
The Burberry Festival campaign steps directly into the heart of Britain’s summer music scene. Led by Liam Gallagher, Goldie, Seungmin, Chy Cartier, Loyle Carner, and a host of other musicians and models, the series captures the raw energy of live events. Presented through portraits by Drew Vickers and films directed by Kim Gehrig, the campaign embraces a looser, off-stage sensibility, part streetwear, part memory, all music-driven.
Chief Creative Officer Daniel Lee describes the campaign as a collage of moments, fragments caught between performances, sound checks, and festival downtime. The imagery focuses on the shared impulse behind festival dressing: a need to be seen, heard, and felt. With nods to ‘90s style and the evolving energy of the UK music scene, the campaign treats fashion as both uniform and artifact.


Lee positions Burberry not just as a label worn to festivals, but as something absorbed into the visual language of British music culture. “Burberry sits at the centre of the summer calendar,” he says. “It’s both a means of creative expression and go-to uniform for festival goers.”
The campaign features a multi-generational lineup, with Liam Gallagher joined by his children Lennon, Gene, and Molly Moorish-Gallagher. Their presence underscores the continuing impact of music on British identity and fashion. Gallagher wears his personal parka from the Spring Summer 2018 collection by Christopher Bailey, an item that will return in a limited reissue this July, both online and in select stores.

Goldie, another cornerstone of UK music history, brings his voice and vision to the project as well. He reflects on Burberry’s visual codes: “You see it [Burberry Check] on the underside of a hat or the inside of a jacket. And then it starts to reverse itself.” His commentary threads through a soundtrack powered by Liquid’s 1991 single Sweet Harmony, a breakbeat classic that continues to echo across festival fields three decades on.
The collection includes a wide range of clothing and accessories tailored to the unpredictable nature of British summer festivals. Coated Burberry Check features on the new Highland handbags, designed to endure sudden weather shifts. Packable hooded jackets and capes arrive in both classic checks and solid shades, built for wear and adaptability.

Cotton Harringtons and nylon parkas offer iconic references, while mini kilts, fleece layers, and washed satin trenches contribute to the textural mix. Rubber boots remain a staple, including Marsh, Moor, Potter, and Urchin styles, joined by Terrace sneakers and mesh Matrix runners.
Shirts appear unbuttoned and oversized, cinched at the waist with belts, while bikini tops, polo shirts, and tanks push Burberry Check into unexpected forms. Denim and knitwear carry tonal check designs, while the revived Knight emblem from the 1980s appears across T-shirts, jackets, and small leather goods.

Burberry’s seasonal jewelry carries emblems tied to nature and nostalgia. Shield shapes in sterling silver sit next to frog and horse charms that reference British rural life. Crossbody bags, curved or quilted, echo rainwear silhouettes, pushing utility into the realm of style.
Every element works within the structure of the campaign’s core idea: that music culture doesn’t need stage lights to show its force. The clothing and accessories frame identity through details, functionality, and mood. Festival style, in this world, arrives lived-in, ready to stand in mud, stand for something, or disappear into the crowd. Shot against a backdrop of speakers, plywood stages, and damp festival grounds, the campaign refuses clean staging. Daniel Lee and the creative teams at Lane & Associates keep the visuals grounded.
