How Chet Lo made his SS25 show inclusive to blind guests

Blind and visually impaired guests at the show received audio descriptions and fabric swatches. It’s a lesson in taking into account the needs of a more diverse audience at fashion week.
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Chet Lo AW24.Photo: Umberto Fratini / Gorunway.com

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Bright lights, vibrant colours, new silhouettes, eye-catching textures, beautiful models — fashion shows are a visual explosion. But for guests who are blind or visually impaired, the typical format of a show makes it hard to participate.

Chet Lo was up to the challenge. The designer invited 20 blind or low-vision guests to his Spring/Summer 2025 show at London Fashion Week (LFW), in partnership with Hair & Care, a non-profit that supports blind and low-vision women and girls in looking after their hair through a series of workshops. The programme was set up in 2019 by Anna Cofone, a hairstylist who has worked with the likes of Dua Lipa and Lana del Rey, and who grew up with a blind father. When Cofone pitched the idea to Lo, he was immediately keen.

Guests listened to audio descriptions of the clothes and received fabric swatches to feel the textures — a good fit for Lo’s collections, which are known for their 3D textured spikes in knitted fabrics. The audio descriptions and fabric swatches were given about 30 minutes ahead of the show, as guests arrived, which gave them time to take their seats and digest the information in the introduction.

“This is the third time I’ve gone to a fashion show and first time I’ve ever sat down with a booklet of swatches from the designer. I feel so included right now,” says blind activist Lucy Edwards after the show. Last month Edwards became the first blind model to walk Copenhagen Fashion Week (at Sinéad O’Dwyer’s show) in collaboration with Hair & Care. Earlier this week, she visited Lo to run through a tactile tour of the collection. She points to a swatch book featuring six fabric swatches — including a spiky knit fabric in brown and seafoam green, a transparent scale-like textured material and a fabric with hanging beads.

She says the audio description was “really helpful” and that she particularly enjoyed hearing the story behind the collection — especially, how it was inspired by Lo’s mother. “I’m so privileged that my sight loss has given me the gift of [experiencing] the designer’s vision,” Edwards says.

Attention around the inclusivity of casting choices has been on the rise over the past few years, but the needs of the audience are still being sidelined. “I think the bigger a deal you make it out to be, the less you normalise it. For me, it’s just an extension of an audience who I really want to be able to experience the show,” Lo says.

“We’ve always championed inclusive casting, so for me this was a no-brainer. I welcome everybody to come watch the shows if they’re interested.”

Designer Chet Lo.

Photo: Darren Gerrish/WireImage for Serpentine Gallery

“There is an assumption that blind or low-vision people don’t care about clothes or hair or makeup. Actually it’s the complete opposite. We have to disrupt the industry and change the narrative,” says Cofone. “Fashion shows are such a visual experience, from the colours to what the models and clothes look like. The challenge for us was to think, what are the most important things for a blind or low-vision person? How can we preempt what their needs would be? What experience would make them feel included?”

In the UK, disabled people have an estimated annual spending power of around £274 billion. “It’s not just about giving blind and low-vision people a more accessible experience, it’s also about brands understanding that if they adopt more of [these inclusive practices] they’ll open themselves up to a community of [millions] of low-vision people globally,” says Cofone. “There’s the business side of it, too: if we educate the community and let them understand what a key piece in a collection is, they’ll feel empowered and want to spend money.” Outside of fashion week, brands could implement tactile clothing labels and online descriptions of garments, compatible with screen readers, to become more inclusive to this community, she adds.

Guests at the show included Edwards, research analyst Jane Manley, who works at the Royal National Institute of Blind, head teachers of a school for blind and low-vision children in London, and various attendees of Hair & Care’s workshops.

“It means so so much to me as a blind model and fashion lover to go to London Fashion Week. I’ve always wanted to get a feeling of what fashion truly means and the vision behind the designs; the thoughts, the feelings and the meaning behind the collection,” says Edwards..

Lo says the fabric swatches were easy enough to gather, but it took a few attempts to get the audio descriptions right. “It was a really interesting exercise. The vernacular used to describe a collection is completely different when you’re describing it to someone who doesn’t have sight,” he says. For instance, he had to be specific about how he described a checked fabric: “The pattern is made up of little squares, and is classically worn in the office.”

It was an opportunity for storytelling, he continues. “I spent a lot of time talking about the concepts, more so than the fabrics. Going through the collection and translating the visual concept through a story has always been more interesting to me anyway, so it’s really beautiful to have an audience that cares about the story.”

The whole process took a fair bit of preparation — Lo sent the audio files to the Hair & Care team over a week before the show. Lo says he tends to have the collection ready in plenty of time, so this wasn’t a challenge for him, though other designers who are making changes up until the last minute might have to be mindful of the additional time needed to create the audio files and swatches. Lo confirmed the running order of the looks the night before the show to ensure the files were in the correct order.

Guests appreciated the effort. “Blindness allows me to see more than any sighted person would, and going through the ‘touch tour’ [with Chet] allowed me to truly connect in a deeper way to each garment, and hear straight from the designer why it’s so important for the model to wear the exact fabrics, shades and designs he has picked,” says Edwards. “This is the true meaning of beauty — a world where everyone can understand fashion and be included in, not only high street fashion, but high fashion, so we have the freedom no matter who we are, to decide who we want to be and what we want to wear.”

The experience has been a testament to how brands should practise empathy when considering their show audience. Lo says he’s learnt a lot in the process. “Now that we understand what these guests need, we can definitely implement it into our next season.”

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