If Luke Derrick has seemed go quiet since his sophomore London fashion week show for spring ’25, it’s because he’s very sensibly been concentrating on the serious business of selling and meeting buyers. Developing things slowly and meticulously is, in any case, the whole Derrick modus operandi: it’s the nerdy nuances of his clothes that make them great in close-up. “I feel there’s the external perception of men’s fashion in London, where there’s traditional Savile Row and Dunhill over there,” he observed, “and then you’ve got really subversive things over there. And I’m in this funny gray space in between.”
That highly specialized space is inhabited by the class of men who are extremely particular about their clothes, yet reject putting on anything that’s fussy, uncomfortable or obviously traditional. Derrick’s exactly the man with the wardrobe for this ageless club of international coolsters—this time, with a smart eye for navigating summer city heat. “The challenge is that you’re dealing with the need for lightness,” he said. “But often with light tailoring comes the fuss of pressing—or you look like a wrinkly bag quite quickly.”
His creative antidotes to that were honed to “have the optics that slightly evoke old British legacy fabrics, but I want to demonstrate that these are things you can live in, scrunch up when you’re traveling, and they will still look good,” he said. This was achieved by Derrick’s use of state of the art Japanese fabrics, some coated with silicone and machine washable. Examples: the “broken” stripe on trousers “which is halfway between a tuxedo or a tracksuit stripe in grosgrain, which is a bit of a code through the collection,” said the designer. Similarly, a fusion which suggested both a bib-front dress shirt and a zip-up Harrington jacket. In cream, it would do for daywear—right up to formal occasions. “And it’s machine-washable cotton silk,” said Derrick.
However subtle, every piece will whisper its story at full volume into the ears of people who encounter Derrick’s work in shops. Like every young, independent designer, he has his head down “navigating a season where you’ve got a lot of instability going on in the world from all sorts of places.” Hence the work put into presenting to buyers instead of putting on a show this season. “It gave us the opportunity, I felt, to actually just focus a bit on the clothes, and capture the storytelling of who this guy is,” he said. “But what’s exciting is, when we do have a stockist (meaning clients in Japan and America) it really sells when it arrives.”