Fashion Finally Admits It Messes Up
Fashion loves a success story
Fashion loves a success story. Breakout designer, sold-out show, overnight genius. What it never really talks about is everything that didn’t work. The collections that flopped, the brands that quietly disappeared, the creative decisions that just… missed.
That’s exactly what Nick Rees-Roberts is poking at in his new book Failure. Instead of treating failure like something embarrassing, he flips it into something almost necessary. Not a glitch in the system, but part of how the system actually functions.

Failure, But Make It Useful
The argument is kind of uncomfortable in the best way. Fashion runs on hype and constant “next big thing” energy, but behind that is a cycle where failure is everywhere. Designers burn out, labels collapse, ideas don’t land. And yet, those moments are what push things forward.

Rees-Roberts goes further and suggests that failure can even be a form of freedom. Stepping away from commercial success, opting out of the pressure to constantly scale, even rejecting parts of the industry altogether. Suddenly failure stops looking like loss and starts looking like a different kind of control.
Maybe Success Was Never the Whole Story
What sticks is the shift in perspective. Instead of obsessing over what works, the book leans into what doesn’t and asks why we’re so uncomfortable with it in the first place.

Because the truth is, fashion isn’t built on perfection. It’s built on trial, error, missteps, and the occasional disaster that accidentally leads somewhere better.
And maybe that’s the more honest version of the industry.