Stella McCartney Returns to H&M With a Surprising New Collaboration
Stella McCartney Returns to H&M With a Surprising New Collaboration
Faran KrentcilThu, April 16, 2026 at 6:00 AM UTC
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Stella McCartney Has a Message for H&M DoubtersCourtesy of H&M
Stella McCartney knows youâre going to be mad.
The 54-year-old designer has gained legendary status for two things: her singular take on capably cool style and her fierce defense of the environment through harm-free materials and âslow luxuryâ production. But on May 7, McCartney is duping her greatest hits at H&M, turning that unique vision into a mass-market frenzyâand partnering with a brand that helped put âfast fashionâ on the map.
âIâm going to get murdered for doing this,â says McCartney when she calls me from a houseboat in London, where sheâs joined by H&Mâs longtime creative advisor Ann-Sofie Johansson to announce the inevitably controversial collab. âBut how do you make change? You make it through economic impact.â For McCartney, specifically, that means this H&M partnership, which replicates her standout designsâdangerously low jeans with Moulin Rouge-style rhinestone swirls at the hips from 2023; faux snakeskin hobo bags with gold link trim, similar to the brandâs beloved cross-body bagsâusing low-impact manufacturing techniques and materials. Yes, there is also the infamous âRock Royaltyâ tank first made by McCartney for the 1999 Met Galaâthen worn by her and her bestie Liv Tyler; in the upcoming H&M ad campaign, itâs sported by ReneĂ© Rapp.
The launch is a milestone for McCartney, who partnered once before with H&M in 2005. The first time around, there were lines circling entire city blocks to shop the collection, which came just after Karl Lagerfeldâs groundbreaking collab with the Swedish mega-chain. Since then, the British-born designerâwho served as ChloĂ©âs creative director from 1997 to 2001 before handing the reins over to Phoebe Philo and starting her own eponymous labelâhas dressed everyone from Natalie Portman to Zendaya. Sheâs bought back her fashion label from both Kering (in 2018) and LVMH (in 2025) and invested in lab-grown fur and leather research, paving the way for an animal-free fashion future. And last month in Paris, she accepted Franceâs prestigious LĂ©gion dâHonneur in front of friends like Oprah Winfrey and Naomi Watts; around the same time, she was on the cover of Time for her environmental work.
It is precisely because of this sustained, earnest effort that McCartney catches strays from keyboard warriors intent on demanding a purity-or-nothing approach to fashion (or maybe just to women running their own companies in general). âWhatever you do, somebodyâs going to say, âThis is bad; sheâs not perfect,ââ sighs the designer, who was raised as a vegan by her parents, musician Paul McCartney and photographer Linda McCartney. âThat whole dialogue around, âIf youâre doing something good, you must be doing something bad, and youâre annoying because youâre woke?â Iâve had it my whole life.â To speak truth to Instagram rants, McCartney has created giant H&M hangtags (made from recycled paper, of course) crammed with details about each piece, including how it was made and where the fibers came from.
Adwoa Aboah in the collectionH&M
âI know what weâve done in this industry is groundbreaking, and more than anyone else has ever done in this day and age.â She winces when she recalls pushing fashion executives for leather-free collections in the early aughts. âPeople were like, âWell, if we didnât eat meat, we wouldnât have cows. So by going vegan, youâre eventually going to kill all the cows.â And Iâm like, âHow can you be so fucking stupid?!â Come on, guys. Come on.â
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âH&M is really big,â Johansson adds. âWith that big responsibility comes the ability to be part of the solution. Working together again puts sustainability back on the agendaâŠbut itâs also to inspire people, make them more curious, and encourage them to keep asking questions.â
McCartney says one of the questions is often, âWhy are your clothes so expensive?â And though she has an excellent answerâluxury materials, well-paid labor, and expert tailoring cost a lot of moneyâMcCartney admits it also âbreaks [her] heartâ that âthe luxury fashion industry relies on making people feel like they canât buy inâthat theyâre not good enough. I have a real problem with that distance. Iâm like, âEveryone, come in, letâs all hug!ââ
McCartney vows to be at various H&M boutiques herself to help shoppers find their favorite pieces, as she did in 2005, when she popped up in London to dress queueing fans, along with Gwyneth Paltrow and Hilary Duff, who donned the same $35.99 denim as the Stella-happy girls on the London Tube. (âWe might have to top those two up with the new stuff,â McCartney muses.) She also insists that if you canât get your H&M fix the old-fashioned wayâby pretending you have a dentist appointment during work hours and racing to your cityâs flagship insteadâyou should try resale sites. âActually, thank God for eBay,â she says. âI know some of this H&M stuff will end up there, just like my runway collections do.â McCartney says this is âgreat.â Anything that keeps clothes out of landfills, in fact, is âbrilliant.â
Model Angelina Kendall on the set of H&Mâs new campaign in London.H&M
âLook, buy the clothes if you love them!â she says with a laugh. âBuy them, take care of them, go to the best parties in them, wear them a long time. And if you donât like the fact that theyâre at H&M, whatever. People will say anything to feel like they donât have to try and do better.â But as cool as a Stella McCartney jacket and jeans may be, âtrying to do good,â says McCartney, âis even cooler.â
Nobody can be mad about that.
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Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ