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Highlights from the London Fashion Week Sping-Summer 2022 shows: Irish designer Richard Malone showcased his latest ready-to-wear collection in the middle of the Victoria & Albert Museum. Scroll for more.
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Richard Malone's new collection consisted of fantastical structured garments in striking hues like cobalt and crimson.
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A model wears a peroxide wig backstage at the Labrum show. The label combines British tailoring with West African silhouettes.
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Labrum's new collection, true to the label's mission, celebrated the beauty of West African style through rich colors and graphics by artist Yinka Ilori.
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At the Mark Fast showcase, models walked in looks heavily inspired by 1990s fashion.
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Models were given smoked-out eyes at the Mark Fast runway show.
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Victorian-era photographs of North American frontier women inspired much of Yuhan Wang's new season.
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Wang's prints were florid and romantic, typical of the label's emphasis on femininity and poetic inspirations.
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Smart tailoring and sculptural shoulders featured heavily in the collection of London-based Indian menswear designer Kaushik Velendra.
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Edward Crutchley's catwalk show took place inside the Collins Music Hall, where the collection ranged from high-cut bodysuits to grandiose gowns.
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Crutchley's clothes were inspired by London's rich LGBTQ+ history -- particularly when gay bars in the 1700s were said to have dominated the capital.
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Extroverted evening wear made up Feben's debut presentation, with barely-there satin twist tops and hot pink skirt suits.
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Feben's collection also featured bold color choices with classic black satin suits.
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Models for Feben were also gilded with gold spray paint.
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Masculine trousers were given a feminine flourish at the Paul & Joe show. The design house is led by French designer Sophie Mechaly.
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For makeup, the models for Paul & Joe were given a glorious sweep of color onto a single eye.
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The new Bora Aksu collection was a multicolored medley of tulle, taffeta and lace.
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For his new season, Aksu, a London-based Turkish designer, was inspired by the late flamboyant 1970s Dutch socialite Mathilde Willink.
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Rejina Pyo staged her show at the London Aquatics Centre, with a dramatic diving introduction by Team GB's Emily Martin, Josie Zilling and Robyn Birch.
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Rejina Pyo's collection was filled summertime hues like fuchsia, apple green and sunset orange.
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The vintage-influenced Rixo presentation had models dotted in and among the verdant tropical foliage of the Barbican Conservatory.
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Rixo models danced and swayed to a live mariachi band.
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Osman Yousefzada's latest ready-to-wear collection emphasized biodegradable fabrics, with multiple looks made from wood pulp fabric.
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Yousefzada buried a dress at the end of his show with the hopes of unearthing the garment next year to see if it returned to the earth.
Halpern
Movement was key to Halpern's new collection. The American designer shot his fashion film at the Royal Opera House in London, where professional ballet dancers helped bring the clothes to life.
Harris Reed
Harris Reed -- the London designer responsible for Harry Styles' American Vogue cover in 2020 -- combined bridal lace and groomsman tailoring to create subversive, fluid garments.
Matty Bovan
Emerging Yorkshire designer Matty Bovan was inspired by the domestic space. One recurring print in his new collection was modeled off the hotel carpet in Stanley Kubrick's 1980 film "The Shining."
Ben Broomfield/Molly Goddard
Molly Goddard released a collection of jeans to pair with her classic diaphanous tops.
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At the Simone Rocha catwalk, models were enveloped by oversized communion dresses and larger-than-life poplin collars.
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Highstreet giant COS showed during London Fashion Week, with the brand unveiling an Autumn-Winter 2021 collection.
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"RuPaul's Drag Race UK" finalist Bimini Bon-Boulash walked the runway at the Richard Quinn show.
Roksanda
Roksanda debuted its Spring-Summer 2022 collection at the Serpentine Pavilion with an immersive performance blending fashion with dance.
London CNN  — 

London Fashion Week was back in full-swing, with dozens of designers opting to reveal their Spring-Summer 2022 collections via in-person shows and presentations across the capital this week.

While the pandemic continues to impact life in the UK, the fashion community seemed hell-bent on ignoring it. Proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test were required to attend shows and parties, but masks were rare and, in contrast to previous seasons, themes emerging from the week’s shows were mostly focused on subjects beyond the global health crisis.

On Sunday night, South Korean designer Rejina Pyo staged an impressive show at the former Olympic village with the help of three Team GB divers. They delighted guests at the London Aquatics Center, opening and closing the event with a series of acrobatic dives. The collection featured pretty garments perfect for wiling away carefree summer days.

British heavyweight brand Burberry, meanwhile, was conspicuously absent from the schedule along with Christopher Kane. But other London Fashion Week mainstays returned in force: Simone Rocha, Erdem and Roksanda were notable highlights on the schedule alongside Richard Quinn – the designer behind singer Kim Petras’ striking ensemble at the MTV Video Music Awards in New York – who closed the six-day program with a packed-show on Tuesday evening. Kate Moss and Boy George looked on as models teetered down the runway in high platform heels paired with vibrant jumpsuits and floral gowns in Quinn’s usual punk-with-a-twist style.

David M. Benett/Getty Images for Richard Quinn
Kate Moss, Jordan Barrett and Boy George watch as models walk the runway at the Richard Quinn SS22 show & cocktail party at The Londoner Hotel.

Earlier in the the schedule, American expat Michael Halpern paid tribute to the many performing artists impacted by the pandemic by presenting his new line with a video starring members of London’s Royal Ballet. Screened digitally and showcased to editors during a series of in-person appointments on Friday, the short film saw dancers performing on the institution’s historic stage dressed in his ultra-glam eveningwear.

Speaking to CNN Style, Halpern said he feels designers now have more freedom than ever to decide how to present fashion. His collection explored ideas of “form versus flow,” with garments designed to “move really large and big and shapely on stage,” he said, while also incorporating ideas of “restriction” through the likes of one round latticed “orb” dress.

Halpern
A look from Hapern's SS22 collection.

London’s Serpentine Pavilion (an ever-changing temporary structure, most recently designed by South African architectural practice Counterspace) set the stage for two shows. First, Roksanda Ilinčić put on an immersive performance – choreographed by Holly Blakey – in which unbridled dancers wove their way through the space draped in lashings of bright colors in a celebration of movement and freedom. Next, rising star Harris Reed showed his latest “demi-couture” collection at the pavilion, opting for a monochrome palette that challenged gender binaries by unpicking traditional “his and hers” wedding attire. Bridal gowns featured elements of tailoring, while his suiting was draped in white lace. Singer Kelsey Lu also performed as part of the show.

Amid an abundance of physical presentations, Victoria Beckham, whose coveted shows are normally filled with celebrity guests, instead released a set of images to mark new collection. JW Anderson took a similarly stripped-back approach with its digital showcase and Matty Bovan, one of 18 designers to receive a “Newgen” bursary from the British Fashion Council in partnership with TikTok, also chose to present virtually via a short film.

“Crochet and hand knitting underpin my work and once I subvert these techniques, I can create worlds in which my collections can flourish,” said Bovan via email. “In working with (director) Ruth Hogben, I found my new Hypercraft collection could exist in its own static TV world, and film was the best medium for me to convey this.”

Harris Reed
Harris Reed hoped to challenge the heteronormative ideology of traditional weddings by melding bridal pieces and groomswear tailoring.

Overall, the official scheduled skewed young – creating space for some of the city’s most promising emerging designers and injecting the week with a sense of hope and new beginnings.

On that note, Nensi Dojaka, winner of this year’s prestigious LVMH Prize, made her London Fashion Week debut to an already adoring audience. The ultimate antidote to loungey pandemic-wear, her delicate and expertly crafted garments offered a modern take on exposed lingerie.

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A model walks the runway at Nensi Dojaka's debut show for her eponymous brand.

Elsewhere, 1970s-inspired Rixo, a brand founded in 2015 by young duo Orlagh McCloskey and Henrietta Rix, staged its presentation within the lush surroundings the Barbican’s conservatory. Sweet cocktails and floaty dresses were plentiful during an event that bid farewell to summer as the weather cools in Europe.

While London Fashion Week is now officially over until next season, the capital will next month play host to another fashion event that promises to draw attention. After six years in Paris, Alexander McQueen – a pillar brand of the British fashion industry since the late designer founded the business in the early 1990s – will return to show its latest collection by Sarah Burton in London on October 12.

Click through the gallery above for my highlights from London Fashion Week.