Fashion

A blind model just made history at Copenhagen Fashion Week

By Daniel Rodgers

Photo: James Cochrane

At the Zalando Visionary Award 2024 winning designer's runway show, Lucy Edwards – accompanied by her guide dog – became the first blind person to model at Copenhagen Fashion Week

It took a matter of seconds for Lucy Edwards to make history on Sinéad O’Dwyer’s spring/summer 2025 catwalk, and the hairstylist Anna Cofone four months to make it happen. The broadcaster – who has been an informative and spirit-raising presence on the For You Page since she started uploading TikToks at the beginning of lockdown – yesterday became the first blind person to model at Copenhagen Fashion Week, and the first blind person to have walked for a London brand. She strode, accompanied by her guide dog, in mini-skirted tailoring as guests were left questioning why this sort of thing isn’t more commonplace. “Just because a person is blind, doesn’t mean they don’t care about their appearance,” Cofone, who runs Hair and Care, a non-profit tasked with broadening fashion and beauty spaces to those with low vision, says. “It’s the absolute opposite.”

Cofone understands this more than most. “My father had retinitis pigmentosa, and I think he used fashion and grooming as a way to maintain independence when he was losing sight,” she says. “He was so passionate about self-care, and was so proud when someone took the time to describe clothes to him, guiding his hand over the shape of a lapel, encouraging him to feel the fabric beneath his fingers. He died 15 years ago and I started Hair and Care in 2019 to help keep his memory alive.” Cofone, who attributes her own success to her father’s resilience, began working with Lana del Rey two years after he passed. Then along came gigs with Dua Lipa, and almost every single international edition of this magazine, alongside countless fashion weeks and campaigns. “Hairdressing isn’t accessible for blind and low-vision people: going into salons is a real challenge and there’s a lack of education on how to communicate with them. Hair and Care runs monthly styling workshops from my studio in Hackney, and we’ve helped to support over 300 women with varying degrees of visual impairments since 2021.”

It was in one of these sessions that Cofone first met the 28-year-old Edwards, who has been blind since the age of 17 as a result of a rare genetic mutation known as incontinentia pigmenti. She has since signed ambassadorships with Pantene and Barbie, and earlier this year published a motivational memoir – Blind, Not Broken – based on her own path to self-acceptance. “She was one of our guests at Sinéad’s London Fashion Week presentation last season,” Cofone says. “The plan was that she’d walk, too, but we couldn’t get it across the line.” There were, of course, a series of other “firsts” to execute: inviting showgoers with visual impairments to experience a tactile tour of the collection, and recording audio descriptions for each look. O’Dwyer and Cofone went even further for spring – partnering with the Danish Association of the Blind on a guest list and creating booklets of fabric swatches and evermore detailed aural guides, which attendees listened to on headsets donated by Sony.

Just because a person is blind, doesn’t mean they don’t care about their appearance.

Anna Cofone, hairstylist

The seasonal grind is hard enough for independent designers, but here is someone who makes things actively more challenging for themselves in order to accommodate an audience of fashion fans so egregiously overlooked. “The most important thing was to make sure the experience would be safe and accessible for Lucy,” Cofone says. “From travelling with an airline that she trusts, to ensuring she could sleep in the same hotel as Hair and Care, to securing shuttle buses, time alone with a movement director and perfecting the tactile markings on the catwalk.” (That O’Dwyer absolutely should be taking home the 2024 Zalando Visionary Award is obvious.)

Photo: -James-Cochrane

“The dream is to work with the British Fashion Council and be the voice that helps brands to be accessible for blind and low-vision people,” Cofone adds of this life-altering if not culture-shifting project. “The women and young girls who come to our workshops leave feeling changed. Less isolated, empowered to take on a more visible role in public life. It’s about giving people a purpose, confidence and a chance to harness their identities.”

Originally published by British Vogue.