All the Best Runway Looks From London Fashion Week Spring-Summer 2025

London Town delivered!

<p>Getty Images</p>

Getty Images

The first stop of Fashion Month commenced with a lineup of New York fashion shows that welcomed the four-week marathon. London's schedule—full of emerging designers, avant-garde giants, and signature British labels—is also making its mark this season, as brands like JW Anderson, Simone Rocha, and Burberry debut their spring-summer 2025 collections.

With an unofficial kickoff courtesy of H&M and Charli XCX last week, the city's most exciting fashion talents have taken the runways by storm, showcasing what has long made London an iconic style scene. Brands like Chopova Lowena and Tove have wowed with intricate takes on their signature silhouettes, alongside other emerging labels like Nensi Dojoka and Chet Lo.

Ahead, some of the best looks shown during London Fashion Week spring-summer 2025.

Chet Lo

<p>Courtesy of Chet Lo</p>

Courtesy of Chet Lo

Chet Lo turned to corporate America for inspiration this season. More specifically, his mother's 9-to-5 life in the 1990s. The designer's usual plucked details took a more conservative turn this season via a darker palette of black and gray, as well as some corporate-adjacent silhouettes like A-line skirts and ties.

<p>Courtesy of Chet Lo</p>

Courtesy of Chet Lo

<p>Courtesy of Chet Lo</p>

Courtesy of Chet Lo

Nensi Dojaka

<p>Courtesy of Nensi Dojaka</p>

Courtesy of Nensi Dojaka

Nensi Dojaka is known for her signature sculptural silhouettes. And this season, she took it a step further via renewed forms of naked dressing. With a new Calvin Klein collaboration, Dojaka showcased black mini dresses, lingerie staples, and sheer styles that flexed her knack for sensuality. A transparent red and pink dress with a criss-cross neckline and flowy hemline served as a high point of the collection.

<p>Courtesy of Nensi Dojaka</p>

Courtesy of Nensi Dojaka

<p>Courtesy of Nensi Dojaka</p>

Courtesy of Nensi Dojaka

Simone Rocha

<p>Courtesy of Simone Rocha</p>

Courtesy of Simone Rocha

Balletcore may be so 2023, but in Simone Rocha's world, tulle and dance always serve as inspiration. The designer's spring-summer 2025 collection was drawn from the work of seminal choreographers and dancers Michael Clark and Pina Bausch. Tulle, brooch-like details protruding from rose-colored leotards, denim jackets paired with tutus, and a satin cape with bubble skirt were all featured in the lineup.

<p>Courtesy of Simone Rocha</p>

Courtesy of Simone Rocha

<p>Courtesy of Simone Rocha</p>

Courtesy of Simone Rocha

Tove

<p>Courtesy of Tove</p>

Courtesy of Tove

The term "quiet luxury" gets thrown around a lot. But in Tove's lineup of practical suits, vibrant silk dresses, and not-so-traditional evening wear, there's a unique type of luxury awaiting its potential wearers. Designers Camille Perry and Holly Wright presented a collection that heavily featured the label's signature easy-to-move-in dresses via draped frocks and light-colored silk gowns. They also introduced footwear this season with an array of pointed mules.

<p>Courtesy of Tove</p>

Courtesy of Tove

<p>Courtesy of Tove</p>

Courtesy of Tove

Burberry

<p>Jeff Spicer/Getty Images</p>

Jeff Spicer/Getty Images

Daniel Lee presented his latest collection for Burberry with a reworked take on the brand's signatures. Many a trench coat were featured in the collection. This time, the trenches included fuzzy embellishments and were cropped for a more modern silhouette. Military symbols made their appearance on evening wear with a white double-breasted, high-neck jacket over a long black flowy skirt.

<p>Jeff Spicer/Getty Images</p>

Jeff Spicer/Getty Images

<p>Jeff Spicer/Getty Images</p>

Jeff Spicer/Getty Images

JW Anderson

<p>Victor VIRGILE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images</p>

Victor VIRGILE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

There's always a sense of surrealism sprinkled through JW Anderson's work. For spring-summer 2025, that mindset came in the form of mini bubble skirts, iridescent fabrics, and hemlines that defied gravity. Trompe l'oeil details were also featured in the collection with mini dresses displaying buttons that were not actually there. He also reworked his bow-shaped tops—a viral hit from past collections—with cozy knit materials.

<p>Victor VIRGILE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images</p>

Victor VIRGILE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

<p>Getty Images</p>

Getty Images

Richard Quinn

<p>John Phillips/Getty Images</p>

John Phillips/Getty Images

Few designers do evening wear quite as well as Richard Quinn. His is a world of reimagined takes on classic feminine staples and this season was a celebration of that talent. Voluminous skirts paired with opera gloves, frothy tulle dresses with metallic embellishments, and a white bridal jumpsuit with layered fringe details.

<p>John Phillips/Getty Images</p>

John Phillips/Getty Images

<p>John Phillips/Getty Images</p>

John Phillips/Getty Images

For more InStyle news, make sure to sign up for our newsletter!

Read the original article on InStyle.