Mobile navigation

News 

Vogue unveils details for Online Fashion Week

Vogue.co.uk has announced further details of Online Fashion Week 2012 which will run from Monday 3rd until Friday 7th December.

Working together with hand-picked retailers, Vogue.co.uk is currently planning exclusive offers, one-time only products and never seen before content and will reveal all by blogging 24 hours a day during the week-long online shopping extravaganza to disclose all the best events happening across the web. Here, say the publishers, is just a taste of some of the exclusive content, which will be revealed throughout the week:

Meadham Kirchhoff has teamed up with amazon.co.uk to create a capsule collection of sweatshirts for both men and women, which will be unveiled in full as part of Online Fashion Week.

OXFAM’s new fashion patron for 2013, William Vintage founder William Banks-Blaney will be curating the best second-hand pieces from OXFAM’s stores and warehouses for a special daily edit which will be unveiled, along with master class films on vintage dressing that will be showcased daily.

Top designers and style icons including Vivienne Westwood, Roland Mouret, Christopher Kane, Nicholas Kirkwood, Alice Temperley, Donna Karan, Paul Smith, Miranda Kerr, Nicole Ritchie and Arizona Muse will share their top picks for the ultimate gift guide this Christmas.

From quintessential British retailers - Liberty, Selfridges, Harrods, Harvey Nichols – to online favourites including Net-A-Porter, Asos And My-Wardrobe, there will be amazing offers and competitions throughout the week. Top fashion brands including Burberry, Stella Mccartney, Katie Hillier and Charlotte Olympia will all be revealing exclusive products, plus Giorgio Armani, Yves Saint Laurent, Chanel, Mac and Benefit are among the brands adding a touch of beauty to the week.

Vogue.co.uk’s Online Fashion Week is sponsored by Amazon.co.uk. The official charity partner is Oxfam Girls Education Project, an initiative which aims to enable all children (especially girls) to receive basic education in poor and isolated communities in West Africa.