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Fashion Creators Changing the Feed

  • 1 day ago
  • 2 min read

If your feed needs a reset, disabled fashion creators aren’t just adding representation, they’re actively rewriting what style, beauty, and influence look like. 


They have long expanded what fashion and beauty can look like, not as a passing trend, but as an ongoing redefinition of style, beauty, and self-presentation. Across visible and hidden disabilities alike, they have consistently challenged narrow ideas of aspiration by bringing lived experience into fashion imagery, editorial spaces, and personal style.


Nikki Lilly

More than beauty content: she’s known for merging glam, visible-differences advocacy, red carpet fashion, and has helped normalise disability within mainstream digital culture and fashion spaces.


Bernadette Hagans

Her prosthetic is not hidden - it’s styled, centred, and celebrated. Through bold visuals, she reframes disability as an extension of personal style, not something to dilute or disguise.


Jessica Kellgren-Fozard

Vintage aesthetics meet radical honesty. By weaving deafness, chronic illness, and disability history into her content, she challenges the idea that disability sits outside of fashion storytelling.


Sinéad Burke

Less influencer, more architect of change. Her work moves beyond the individual, calling out systemic inaccessibility and demanding structural transformation within fashion, design, and education.


Lucy Dawson

Maximalism as resistance. Through unapologetic styling and chronic illness visibility, she reframes getting dressed as both survival and self-expression in a world that often demands invisibility.


Chelsie Hill

Blending dance, fashion, and wheelchair visibility, she brings movement into fashion content, challenging static ideas of styling and proving that mobility aids can be integrated into personal style narratives.


Jillian Mercado

As a model who uses a wheelchair, she has been instrumental in pushing representation within high fashion campaigns and editorials, proving that disabled talent belongs not just online, but at the core of the industry.


Claudia-Liza Armah

Through her content, she explores disability, confidence, and personal style with a focus on storytelling, offering a nuanced perspective on how fashion intersects with identity and lived experience.


Andrea Dalzell

Known as “The Seated Nurse,” she combines fashion with advocacy, often using her platform to highlight the intersections of disability, healthcare, and representation, while embracing bold, expressive styling.


Lucy Edwards

By integrating beauty tutorials with conversations around blindness, she has expanded how beauty content is created and consumed, proving that accessibility and artistry can coexist.



 
 
 

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