Emilio de la Morena’s S/S 2015 collection at London Fashion Week felt like a love letter to the early 2000s party girl, the kind who never missed a flashbulb and always reached for whatever sparkled the hardest. This was fashion with a memory, pulled straight from the Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan era, when nightlife dictated style and excess was the point.
-
-
Simone Rocha S/S 2015 LFW
Simone Rocha S/S 2015 at London Fashion Week felt almost Victorian at first glance, but nothing here stayed polite for long. The collection flirted with tradition, then deliberately knocked it off balance. You could absolutely imagine corsets living underneath these looks, even though none were shown. The structure was there. The restraint was not.
-
Osman S/S 2015 LFW
Osman’s Spring Summer 2015 collection at London Fashion Week delivered sleek restraint with just enough weirdness to keep it interesting. At first glance, the silhouettes felt controlled and modern. However, the longer you looked, the more playful details began to surface. This was not minimalism for the sake of being serious. It had personality, and it knew exactly when to show it.
-
Issa London S/S 2015 LFW
At first glance, Issa London Spring Summer 2015 looks like chaos with a plan. The collection hits you immediately with what can only be described as lasagna graffiti. Layered, messy, and strangely satisfying. However, once the shock wears off, the intention becomes clear. This was not randomness. It was controlled experimentation.
-
Erdem S/S 2015 LFW
Erdem Spring Summer 2015 felt like stepping into a carefully cultivated world where nature and couture exist in perfect harmony. From the very first look, the collection invited you inside a lush greenhouse fantasy, one built on precision, romance, and obsessive attention to detail. Nothing felt accidental. Every reference landed with intention.
-
Antonio Berardi S/S 2015 LFW
Antonio Berardi Spring Summer 2015 unfolded like a confident conversation between strength and softness. From the opening look, it was clear this collection was not interested in playing by a single rulebook. Instead, Berardi leaned into contrast and let it lead the narrative. Bold elegance met fluid movement, and the tension between the two made the entire runway hum.
-
Pringle of Scotland S/S 2015 LFW
Pringle of Scotland Spring Summer 2015 arrived with a sense of calm confidence. Nothing screamed for attention, yet everything felt intentional. The collection unfolded gently, starting in crisp whites before drifting into soft baby blues and eventually settling into deeper shades of blue. This progression gave the runway a natural rhythm, almost like watching the sky shift throughout the day.
-
Vivienne Westwood Red Label S/S 2015 LFW
Vivienne Westwood Red Label Spring Summer 2015 felt like a joyful rebellion. It embraced chaos, humor, and elegance all at once. This was not pirate cosplay or historical reenactment. Instead, it was casual pirate couture filtered through Westwood’s unmistakable wit. The collection leaned into freedom, irreverence, and styling that looked intentionally undone in the best possible way.
-
Hunter S/S 2015 LFW
Hunter’s Spring/Summer 2015 collection at London Fashion Week was the perfect balance of sporty ease and refined simplicity. This is clothing designed for real life, practical yet stylish, capturing the essence of urban adventure with a polished finish. The collection felt like a love letter to the outdoors, but one that still made a statement on the city streets.
-
KTZ S/S 2015 LFW
KTZ’s Spring/Summer 2015 collection at London Fashion Week was bold, unapologetic, and thoroughly theatrical. The line drew inspiration from Victorian portraiture and classical artwork, translating familiar images into wearable, three-dimensional prints. Each piece felt like a miniature art installation, merging fashion with fine art in a way that is both playful and visually arresting. This was not a quiet collection; it demanded attention.
-
Joseph S/S 2015 LFW
Joseph’s Spring/Summer 2015 collection at London Fashion Week was the epitome of casual sophistication. This was a show that didn’t scream for attention but quietly demanded it with well-tailored simplicity. The collection focused on a palette of light denims and soft heather greys, creating a laid-back mood that felt surprisingly modern and polished at the same time.