The fashion industry in Manchester is older than fashion industry as a concept. Before Paris was the centre of haute couture, Manchester mills were producing the cotton and finished cloth that made global mass clothing possible. The story runs through the Industrial Revolution, the 19th-century textile economy, post-war ready-to-wear manufacturing, the youth culture explosions of the 70s and 80s, and into the modern e-commerce era. Two centuries of clothing the world.
The Cotton City (1780s-1860s)
Cottonopolis. Manchester acquired the nickname in the early 19th century when its cotton mills produced more cloth than any other city in the world. By 1853 there were 108 cotton mills inside Manchester city limits and another 280 in the wider region, employing hundreds of thousands of workers and turning raw cotton from the American South and Indian subcontinent into finished cloth that clothed the British Empire and most of the global market for affordable clothing.
The mills concentrated in Ancoats, where Murray’s Mills and McConnell and Kennedy’s mill formed the world’s first industrial mill complex. The Bridgewater Canal moved raw materials and finished goods. The railway followed. The whole infrastructure of modern industrial production was prototyped here.
The fashion impact was enormous. Manchester cloth made affordable clothing possible at a global scale for the first time in history. Before Cottonopolis, most working people wore homespun cloth or hand-me-downs. Manchester’s mass-produced cloth made the modern wardrobe possible.
The human cost is part of the story too. The mill workers were the first modern industrial workforce. Friedrich Engels wrote his ‘Condition of the Working Class in England’ from observations of Manchester mill workers in the 1840s. The Manchester Working Class Movement Library in Salford holds extensive archive material.
Decline and Diversification (1870s-1940s)
The cotton industry peaked in the 1870s. From the 1880s onwards, Manchester’s cotton economy declined gradually as competing manufacturing emerged in other countries. By the early 20th century, Manchester had diversified into broader textile manufacturing including ready-to-wear clothing production, hat-making, glove-making and accessories.
Stockport and Denton became major hat-making centres. Bury and Rochdale specialised in technical textiles. The wider region developed a clothing manufacturing economy that survived the cotton mill decline.
The early 20th century also saw Manchester emerge as a major retail centre. Kendals (founded 1832, became House of Fraser later) anchored Deansgate. Lewis’s department store on Market Street was one of the largest in the UK. Affleck and Brown department store on Oldham Street (the building later became Affleck’s Palace).
Post-War Manufacturing (1945-1970s)
Post-war Britain rebuilt its clothing industry around mass production. Manchester and the wider region remained one of the manufacturing centres. Brands like Aquascutum (founded London but with strong Manchester connections), Burberry (mainly southern but with Manchester retail) and Daks built reputations on traditional British clothing manufacturing.
The 1960s saw the rise of British youth fashion and Manchester contributed. Mod culture took hold strongly in the city and the wider Lancashire region. The Hayfield in Sale and several Manchester clubs became centres of mod fashion in the early 60s.
The Casuals Era (Late 1970s onwards)
Casuals. The football-rooted style movement that began in the late 1970s when match-going fans started bringing continental European sportswear back from European away matches. Liverpool fans following the club to European games came back with Adidas trainers, Lacoste polos, Sergio Tacchini tracksuits. The look spread quickly across the north of England.
Manchester is one of the spiritual homes of casuals culture. The United Cool Cats (mid-80s) and the City Young Guvnors (late 80s and early 90s) were two of the best-dressed match crews in the country, with serious Stone Island, CP Company, Adidas Originals, Lacoste, Sergio Tacchini, Pringle and Burberry wardrobes.
The casuals look has never gone away in Manchester. It continued through the 90s into the 00s, picked up Stone Island and CP Company adoption, merged with Madchester, and survives today as the dominant menswear aesthetic for a significant portion of Manchester men. See the Casuals Culture page for the full story.
Madchester (1985-1992)
The Hacienda dress code. Manchester’s late-80s and early-90s music explosion came with a corresponding fashion movement. Bucket hats (the Reni hat, after the Stone Roses drummer), oversized T-shirts, baggy jeans (Joe Bloggs the local brand), Adidas Sambas, paisley everything.
The look spread from the Hacienda dancefloor to the wider music scene. Stone Roses, Happy Mondays, Inspiral Carpets, James, Charlatans all coded the same dress code. International press dubbed it Madchester and the look became a global youth fashion movement for several years.
Joe Bloggs was the homegrown brand of the era. Manchester-based, manufactured baggy jeans and casualwear specifically for the scene. Sold internationally during the peak Madchester years.
The Madchester look bled into the 90s indie scene. Oasis-era parkas (Liam Gallagher’s signature), Adidas Gazelles, Fred Perry polos. The look got more refined but the lineage was clear.
The 1990s and 2000s
Manchester’s fashion economy diversified through the 1990s. Pretty Green wasn’t yet a brand but the elements were there. Henri Lloyd, Aquascutum, Massimo Dutti, Boss all had strong Manchester retail presence. The casuals scene continued through the late 90s with Stone Island still niche but growing, Aspecto in Manchester stocking it heavily, and the Manchester casuals brand scene developing (Marshall Artist, Weekend Offender both founded around this period).
The Northern Quarter began its transformation in the late 90s. Affleck’s Palace had been there since 1982 but the wider NQ took shape as an independent fashion district during the 90s and into the 00s. Cow Vintage opened in the early 2000s. Pop Boutique. Junk. The vintage and indie scene that defines the NQ today started here.
The E-Commerce Revolution (2006 onwards)
Boohoo. The Manchester fast fashion empire that has defined the city’s fashion economy for the past two decades. Founded in 2006 by Mahmud Kamani and Carol Kane, both with strong Manchester market trading roots. Built from a market stall to a billion-pound listed company in a generation. Headquartered in Manchester throughout.
Boohoo Group expanded through acquisitions: PrettyLittleThing (acquired 2017, originally founded by Kamani’s sons), Nasty Gal (acquired 2017 after the original US business collapsed), Karen Millen, Coast, Warehouse, Oasis, Burton, Wallis, Dorothy Perkins (acquired 2021 after the Arcadia Group collapse).
The economic impact on Manchester was transformative. Boohoo Group employs thousands of Manchester-based staff in design, buying, technology, marketing, photography, modelling and warehousing. The Boohoo and PLT photographic studios alone produce thousands of e-commerce shoots per month.
The wider e-commerce ecosystem grew around Boohoo. ASOS has significant Manchester operations. In The Style was Manchester-headquartered until restructuring. Multiple smaller direct-to-consumer fashion brands operate from the city.
Manchester Fashion Institute
MMU’s Manchester Fashion Institute, formally established in 2018 to consolidate the existing fashion programmes at the university, has grown into one of the UK’s top fashion schools. Industry links with Boohoo Group, ASOS and major UK retailers give graduates strong career paths into the Manchester fashion economy.
Notable MFI graduates include Henry Holland (House of Holland founder, MMU graduate from before the formal MFI consolidation), plus dozens of designers working at Boohoo Group brands, ASOS, M&S head office, JD Sports head office and major UK retailers.
Manchester Fashion Week and the Modern Scene
Manchester Fashion Week launched in 2010 and has run annually since. Smaller than London Fashion Week but with a focus on northern designers and the local scene. Held at venues across the city including the Renaissance Hotel, Manchester Central and various indie venues.
The wider modern scene includes the Pretty Green flagship on King Street (Liam Gallagher’s brand), Private White V.C. continuing to manufacture in Salford as it has since 1853, and a growing number of small Manchester-rooted indie brands selling via direct-to-consumer and indie retailers.
Manchester’s Fashion Identity Today
Three things define modern Manchester fashion identity. First, the e-commerce volume. Boohoo Group, PLT, Nasty Gal, ASOS Manchester operations make this one of the world’s largest fast fashion production cities. Second, the casuals heritage. Stone Island, CP Company and Adidas Originals are everywhere on Manchester streets in a way no other UK city outside London matches. Third, the indie scene. The NQ vintage and indie shops, the Ancoats considered designer scene, the Chorlton sustainable boutiques and the Didsbury smart-casual indies together create a parallel fashion economy alongside the e-commerce volume.
The challenge for Manchester fashion’s next chapter is balancing the fast fashion economy (volumes, jobs, profile) with the indie scene (identity, sustainability, considered design) and the heritage (casuals, Madchester, Cottonopolis history). The city that invented industrial fashion has always defined the global mass market. The next iteration is being written now.
Manchester Fashion History Resources
The Manchester Working Class Movement Library, Salford
Holds extensive archive material on the cotton mill era, the working conditions, the labour movement.
The People’s History Museum, Manchester
Permanent exhibitions covering Manchester industrial history including textile and clothing manufacturing.
The Manchester Jewish Museum
Holds material on the Jewish-owned tailoring and clothing manufacturing businesses that played a major role in Manchester’s 20th-century fashion economy.
The Whitworth Art Gallery textiles collection
One of the most important UK collections of historic and contemporary textiles. Regular exhibitions.
The Science and Industry Museum, Castlefield
Permanent exhibitions on the cotton industry, the textile mills, the Industrial Revolution. The mill machinery on display gives a sense of the scale of Cottonopolis.
Phil Thornton’s ‘Casuals’ (book)
The foundational text on casuals culture. Manchester features heavily.