After a six-year absence from the runway, Mulberry will return to London Fashion Week this September with a debut collection by newly appointed creative director Christopher Kane. The show, titled “Mulberry by Christopher Kane,” is scheduled for Sunday, September 20 at 3 p.m., marking the British heritage house’s most significant reset in a decade.
The return to the London calendar carries emotional weight. Mulberry last showed during the pandemic-era digital seasons, and its physical runway comeback coincides with a broader resurgence of British heritage brands reclaiming their home turf. Alexander McQueen and Mulberry now bookend the same September weekend, creating a concentrated moment for British fashion on the global stage.
Kane, who joined Mulberry in March 2026 after departing his eponymous label, brings a sensibility rooted in precise tailoring and dark romanticism — a contrast to the relaxed English countryside aesthetic Mulberry has long championed. His appointment signals a deliberate pivot toward sharper, more fashion-forward thinking at a house whose leather goods have long outstripped its ready-to-wear in cultural currency.
For Kane, the move represents a full-circle moment. The Scottish designer built his reputation on a distinctly British vocabulary — sliced silks, anatomical prints, unexpected transparency — that feels aligned with the house codes Mulberry wants to evolve. The collection will arrive in stores and online from January 2027.
The announcement arrives during a period of intense reshuffling in the British fashion ecosystem, with several heritage houses recalibrating their creative direction simultaneously. Mulberry’s bet on Kane is a wager that rigorous design thinking — not just logo recognition — can drive the next chapter for a 50-year-old house.


