black Blast. “Even after her official role ended, she stayed involved to ensure the clients were taken care of and even worked tirelessly to help the displaced staff members.”  

It was a tough moment, for sure, but Biros maintains the timing was right. The leadership role had required a lot of time and energy from her, and she’d had to put off work on her entrepreneurial endeavor, an adaptive clothing line for people with disabilities named Love, Emma.

Three girls are laughing. The one in the center is seated in a wheelchair.

Biros' Love, Emma features adaptive clothing for young women living with disabilities. Photo: provided

Love, Emma

The idea for Love, Emma first came to Biros through an experience she had while working her college job – or, more accurately, one of her college jobs. “When I was in school, I had to make rent somehow, so I had a few jobs. If you ask my husband, I had too many,” she laughs. She’d always been interested in fashion and the way clothing allowed her to express herself, and in time her friends started asking her to style the way they dress, too. “I thought, maybe I can do this for a job.” Biros saw an ad from a clothing company seeking a fashion stylist, applied and was hired to the role. 

A young woman wearing a light blue blouse sits in a chair. She has a medical device of some kind on her chest.

Adaptive clothing from Love, Emma is designed to be functional for young women living with disabilities. Photo: provided

One of the clients Biros ended up working with on a regular basis would bring her sister, Maddie, who had cerebral palsy, with her to stylings. “Maddie would just kind of hang out. She never tried on any clothing. She was never styled,” recounts Biros. “Maybe my eighth or ninth time styling her sister, Amanda, they were telling me how they were going on a trip somewhere tropical.” At one point during the session, Maddie asked if she could also be styled, surprising Biros. “She typically came in baggy sweats, a hoodie, T-shirts. I never pictured her as one who really cared about the clothing she was wearing. I was like, 'Oh my gosh, I would love to do that!'” 

Amanda, however, quickly stepped in to decline the offer. “I was naive, I was young, and also I'm a very stubborn person,” says Biros, explaining that prior to Amanda’s next fitting, she secretly pulled about 10 outfits for Maddie to try on. “Pretty quickly I saw why exactly her sister had not wanted this to happen. Due to the rigidness of her arms we weren't able to get her arms up in a way that would let us get clothing on. Nothing worked except for one dress, which actually got caught in her wheelchair as she was coming out of the fitting room. I felt horrible. You could tell that Maddie was upset. Her sister was upset.” 

Untitled design - 2

Love, Emma's Glimmer boxes include a copy of "Signed and Sealed" magazine, which Biros created to return a sense of normalcy for young women whose lives have been disrupted by disability. Photo: provided

Biros went home that night and began researching adaptive clothing, or clothes specially designed for people with disabilities. And she didn’t like what she saw: unstylish items predominantly geared for an elderly population. “There was nothing suitable for a 23-year-old girl who was going to go hit the clubs. That's when I realized there was this really big gap in the fashion industry. So that's why I decided to start Love, Emma – for Maddie and all of these other girls who did not have the ability to choose clothing that made them feel seen or special.” 

In the years since her college decision to start Love, Emma, Biros has kept plugging away at bringing her dream into reality. She’s had conversations with women living with a variety of disabilities, as well as learned from occupational therapists. She hired a consultant for adaptive clothing design who had worked with Tommy Hilfiger on their adaptive line. Biros also worked with Sew Valley, a local nonprofit founded by DAAP grads, to create samples to try out on actual women.  

“Love, Emma can change the way women in wheelchairs feel about themselves in stylish, functional clothing,” says DeLaura. “Emma has worked hard on this fashion line since before I knew her and has made many connections to further the project. She has faced multiple roadblocks along the way and just keeps rethinking and repackaging the line.” 

The journey has taken years, in large part due to the upfront costs of purchasing inventory and Biros’ refusal to cut production corners. But Love, Emma is about to hit a meaningful milestone with the introduction of Biros’ Glimmer Boxes.  

“They are packages that are going to be sold specifically to hospitals, trauma centers, occupational therapy offices – anyone who's going to be working with young women with a newly developed disability or chronic illness,” she explains. “The boxes have a few articles of Love, Emma clothing and then a magazine called Signed and Sealed, which I've been working on for a while. It's specifically in there to provide a sense of normalcy and hope for girls whose lives have completely been turned upside down.” The boxes also include a crystal “glimmer catcher" and an assistive makeup device Biros recently developed. 

Beyond that, she’s working toward having a physical inventory on hand this fall, at which point her dream of helping young people living with disabilities will finally be realized.   

“One in four Americans has a disability. Most people wouldn't even realize it. There are endless invisible disabilities,” she says. “It's a group that anyone can join at any moment, and I think a lot of people forget that. There is so much need for adaptive clothing.” 

Featured image at top: Headshot of Emma Biros, founder of Love, Emma. Photo: provided

Next Lives Here

CECH’s School of Education is highly regarded for preparing the next generation of educators. The program is led by a team of experienced and qualified faculty who are dedicated to teaching students to meet the demands of modern classrooms and address the educational needs of student populations. The program offers a variety of courses and experiences that will help students develop their understanding of child development, instructional methods and classroom management.

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