Wear it Your Way - LedByHer
LedbyHer’s energy hits the room before she even speaks. On set, she was in constant motion, switching between playful spins, subtle glances, and moments of stillness that somehow carried just as much impact. The camera loved her, and she knew exactly how to give it what it wanted. Every shot felt instinctive, as if she had been doing this for years, even though much of her artistry comes from outside the studio. When the interview mic came out, she brought the same vibrance, speaking with an openness that matched her presence in front of the lens.


For her, success is not just a milestone or a list of achievements. “Freedom. Yeah, success sets out freedom for me. Freedom with a touch of peace,” she said, her tone soft but deliberate. It is a definition rooted in personal authenticity, not external measures. This mindset extends to her creative style, which draws deeply from her history. “I’ve found going back in time and finding inspiration then. Like, I just look at my grandma’s pictures and my great grandma’s pictures, and then I started the long skirt thing, and now people will be like, Let’s buy her a long skirt. And I was like, I didn’t know that was so left field because I was just looking at my grandma.”

Her approach blends heritage and modernity in a way that feels entirely her own. She is not interested in simply repeating tradition or abandoning it altogether. Instead, she reworks it, reshaping the edges until it fits her life and vision.

That personal vision was clear in her looks on the day. Each piece she wore felt intentional, carrying a story in its cut, texture, and styling. The long skirt was more than just fabric and silhouette; it was a quiet nod to the women in her family, reframed through her lens. There was no sense of trying to fit into a prescribed mould. Instead, she occupied a space entirely of her own making.
Her creative process is equally fluid. Inspiration can come from something as simple as a photograph, a fabric, or a passing comment from a friend. Once it takes hold, she runs with it, shaping it until it becomes something she not only likes but recognises as hers. It is this instinct, paired with her refusal to be boxed in, that makes her artistry so magnetic.
As she wrapped her final shot of the day, she summed it up perfectly. “Style is personal history in motion. You take what came before you, you shift it, and you let it carry you forward.”

