
Burberry unveils its Summer 2026 campaign under the direction of Chief Creative Officer Daniel Lee, focusing on the long-standing relationship between fashion and music. The campaign approaches music as a cultural force that shapes style, challenges convention, and communicates across generations. Lee places live performance at the center of the narrative, drawing from the energy and diversity of the UK music scene and the creative output of contemporary artists.
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Lee describes music as a driver of change within fashion. “Music pushes boundaries, blurs lines and defines the codes of fashion,” he says. “It is about self-expression, originality and belonging.” The campaign translates this perspective into imagery and styling that prioritize presence, attitude, and movement. Fashion appears as something lived in and performed, shaped by rhythm and identity.


Captured by photographer Sam Rock, the campaign imagery reflects this connection through immediacy and restraint, focusing on posture, gesture, and attitude. The cast brings together figures across generations and disciplines. British model, actor, and 1960s icon Twiggy appears alongside Sonny Ashcroft, Filip Bryndza, Sora Choi, Albert Cocker, Ella Dalton, Shuqi Lan, Ahmed Richards, Raika Sales, and Maya Wigram.
For Summer 2026, Burberry defines the silhouette as neat and narrow. Rainwear introduces new trench styles, including the Summerside, Rayne, and Isleworth, each referencing a detail from a 1927 Burberry coat. The Foxfield trench appears in the menswear offering, paired with classic Harrington jackets.

Outerwear arrives in updated fabrications designed to reflect British summertime conditions. Printed trench coats, silk bomber jackets, and oversized waxed-cotton parkas lead the range. Denim appears in washed and raw finishes with foil coatings, while wet-look raincoats use cotton and raffia-effect weaves punctuated by vivid checks. Suede and leather coats expand the material vocabulary through python-print vegetable-tanned calfskin, paisley laser cuts that suggest lace, and surfaces detailed with whipstitching and fringing.
Shift dresses and mini skirts establish a base that extends into slips and shirt dresses. Cropped bootcut trousers appear in check and leather. Tailoring returns with a slim, mod-influenced profile, executed in mohair wool, denim, and whipstitched leather. Three-button jackets in short single- and double-breasted cuts pair with tapered straight-leg trousers, layered over striped Sea Island cotton shirts and narrow silk ties woven with Burberry Check.


Within the atelier, texture and surface take on greater importance. Party dresses feature hand-crocheted and embroidered construction that builds depth through structure. Chainmail dresses and kilts shimmer in color-blocked Burberry Check. Pieces composed entirely of beads, mirrored tiles, and linked crocheted leather introduce a tactile finish. Knitwear follows an artisanal approach, with bobbin crochet across tops and trousers, macramé panels integrated into coats, and narrow scarves finished with exaggerated fringing.

















