If Central Saint Martins BA fashion students were high on concept and ideas, then London College of Fashion grads were geared towards making clothes that can be worn straight away. Not to say that wearability dents creativity in any way, as the LCF students produced collections that strove to achieve a balance between the two.

Hoi Lam Wong, who came away with the big prize, mixed male and female tailoring to create a collection of seemingly disjointed separates that came together through brave juxtaposition. Different knitted textures were explored by Neliana Fuenmayor whose collection was also pointedly sustainable. Things took a wilder turn with Anna Legay's giant ruffles and Isabelle Bundi's acrylic panels and headpieces. Though the show was low on menswear, Asger Juel Larsen shone through with his take on modern chain mail. Bahar Alipour closed the show with some impressive styling involving hats, headscarves and a muted palette that took her oversized silhouettes to new levels.   

Hoi Lam Wong
"I wanted to create a modern womenswear collection that drew heavily from male tailoring - thus blurring the boundaries between male and female clothing."

Isabelle Bundi
"X-ray photography was the inspiration behind the garments; transclucent fabrics such as silk organza and chiffon created a futuristic feel, mirrored with plastic pieces that created the 'skeleton'."

Anna Legay
"In addition the wrap-over elements and high emphasis on the frill details are featured to reference themes of nobility and royalty."

Neliana Fuenmayor
"My work concentrates on a new interpretation of sustainable design. I have worked with fair traded alpaca wool, sourced in the Andes."

Asger Juel Larsen
"I created a modern adaption of the armour by producing 'futuristic' ideas of chain mail, using alternative materials such as leather, PVC and rubber cords."

Bahar Alipour
"My inspiration and ideas are usually very personal and built around one key idea - in this case I drew on themes from the tailoring of Sardinian garments."