London Fashion Week AW25: A Recap Of This Season’s Highlights

By Charlie Colville

11 hours ago

London Fashion Week is officially back for AW25. Find out everything you might have missed with our guide to all of this season's highlights.


Noticed flocks of well-dressed Londoners migrating around the city this week? That’s right, London Fashion Week is back for another round of shows, with designers showcasing their AW25 creations for the style set. Intrigued to know what went on at the shows? We’ve rounded up all the highlights.

London Fashion Week AW25: The Highlights

E.L.V. Denim

Making its London Fashion Week debut this season – as the first fully upcycled brand on-schedule, no less – E.L.V. Denim used its presentation slot to showcase just what goes on behind the scenes. Bringing its studio to Regent Street, the brand showed how its garments are made (with its actual craftspeople doing the making) using materials handpicked from vintage warehouses around the UK. A stand-out piece from E.L.V. Denim’s AW25 collection was a white, hand-crocheted evening gown, made from upcycled bed sheets provided by 1 Hotel Mayfair.

Models in upcycled materials | E.L.V. Denim AW25

E.L.V. Denim AW25

Harris Reed

London Fashion Week’s first celebrity sighting comes courtesy of Florence Pugh, who opened Harris Reed’s AW25 show with a performance monologue – two years after she fist opened the designer’s show for AW23.

This season, Reed was drawn to punk references and rebellious self-expression, as well as the dialogue created by contrasts of strength and vulnerability. Looks were designed to echo armour and architectural structures – spikes and waves, crinoline cages and metallic finishes – with ‘urchin fronds’ designed by British artist Porta Romana growing into a protective shell around the body. Between the spikes and hard lines, however, Reed offered glimpses of bodily curves, with unexpected cut-outs and underwear staples reframed as outerwear.

Model on runway

Harris Reed AW25 (c) Jason Lloyd-Evans

Paul Costelloe

Day 2 kicked off bright and early with Paul Costelloe, who brought his heritage brand, Paul Costelloe Dressage, to the runway for AW25. A love letter to British equestrianism, the collection drew on fabrics from Magees of Ireland and Harris of Scotland. Classic tweeds and herringbones were crafted into dramatic overcoats, capes and feminine co-ords, while the brand’s in-house team brought to life a hand-painted narrative print depicting the art of dressage.

MITHRIDATE

Making his runway debut as the Creative Director of MITHRIDATE, Daniel Fletcher truly put his stamp on the brand’s next (exciting) chapter. The designer’s goal with his first collection with the brand was to bridge the gap between British heritage and Chinese craftsmanship, with an emphasis on British sartorial staples; tailored coats, knitted jumpers and scarves, ball gowns and striped shirts all made an appearance. Fletcher also created a number of styles inspired by the eighties and noughties, cast in sickly pastels and preppy hues, as a means of challenging the idea of bad taste. Exploratory, playful and underpinned by exceptional craft, this was just a glimpse of MITHRIDATE’s new era.

Models on runway

MITHRIDATE AW25

Bora Aksu

With the rain pouring down over London, it felt only fitting that Bora Aksu’s dialogue on the interconnections of tragedy and beauty be backdropped by the worst of the week’s weather. Inspiration this season came from Austria, where Aksu came across Empress Elisabeth’s struggles with the rigidities of the imperial court – as well as emotive vibrant of painter Egon Schiele. Aksu imagined how the artist would have depicted the empress, crafting her image in swirls of lace, intricate veils and deep shades of red, purple and pink.

Close up of model wearing a veil | London Fashion Week AW25

Bora Aksu AW25 (c) Jason Lloyd-Evans

Temperley London

This season also marked a new era for Alice Temperley MBE, whose AW25 collection ‘La Victoire’ was a tribute to elegant rebellion. Taking inspiration from the Napoleonic era, Temperley wove her signature embroidery and hand-painted motifs with military detailing such as medal motifs, tassels and sharp tailoring underpinned by gothic romance.

Models in London Fashion Week AW25 presentation

Temperley London AW25 (c) Max Cisotti/Dave Benett/Getty Images

Mark Fast

Dreams took on a gothic shape for Mark Fast’s AW25 runway show. Built around themes of vampiric immortality, gothic romance and 80s new wave youth culture, the designer offered a new take on the Mark Fast Woman: someone who is ‘both elegant and unpredictable, daring yet sentimental, rebellious yet wrapped in romance.’ A collection of contrasts, models walked down the runway in swathes of velvet and sheer layers, corsets and flowing skirts, soft curves and sharp tailoring.

Models on runway | London Fashion Week AW25

Mark Fast AW25 (c) Iker Aldama

More From LFW

For more information on the London Fashion Week AW25 schedule, see our guide here or visit londonfashionweek.co.uk

Featured image: E.L.V. Denim AW25 (c) Sophie Holden, British Fashion Council