Background
Gunn's mother, Nancy, helped found the library for the Central Intelligence Agency, while his father, George William Gunn, worked as a Federal Bureau of Investigations agent. A fifth generation Washingtonian, Gunn was raised in the capitol's bucolic Cleveland Park neighborhood. His childhood, however, was anything but idyllic. Gunn was a shy and unhappy boy, who preferred playing with Legos and assembling his sister's Barbie toys to sports, which greatly displeased his father.
Education
Gunn changed schools frequently as a result of debilitating social anxiety issues.
After graduating from high school, Gunn enrolled in Washington's Corcoran College of Art and Design, where he discovered a passion for design and sculpture. He received his bachelor's in fine arts from Corcoran in 1976, and set up a sculpture studio in D.C.'s Dupont Circle, working in the medium of paper and illustration board. He also took a job at Corcoran teaching design and working in campus admissions.
Career
In 1983, he was hired as an Assistant Director of Admissions at the Parsons School for Design in New York City. He rose through the ranks at Parsons, eventually becoming an associate dean. In 2000, Parsons' fashion department was in a state of turmoil. The curriculum had grown stale and stagnant, a lethal combination in an industry obsessed with the cutting edge. Gunn took over the department for what was supposed to be just one year, but he stayed on for seven. During that time he completely revamped the program, helping to place Parsons in the upper echelon of respected design programs. Gunn was at Parsons when the producers of a forthcoming reality television show named Project Runway called. Reluctantly, Gunn agreed to meet with producers from the Bravo TV network. He was won over by their vision, and allowed Bravo to stage the show at Parsons during the summer break and agreed to serve as an on-air mentor for contestants. Project Runway premiered on December 1, 2004. Audiences and critics soon warmed to the weekly design contests, and to contestants' big personalities and creativity. The show earned a steadily growing audience and an Emmy nomination before crowning Jay McCarroll its first winner. The show was a hit, and so was its breakout star, Tim Gunn. Audiences loved Gunn and his signature catchphrases "Make it work," "Talk to me" and "It's a little costumey." In 2007, Bravo gave Gunn his own show, Tim Gunn's Guide to Style, which ran for two seasons. After 29 years at Parsons, Gunn left the school in 2007 to take over as creative director for Liz Claiborne, Inc. In addition to his job at Liz Claiborne, Gunn continues to appear in Project Runway, which moved to the Lifetime channel in 2009.