The 10 Red Carpet Looks You Need to See From the Brit Awards
Like all music award ceremonies, when it comes to the red carpet at the Brit Awards, pretty much anything goes. You won't see your average floor-sweeping award-season gowns, but instead bonkers creations adorned with feathers, sequins and daring cutouts. Tonight's red carpet was no exception, and Katy Perry led the fashion pack, tapping into the current pink obsession in an Atelier Versace beaded micro minidress with a matching suit jacket with pink-ribbon detailing on the lapel.
Neelam Gill was the most elegant dresser of the night, wearing a midnight blue jumpsuit by Galvan with an off-the-shoulder neckline, which she paired with mirrored silver stilettos and a matching clutch. Model Charlotte Wiggins wore a midnight blue velvet sleeved dress ruched up the right-hand side by Preen by Thorton Bregazzi, meanwhile Héloïse Letissier of Christine and the Queens worked deconstructed tailoring.
Scroll below to see 10 of the most talked-about Brit Awards red carpet looks.
WHO: Katy Perry
WEAR: Atelier Versace.
WHO: Neelam Gill
WEAR: Galvan.
WHO: Charlotte Wiggins
WEAR: Preen by Thornton Bregazzi.
WHO: Alice Levine
WHO: Ellie Goulding
WEAR: Philipp Plein.
Related: The Best Front-Row Pictures From London Fashion Week
WHO: Dua Lipa.
WHO: Eliza Cummings.
WHO: Natalia Vodianova
WEAR: Givenchy Haute Couture by Riccardo Tisci.
WHO: Rita Ora
WEAR: Preen by Thornton Bregazzi.
WHO: Héloïse Letissier.
For more celebrity style, see the best front-row looks from London Fashion Week.
Emma is a freelance fashion editor with over 15 years experience in industry, having worked at The Telegraph, Grazia and, most recently, British Vogue. Emma was part of the founding team of Who What Wear UK, where she worked for six years as Deputy Editor and then Editor—helping shape the team into what it is today is one of the biggest privileges of her career and she will always see herself as a Who What Wear girl, contributing to both the US and UK sites. Whether she's writing about runway trends or spotlighting emerging brands, she aims to write about fashion in a way that is democratic and doesn't promote over consumption.