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Farm Rio

23 Dress Brands You Need To Know About

From niche must-knows to emerging talents, these are the labels that serve up the perfect one-pieces every season.

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It was less than a decade ago that every kind of woman started reluctantly swapping her skinny jeans for floral midis and prairie maxis (which had once been seen as frumpy), and more often than not pairing them with trainers (a styling combination that was previously considered a fashion faux pas).

It was around the same time Raf Simons was dipping into Dior’s iconic ‘New Look’ archive and sending unabashedly feminine dresses down the runway; Alessandro Michele had just taken the helm at Gucci and immediately put pleated midi skirts on the map; and other womenswear designers were introducing trainers into the high-fashion sphere for the first time. Runway trends always find a way of trickling down, but this cocktail of ‘firsts’ went on to shape fashion for the best part of a decade.

Hemlines have grown ever since. So much so that the reintroduction of the mini in 2021 felt almost as revolutionary as it had back in the 1960s. But while John Lewis tried and failed to predict the demise of the floral midi dress a few seasons back, this piece stays put. We can’t erase the last decade of easy ‘throw it on and look pulled-together dressing’ that has liberated women in so many ways.

We also can’t ignore the myriad labels that have popped up as a result of this shift. The likes of Rixo (launched in 2015), DÔEN (2016), Batsheva (also 2016) and Kitri (2017) have seen unprecedented success focusing the majority of their collections on the one-and done outfit. So to hear it for this humble hero, we’ve rounded up 23 of the best dress brands that are really worth celebrating in 2025, from the Australian brands that get modern bohemia just right to the Scandi brands any Ganni lover will want to discover.

The Dress Brands To Bookmark Now

Rat & Boa

best dress brands
Rat & Boa

Rat & Boa is the easy winner when it comes to dresses guaranteed to make an impact. The brand has built an ultra-loyal cult following for its just-naked-enough sheer dresses, bias-cut slips and plunge-front maxis, all of which will turn heads for all the right reasons.Tropical getaways, destination weddings and festive parties are all served well here: but don't stop at the dress, as the brand makes some stellar fluid suiting, too.

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Damson Madder

best dress brands
Damson Madder

Damson Madder's cult dresses might be Instagram catnip, but they're actually loaded with wearability. The brand is a master of marrying statement details with real-life practicality – think puffball minis that have detachable sleeves for trans-seasonality and linen midis with convertible straps that fasten halter-style or into a strapless bow. Oh, and less we forget the satin slips (dyed in a delicious butter-yellow hue this season) that work with heels, trainers and ballet flats. Wedding guest dressing made more sustainable? We never thought it possible.

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Reformation

best dress brands
Reformation

Reformation needs no introduction. The LA-based brand, which launched back in 2009 as a vintage boutique, was one of the first to make sustainability sexy, long before greenwashing and greenwishing was commonplace in the fashion industry.

Reformation was also one of the first brands to champion the sultry daytime dress. Yep, those puffed-sleeve milkmaid and cupped styles you now see everywhere? They're OG Ref.

Celebrities cannot get enough of these feminine one-pieces – everyone from Meghan Markle and JLo, to Rihanna, Kendall Jenner and Kaia Gerber, wear them on repeat. And with profits doubling in the past four years to reach $300 million, the label's popularity shows no sign of abating.

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Me + Em

best dress brands
Me + Em

There aren't many dress brands you'll see politicians, daytime TV hosts and fashion editors all wearing, but that's the power of Me + Em: its skilful designs work seamlessly across occasions, age groups and style predilections.

In 2025 the British brand is having a fresh glow-up, nearly 10 years since it introduced the concept of 'athleisure' into corporate circles (oh how the British balked when Kirsty Wark wore its side-stripe cigarette pants on Newsnight). Just this year we've seen Daisy Edgar Jones, Leighton Meester and Phoebe Dynevor wearing its piece.

And while the label made a name for itself with its signature tracksuit trousers, it's since become a go-to destination for dresses. Everything from crisp cotton sundresses and ruched jersey midis to corsage-embellished eveningwear.

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Farm Rio

best dress brands
Courtesy, Farm Rio

Farm Rio started as a market stall in 1997, but officially launched as a brand in 2019. Fast forward six years and the Brazilian label just opened its third London store last month.

The brand is best known for its hand-drawn prints created in-house by a collective of Brazilian artists. But it's also become known for its one-of-a-kind dresses: from the sell-out 3D corsage styles that have more than a touch of Carrie Bradshaw about them, to the boho balloon-sleeve minis that couldn't feel more SS25. Elegant placement of cutouts, Guipure lace, folk-inspired embroidery and scallop trims all add joy, too.

Farm Rio is also transparent in its carbon usage and offsetting, with aims to become totally sustainable by 2030. Jennifer Lopez, Ana de Armas, Selena Gomez, Sarah Jessica Parker and Taylor Swift are big fans.

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Rixo

best dress brands
Gallery

Rixo was, without a doubt, one of the OG dress brands – and we daresay the British label helped shape the last eight years of one-piece trends. Founded in 2015 by best friends and LCF-alumni Orlagh and Henrietta, Rixo was inspired by their love for vintage shopping. Fast forward to 2025 and you'd be hard-pressed to find a style icon who hasn't worn one of the brand's cult dresses: the Princess of Wales, Hailey Bieber, and Sofia Richie are all fans. Customers return for the playful patterns (Orlagh still hand-paints all of the original prints) in their bread-and-butter collection, but the bridalwear (which takes on a simpler, more ethereal aesthetic) is also to die for.

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Sézane

best dress brands
Sezane

Sézane has a cult following in the UK. That's why you'll see queues snaking round the block on a weekend outside of the French brand's Marylebone and Notting Hill shops. And while we love the label for its sultry knits, tailored trousers and boho footwear, it's the dresses we keep coming back for again and again.

There is something for every kind of woman here. Its A-list fans (Selena Gomez, Sienna Miller and Kate Middleton) are a testament to that. So whether you're looking for a broderie anglaise midi, a boho tiered mini, an easy T-shirt dress or a sultry sequinned evening number, you'll probably leave with a haul in-hand. That French charm is hard to resist.

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DÔEN

doen dress
Courtesy Doen

Sisters Margaret and Katherine Kleveland launched DÔEN in 2016 as a reaction to the minimalist mood in fashion. They wanted to celebrate effortless one-piece dressing and the romanticism of past decades at a time when blazers, cigarette pants and trainers reigned supreme. Their plan worked. The LA-based brand has shaped dress trends ever since, with their empire waists, effortless smocking, breezy cottons and puffed sleeves trickling through the industry. In another celebration of femininity, the brand also became a go-to for mothers, thanks to its roomy and stretchy dresses being appropriate pre-, during and post-pregnancy. Kylie Jenner, Taylor Swift and Selena Gomez are all fans.

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Pink City Prints

best dress brands
Pink City Prints

Launched in 2018, Pink City Prints is a British brand that celebrates ancient craft. All of the block and screen printing, hand-looming and embroidery is done by a network of artisans in Northern India (each dress can take up to three days to create). The brand has just launched pyjamas and homewear, but it’s still the standout dresses that have customers coming back for more – think Prairie-inspired and Victoriana cuts, with peplums, high ruffs and peasant sleeves. No wonder sales have doubled since the pandemic.

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Kitri

best dress brands
Kitri

South Korea-born Haeni Kim launched her London-based brand in 2017 with an aim to create directional, quality pieces at affordable prices. A former ballet dancer, she named her label after the vivacious protagonist Kitri in Don Quixote. Digitally focused from the beginning, with a direct-to-consumer model, Kitri thrived from the get-go (who can forget the Gabriella dress with an 800-strong waitlist back in 2018, and the Lenora which sold out in 24 hours).

The brand is beloved for its fresh shapes and playful prints – from feather trimmed Cheongsam minis to easy jersey midis – but this season, don't miss the bound-to-sell-out patent jackets, which come complete with detachable shearling trims.

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Rotate

dress brands
Courtesy ROTATE

It’s no secret that Rotate founders Thora Valdimars and Jeanette Friis Madsen know how to throw a party – and, of course, how to craft a show-stealing evening dress. From major eighties-inspired silhouettes to show-stopping sequins, via puff sleeves, see-through lace and magpie embellishment, this is a brand made for maximalists.

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Free People

dress brands
Courtesy Free People

For statement dresses with more than a hint of bohemian charm, Free People always wins. The brand is known and loved for its carefree, folkloric design DNA, which translates through embroidered details, feminine prints and ruffled silhouettes. For AW24, expect crisp cotton and crumpled linen pieces toughened up with battered leather jackets and cowboy boots.

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Silk Laundry

silk laundry dress
Courtesy Silk Laundry

Katie Kolodinski founded Silk Laundry almost ten years ago with a single mission: to create the ultimate '90s slip dress. A decade on, not only has she ticked that box – the brand's bias-cut, slender-strapped midi is total perfection – but plenty of others too, expanding the line into a thoughtful edit of elegant silk essentials. Seasonal stand-outs include the fluid, sheer slip skirt – a chic way to wear the sheer trend – and a long-sleeved take on that iconic original.

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Cecilie Bahnsen

cecilie bahnsen dresses
Cecilie Bahnsen

Copenhagen's favourite, Cecilie Bahnsen excels at creating the kind of dresses you save for the most special of occasions – but switch your sandals for a pair of biker boots, and these clouds of couture-level tulle transform into a stellar daytime proposition. That's exactly the magic of a Bahnsen piece: you'll invest once and wear it forever – day, night, or both.

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Bernadette

dress brands
Bernadette

Mother-daughter design duo Bernadette and Charlotte de Geyter have built their cult dress brand from the ground up, and within just six years it has become a go-to for special-occasion pieces you won't see everyone else wearing.

Not just a very wise place to buy all those wedding-guest dresses, the brand is now also a destination for the bride herself, with its debut all-white collection delivering unique gowns and separates for nuptials with a dose of nostalgia. We're obsessing over the liquid-silk slip dress, complete with pastel rose embellishment.

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Batsheva

best dress brands
Gallery

Batsheva Hay, a former lawyer, launched her label in 2016 after receiving constant compliments for her own re-worked vintage dresses. She started small, taking fabric and downloaded 1970s dress patterns to the tailor and then selling them online. What originated as a Mummy-and-me business quickly evolved into a womenswear label stocked at Opening Ceremony and Matchesfashion. Batsheva doesn’t compromise when it comes to cut, never sacrificing the unabashed chintz of a floral-print corduroy, puffed sleeves or pie-crust collars in the name of contemporary fashion – which is no doubt why the brand has resonated with nostalgists. Oh, and Lena Dunham, Emma Roberts and Sarah-Jessica Parker.

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O Pioneers

best dress brands
O Pioneers

The charismatic duo depicted here is Clara Francis and Tania Hindmarch – best friends, and the face and brains of O Pioneers. The British brand is the definition of ‘slow’ fashion, in the best way possible. The team use heritage Liberty fabrics to create limited edition runs of statement Victoriana styles, which is why each dress is made to order and takes two weeks to arrive.

Everything is produced by local seamstresses in Britain to reduce mileage. In fact, inside each of the brand's signature tank tops (designed to be layered over the floral midis) is the name of the woman who knitted it. These one-off pieces are not just a pretty face either: 99% of the collection is machine washable and made from sturdy cotton that can withstand a bit of everyday wear and tear.

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Sister Jane

best dress brands
SISTER JANE

Long, long before the #coquette aesthetic was trending on TikTok, Sister Jane was a go-to for all things unabashedly girlish – think babydoll silhouettes, voluminous puffed sleeves, bow appliques, pearl embellishments and floral cloqué fabrics.

Sister Jane was born in 2011, first landing in stores as a concession in #OldTopshop's iconic Oxford Street flagship, then launching its ecommerce site two years later, and now you’ll find its one-of-a-kind pieces displayed in its three-story townhouse in Notting Hill’s Golborne Road. The British brand has always marched to the beat of its own drum, beloved since day one for its dedicated retro aesthetic (no mean feat, given that bodycon minis and jeggings were reigning supreme at the time of its inception).

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Ghost London

best dress brands
BRIAN DALY

Ghost has been known for sultry, bias-cut dresses since its conception in 1984, just before the underwear-as-outerwear really kicked in during the ‘90s. The label’s signature viscose-satin fabric was a phenomenon back then, thanks to the fact it was just as fluid as silk, but much less high-maintenance. Now 40 years on, the label has branched out to easy, silky separates, relaxed tailoring and more casual printed pieces – but it’s still a go-to for impactful dresses for day-to-day wear, work, weddings and more.

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Louisa Ballou

dress brands
Louisa Ballou

If you’re looking for something that ticks the tricky ‘destination wedding’ box, resortwear brand Louisa Ballou is the name to know. Drawing on her upbringing on the coast of South Carolina, the designer is a master of vibrant colour, projecting sunset-hued prints onto second-skin dresses that offer both ease and impact. Each piece is hand-painted before being printed in Italy and finished in New York. With Bella Hadid and more than one Kardashian-Jenner sister already fans, we predict a swift rise.

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Lettermark
Abigail Southan
Senior Fashion Ecommerce Editor

Abigail Southan is our Senior Fashion Ecommerce Editor and has five years' experience as a writer and editor in the industry. Abigail has a BA in History from the University of Bristol and an MA in Fashion Journalism from Central Saint Martins. Abigail currently covers all things style and shopping across titles including Harper’s Bazaar, ELLE, Esquire and Red. On a daily basis, she helps readers buy better with how-to-wear guides, first-person product reviews and deep dives into the latest trends. Previously, Abigail has worked for The Sunday Times’ Style and Fabulous magazine as their first ecommerce writer and was a founding editor of Sun Selects. She has also written for Net-a-Porter, I-D, Man About Town, Wonderland and 1 Granary, and has interviewed the likes of Paris Hilton, Dua Lipa and Christopher Bailey. You can follow Abigail on Instagram at @abigailsouthan.  

Headshot of Roberta Schroeder
Roberta Schroeder
Senior Ecommerce Editor, Luxury

Roberta Schroeder is the Senior Ecommerce Editor at Harper's Bazaar, ELLE and Esquire, overseeing shopping strategy and content across fashion, beauty, and travel. Roberta has reported on everything from market-leading skincare brands to the world’s most iconic fashion pieces, while also regularly updating a range of shopping guides, including LED masks, heritage cashmere brands and niche new dress brands to know.  


Roberta has more than 15 years' experience in the luxury sector, spanning editorial consultancy, trend forecasting and journalism. Over the years, she has worked for global brands including Farfetch, Chanel, and Vogue.  


When not testing beauty products, trialling trends and curating content that spotlights the very best in fashion and beauty, Roberta can usually be found trawling resale sites and vintage stores for a long-coveted designer find. Follow Roberta on Instagram at @roberta__schroeder

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