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This article was co-authored by Dr Brett Staniland, PhD — fashion editor, academic, activist, and model — and Kolsquare’s team, bringing together expertise from both the UK fashion industry and influencer marketing.
With London Fashion Week sustainability now under intense scrutiny, Brett brings years of runway experience and insight. Paired with Kolsquare’s data-driven, values-led influence, he offers a unique lens on the future of UK fashion.
London has always been a cultural powerhouse. In fashion, it remains one of the most exciting and diverse capitals — but it also faces unique challenges in maintaining global influence and credibility. We've seen London Fashion Week leading with bold initiatives, becoming the first of the Big Four to adopt Copenhagen’s sustainability requirements for brands on schedule.
Yet the presence of major fast fashion players alongside emerging designers raises the question: how can every platformed brand reflect the industry’s long-term sustainability goals? The answer depends not only on designers but also on the creators who shape narratives and hold brands accountable.
As Brett notes, “There’s an opportunity right now. Consumers are becoming tired of big brands and logos they can’t trust. There’s a growing appetite for craftsmanship and storytelling from honest brands with real values.”
By prioritising these qualities, London Fashion Week can strengthen its position as a leader in responsible fashion innovation.
Behind the glamour of the runway, London Fashion Week faces deep-rooted challenges that shape how the industry innovates and responds to growing demands for sustainability and accountability.
Unlike Milan or Paris, fashion in the UK has historically been undervalued as an industry. Brett explains, “In Milan, working in fashion is seen as one of the best industries to be part of, but in England, people often dismiss it as unserious or temporary. That perception has led to underfunding and a lack of respect for the craft — yet it’s an industry that employs thousands and has a major environmental footprint.
"If we took it seriously, we could tackle those impacts more effectively, especially as shifting consumer habits increasingly demand transparency and responsibility from brands.”
Many sustainability projects still rely on funding from large corporations, which can create tensions between ideals and practical realities.
As Brett puts it, “It’s so underfunded that the money often comes from big brands using the opportunity to greenwash. That’s a challenge we need to face head-on if we want to maintain integrity. Supporting sustainable fashion events London could help provide authentic platforms for responsible brands and innovators.”
Fashion Week remains a vital showcase, but behind the scenes, designers are under pressure to deliver more collections than ever, often with limited resources.
“Fashion Week can sometimes be a glossy surface over an industry that’s struggling,” Brett says. “Some brands pull in celebrities to distract from problems, others push out trends at a pace that fuels ultra-fast fashion. We need more stories, more substance, and less ‘stuff for stuff’s sake.’”
The “see-and-be-seen” creator is outdated. A new wave is emerging — fashion commentators, cultural critics, sustainability educators, and brand storytellers. These UK fashion creators are building loyal communities who trust their perspective, not just their wardrobe.
Yet the industry seemingly still rewards visibility over contribution. As Brett notes, algorithms and PR teams have long prioritised agreeable, trend-driven content over nuance and critique. This has fuelled a cycle where creators gain clout simply by being present, rather than supporting the designers, the message, or the craft.
Responsible influence offers a different route. By collaborating with creators who use their platform to educate, critique, and inspire, brands can extend the life and depth of their London Fashion Week presence beyond the runway moment. These are the voices who can play a key role in shaping London Fashion Week sustainability by translating a show’s values into cultural relevance, explaining why a brand’s sustainability commitments matter, and calling out tokenism when they see it.
From our shared perspective, brands need both cultural insight and hard data to make sure creator-brand partnerships fashion UK live up to their promise. That means looking beyond style and reach, and into trust, compliance and audience fit.
Together, we recommend:
When brands combine these kinds of tools with a commitment to elevating UK fashion creators who educate, challenge, and inspire, London Fashion Week can become a global leader in responsible influence.
With rising consumer demand for responsibility, building a sustainable London Fashion Week requires three key pillars: structured funding, purposeful partnerships, and inclusive representation.
Match public support with creative independence, ensuring that funding structures enable innovation without compromising on values. In many cases, brands struggle to balance financial support with creative freedom, making thoughtful funding structures essential.
Platform voices that contribute to lasting change, not just immediate hype.
Prioritise creators who bring purpose to glossy campaigns, ensuring that commercial relationships reflect shared values and goals.
London’s strength has always been its boldness and its diversity of ideas. By harnessing those qualities and combining them with a commitment to transparency, inclusivity, and London Fashion Week sustainability, the event can help build a new narrative for how fashion weeks evolve.
“When people think of British fashion, names like Vivienne Westwood and Lee McQueen come to mind — creatives who were bold, brave, and unapologetically themselves. We should take inspiration from them and champion those willing to use their voice for progress.” - Dr Brett Staniland
The future of fashion isn’t just about what’s on the runway — it’s about the stories we tell and the partnerships we choose to build.
Want to put these values into action?
We’ve created The Ethical Influence Checklist for UK Fashion & Beauty Brands — a 10-point checklist to help you stress-test your next activation.
It includes:
This free, downloadable PDF is built for value-driven brand marketers and agencies who want to go beyond short-term visibility and ensure their campaigns genuinely reflect their values in the long run. Sound like you?
[Download the Ethical Influence Checklist ] below to make sure your next campaign isn’t just seen, but stands for something.
Kolsquare is Europe’s leading Influencer Marketing platform, offering a data-driven solution that empowers brands to scale their KOL (Key Opinion Leader) marketing strategies through authentic partnerships with top creators.
Kolsquare’s advanced technology helps marketing professionals seamlessly identify the best content creators by filtering their content and audience, while also enabling them to build, manage, and optimize campaigns from start to finish. This includes measuring results and benchmarking performance against competitors.
With a thriving global community of influencer marketing experts, Kolsquare serves hundreds of customers—including Coca-Cola, Netflix, Sony Music, Publicis, Sézane, Sephora, Lush, and Hermès—by leveraging the latest Big Data, AI, and Machine Learning technologies. Our platform taps into an extensive network of KOLs with more than 5,000 followers across 180 countries on Instagram, TikTok, X (Twitter), Facebook, YouTube, and Snapchat.
As a Certified B Corporation, Kolsquare leads the way in promoting Responsible Influence, championing transparency, ethical practices, and meaningful collaborations that inspire positive change.
Since October 2024, Kolsquare has become part of the Team.Blue group, one of the largest private tech companies in Europe, and a leading digital enabler for businesses and entrepreneurs across Europe. Team.Blue brings together over 60 successful brands in web hosting, domains, e-commerce, online compliance, lead generation, application solutions, and social media.