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Street style at London Fashion Week
Street style at London Fashion Week Kuba Dabrowski/WWD

London Fashion Week 

London Fashion Week stands alongside New York, Milan and Paris as part of the "Big Four" fashion weeks making up fashion month. It is the second fashion week taking place during fashion month, following New York and preceding Milan and Paris. London Fashion Week is the newest of the four — its first edition was organized in February 1984 by the British Fashion Council for the London Development Agency, held at the Commonwealth Institute's car park in Kensington. 

London Fashion Week hosts spring collections shows in September, while fall collections are historically shown in February. 

The city's fashion week was bolstered in 1985 when Princess Diana held a reception for various designers at Lancaster House. 

In 1993, the British Fashion Council established the Newgen program, which helped support emerging designers. Newgen offers designers financial support, showcasing opportunities and mentoring to develop critical skills to help designers future-proof their businesses.  

London Fashion Week has been through several venue changes, including Somerset House, Soho's Brewer Street and The Store Studios on The Strand, though many shows take place offsite at venues like Tate Modern and Royal Courts of Justice. 

London's fashion scene was influenced early on from the city's clubs and counterculture — that vibe carries through to today, as many young, edgy designers show during London Fashion Week. 

The city is known for classic British designs, including from Burberry. In recent years, eyes are also on Jonathan Anderson and his J.W. Anderson label, as well as Charles Jeffrey's Loverboy.  

London Fashion Week has hosted its share of memorable moments, including Naomi Campbell walking topless for Philip Treacy in 1993; Spice Girl Mel B walking for Julien Macdonald in 1999; and Shalom Harlow twirling while robots spray painted her dress at Alexander McQueen's 1999 show. 

London Fashion Week

1205 RTW Spring 2016

Paula Gerbase took inspiration from a trek she did in May through Africa's Atlas Mountains, saying that she'd…

Hunter Original RTW Spring 2016

Hunter paid homage to the muddy British summer music festivals that made its rubber boots so famous. Here was…

Julien Macdonald RTW Spring 2016

Inspired by a recent trip to Bali, Julien Macdonald's show was filled with tropical colors and the designer's…

Markus Lupfer RTW Spring 2016

Markus Lupfer played with the idea of a tough femininity, saying during his presentation that he'd imagined…

Holly Fulton RTW Spring 2016

Holly Fulton quite literally applied the fetish motifs, sulfuric colors and Surrealist spirit of late British…

J.W. Anderson RTW Spring 2016

Does a woman look more powerful in a printed top with big leg-of-mutton sleeves and printed balloon pants…

Alexander Wang Christens London Boutique with Raucous Bash

The designer dispensed vodka shots to guests, and Skepta performed.

Orla Kiely RTW Spring 2016

The late Sixties and early Seventies are Orla Kiely's favorite years, and this season she gave her…

Sibling RTW Spring 2016

This polished and glamorous collection was a departure from the label's often wild – and borderline camp…

Ed Marler RTW Spring 2016

This Fashion East alumnus staged his debut in a tiny Soho courtyard. Beneath a tinsel-festooned canopy…

Le Kilt RTW Spring 2016

Le Kilt's Samantha McCoach showed at legendary Soho music venue, the 100 Club, and her collection took its…

Molly Goddard RTW Spring 2016

One of London's rising talents, Molly Goddard let loose her love of smocking, ruching and ruffles on…

Manuel Facchini RTW Spring 2016

Manuel Facchini, who is also creative director at Byblos, said in his show notes that he wanted to fuse…

John Smedley RTW Spring 2016

This 230-year-old British knitwear label's first full women's wear collection telegraphed a serene mood.

Mother of Pearl RTW Spring 2016

Victoriana viewed through an Eighties lens: That was Mother of Pearl creative director Amy Powney's take on…