It’s been five whole seasons since Molly Goddard staged a real-life runway show, which, in fashion years, translates to several decades. Of course, like everyone else, the British designer bore the brunt of the pandemic, which forced London Fashion Week to go entirely online for the better part of 2020 and 2021.
This was particularly crushing for Goddard fans given the Londoner’s reputation for high-concept, high-drama shows – previous years have seen her stage tea parties and banquets with martinis for the Frow.
This season, the 33-year-old stripped things back by hosting a classic catwalk inside the Seymour Leisure Centre in central London. With nothing but rows of white benches and an elevated runway, the show’s setup allowed for Goddard’s clothes to take centre stage without any of the pomp and pageantry one has come to expect at LFW.
Considering the brutal rainstorm happening outside, you’d be forgiven for thinking spirits would have been somewhat dampened as the fashion pack waited for the show to begin. And yet, quite the opposite was true, with editors, buyers, and influencers alike giddily catching up in anticipation of Goddard’s catwalk comeback.
Meanwhile, the front row was alight with fledging talents from the worlds of art and music, including singers Celeste and Babeheaven and actors Lolly Adefope and Bukky Bakray.
The second the music started pumping out – remixes of classic 1980s and 1990s tracks – it was clear Goddard was championing a celebratory mood for autumn/winter 2022. It makes sense, given that the collection was inspired by Portobello and Camden markets of bygone years.
As Goddard explains in the show’s notes, her mother’s best friend was central to the Portobello social scene in the late 1980s. The aesthetic underlying the collection is “somewhat based around her”.
“I would describe her as a cross between Marilyn Monroe and Mick Jones,” Goddard adds. “Big, bleached blond hair with a flower in it, red lipstick, a 50s dress with an army jacket and trainers.”
Sartorially speaking, this manifested in some classic Goddard silhouettes: full, glorious tutu dresses featuring layers of frills paired with flatform knee-high boots and oversized knee-skimming knits. Renowned for her hot pink creations, Goddard’s contributors this season were even more eye-poppingly bright, with several iterations of her famous crunchy tulle coming in a brighter-than-bright fuchsia.
Elsewhere, feminine smocks came in more neutral buttercup and dusky blue shades, carefully constructed to feature horizontal curved seams with uneven frills. Goddard added a casual edge to her girlish frocks by styling them underneath oversized men’s jumpers, and with trainers instead of heels. This aesthetic was perfected by friend and muse Edie Campbell, who closed the show in a cupcake-like cream tulle gown practically bursting from the seams underneath a vintage-looking grandpa knit.
There was plenty of denim, too, with frayed dresses and skirts evoking that late 1980s punk spirit. The era was also referenced in accessories – think fishnet tights and shoulder bags with silver chains – and hairstyling, which saw models walking the runway with higher-than-high ponytails that swung from the middle of their heads.
The mood was one of playful dress-up, evoked further by the inclusion of Run DMC’s “Walk This Way”, which Sex and the City fans will immediately align with the famous scene from the 2008 film in which Carrie Bradshaw tries on old outfits for her friends, Charlotte, Samantha, and Miranda, who vote on which items she should “toss” and “take” to her new apartment.
“The overall look is eclectic, here’s-what-I-found-down-the-market,” explained GoddardThere is a familiarity to this collection and the objects in it – each garment having a simplicity to it but each elevated into something special.” Here’s hoping for more real-life runways from the designer in the future.