Why the Fashion Industry Is Failing Working-Class Designers—and How to Fix It

Why the Fashion Industry Is Failing Working-Class Designers—and How to Fix It

Beauty has always been about more than surface. It’s the story, the craft, the daring ideas stitched into every hem and highlight. In London, that spirit is being reimagined with fresh intent: opening doors for talent that doesn’t come prepackaged with privilege. If you care about the future of fashion as deeply as we do at Malibu Elixir, this moment matters.

Resetting the runway: A new promise for access

The British Fashion Council’s new CEO, Laura Weir, is placing inclusivity at the center of British style. Her goal is simple yet seismic: make fashion fairer for the working-class designers who fuel its originality.

Working alongside BFC ambassador for emerging talent Sarah Mower, Weir launched an outreach program that takes designers back into schools, making a creative career feel close, not distant. She also waived fees for BFC members on the official London Fashion Week schedule, easing a long-standing financial pinch.

  • What’s changing now:
    • No participation fees for BFC members on the LFW schedule
    • Designer-to-student outreach, spotlighting real career paths
    • A focus on decentralization so opportunity travels beyond London

Weir is candid that the next step requires a thriving creative economy and policy support. The vision: a pathway based on talent, not means.

Catherine, Princess of Wales with designer Patrick McDowell and BFC CEO Laura Weir at the Queen Elizabeth II Award for British Design.

The bigger picture: Class, culture, and who gets seen

Fashion doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Across the UK arts, leadership and prestige often skew toward those educated privately, while systemic barriers make entry harder for those from lower socio-economic and ethnic minority backgrounds. The pattern is clear: access often predicts opportunity.

This context matters when we talk about fabric and fantasy. The gatekeeping of culture shapes whose creativity gets funded, exhibited, and ultimately, remembered.

See also  The Archival Prada Comeback: Celebs, Collectors, and the Return of '99 Mirror Bags

Getting a foot in: Then and now

The UK once nurtured icons like Alexander McQueen, John Galliano, and Vivienne Westwood—talents who didn’t start with wealth. Many insiders now say those paths would be harder today, given the rising costs of education, studio space, and shows.

Industry veterans also point to a missing piece: patrons who open doors. In a world where social media promises visibility, success still demands business savvy, networks, and endurance—not just genius.

Alexander McQueen at a London show in 1997.
Alexander McQueen at a London show in 1997.

Today’s bright lights—including Tolu Coker, S.S. Daley (Steven Stokey-Daley), Aaron Esh, Bianca Saunders, and Saul Nash—prove it’s still possible. But it often comes with sacrifice, grit, and community support.

Patrick McDowell: Crafting a path with purpose

Liverpool-born designer Patrick McDowell, admired for environmentally conscious womenswear and worn by Sarah Jessica Parker, credits a pivotal teacher for early encouragement. By 13, they were upcycling school bags from unwanted materials—an early love letter to circular fashion.

At Central Saint Martins, loans didn’t bridge every expense. McDowell worked multiple jobs while studying, then navigated the added costs of materials and their graduate collection. Access to leftover Burberry stock from an internship and a BFC hardship grant helped fill the gaps—proof of how targeted support can change outcomes.

Backstage view at S.S. Daley's London Fashion Week show in February.
Backstage at S.S. Daley during London Fashion Week.

Beyond money: The quiet barriers

Designer Christopher Shannon, who grew up working-class, points to the microaggressions that trail success when you don’t fit the expected mold. From the way profiles are framed to the expectation of constant gratitude after awards, class can become a label that overshadows the work.

It’s a reminder that inclusivity is cultural as much as financial—about respect, credit, and how we talk about talent.

See also  Meryl Streep Returns as Miranda Priestly at Milan Fashion Week for Devil Wears Prada 2
Runway look from the Christopher Shannon show at London Fashion Week Men's, January 2017.
On the runway with Christopher Shannon, London Fashion Week Men’s, 2017.
A look from the Saul Nash show during London Fashion Week in February 2022.
Performance-driven elegance at Saul Nash, London Fashion Week.

To show or not to show: Rethinking the model

Post-Brexit realities—tariffs, customs checks, and shipping delays—have made UK-made goods costlier to produce and export. Factor in London’s high living costs and the economics grow tougher, especially for small labels.

London Fashion Week remains a coveted stage for discovery and press. Yet even with schedule fees lifted, the price of staging a show—venue, models, hair and makeup, production—can run into the tens of thousands. Many young designers have carried that debt for years.

Designer Dilara Findikoglu backstage at her London show in February.
Dilara Findikoglu backstage in London—where vision meets logistics.

Some labels are reshaping strategy. Brands like Rejina Pyo and Stefan Cooke have leaned into intimate events and pop-ups. Others—Conner Ives, Chopova Lowena, KNWLS—appear on the LFW calendar selectively, choosing impact over frequency.

Rejina Pyo hosts an intimate dinner celebrating the Mulberry x Rejina Pyo collaboration.
Rejina Pyo celebrates a collaboration with quiet luxury and community.

The quiet power of alternatives

Shannon now splits time between limited e-commerce drops, visual projects, and teaching—encouraging students to build direct-to-consumer platforms and define success on their own terms. It’s a modern blueprint: community, creativity, and smart commerce over spectacle.

Meanwhile, the BFC is exploring ways to further reduce the financial pressure of runway presentations. If the show model evolves, more working-class voices can be heard—loudly, beautifully, and sustainably.

A cautious optimism

Designers like McDowell are hopeful. There’s a growing acknowledgment of the problem and a real intention to fix it—and that’s a meaningful start.

Because when talent is given room to breathe, fashion becomes what it’s meant to be: democratic, dazzling, and deeply human.

Call to action
If this vision resonates, champion it. Seek out independent designers, attend small shows and pop-ups, and choose pieces that reflect your values. Join us at Malibu Elixir as we celebrate a more inclusive, radiant fashion future—one thoughtful choice at a time.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *