
Lydia Millen partners with Holland Cooper for tweed collection
There are collaborations, and then there are fashion moments that feel like a shift – a merging of worlds so aligned that the partnership seems less like a decision and more like destiny. The latter is exactly what unfolded when Lydia Millen joined forces with British luxury fashion house Holland Cooper.
In an exclusive conversation with the Daily Express, Lydia reflects on the collaboration with a clarity that mirrors the precision of the pieces themselves. “I have been a customer of Holland Cooper from the very beginning, and through the years, it’s just felt like there’s sort of been this coming together of both of us,” she says.
Holland Cooper has long been a quiet favourite among the British royal family, with its heritage tailoring and impeccable craftsmanship earning a place in their most-worn wardrobes. Princess Catherine, in particular, has repeatedly turned to the label’s structured coats and heritage-check blazers – proof that the brand’s refined British elegance is fit for modern royalty.
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Lydia Millen launched her own Holland Cooper Collection back in October (Image: Holland Cooper)
What began as admiration blossomed into a creative union, one that Lydia describes as “a natural progression, really authentic and just like it was sort of destined to happen.” Many influencers collaborate with brands. Few create collections that read like autobiography.
Lydia’s Holland Cooper capsule is deeply personal, informed not by mood boards or trends, but by the intimate world she inhabits.
Speaking of Jade Holland Cooper and the creative team, she described how they encouraged her to bring her lived inspiration into every detail. “They’ve been so wonderful and just open to absolutely everything in my sentimental nature,” she says.
The collaboration process quite literally shifted close to home. “I’ve gone from someone that was sort of looking for inspiration in all of the wrong places and then realised that I had this plethora of inspiration on my doorstep, taking colours and tones and things like that from my garden was just an absolute dream,” she explains.

Lydia Millen wearing the Aynhoe from her Holland Cooper collection (Image: Holland Cooper)
The result is a collection infused with meaning – a palette borrowed from the 500-year-old wall on her property, the deep greens of the woodland that surrounds her home, and the warm, earthy tone of ancient local stone.
“It felt like it was almost like we were weaving this really special tapestry of my life,” she says. And Holland Cooper embraced it entirely. “The fact that they have accommodated that and made it possible and really just been a complete open book with me has been absolutely wonderful.”
Lydia describes the aesthetic as “timeless elegance rooted in British heritage.” It feels unmistakably Holland Cooper yet distinctly Lydia, a fusion of Jade Holland Cooper’s powerful tailoring and Lydia’s soft, romantic sensibility.

Lydia Millen wearing the Aynhoe jacket from her Holland Cooper collection (Image: Holland Cooper )
“I really share and champion what Jade does so well. She has this powerful but elegant way of creating things,” she says. And the pieces have already taken on a life of their own in Lydia’s wardrobe.
Speaking of the Aynhoe skirt, she explained it has become a “workhorse” staple in her wardrobe. “I have worn it so much already, and it’s incredibly versatile,” she shares, detailing how she styles it with plush knits one day and silk pussy-bow blouses the next.
But the most sentimental design is the silk scarf honouring her beloved horse. “We’ve literally taken my horse, Atlas, and made him into the most beautiful motif. It is one of those things that I think I’ll probably have framed.”

Lydia Millen’s Holland Cooper range isn’t just fashion, it’s a ‘British style awakening’ (Image: Holland Cooper)
The capsule is a celebration of the breadth of modern British style that feels polished yet grounded, heritage-rich yet effortlessly wearable.
“There is such a breadth that’s quintessentially British. Those smart blazers that are almost workhorses in your wardrobe, those tweeds are so, so special,” Lydia says.
This is fashion designed not just to be worn, but to be lived in, the kind of investment pieces that grow more meaningful with time. It is, as Lydia says, a tapestry – one woven from the land she loves, the life she lives, and the brand that helped shape her own style journey.
This edit doesn’t follow British fashion; it elevates it. Refined, rooted, and resonant, it marks a landmark moment where influence meets artistry, and where heritage becomes newly, beautifully alive.



















