Rebecca Hessel Cohen has built LoveShackFancy from a personal creative vision into a global lifestyle brand. The opening of the Chelsea boutique marks the latest chapter in a story that now spans fashion, beauty, fragrance, home and children’s collections. (Photo by Jesse Grant/Variety via Getty Images)
Variety via Getty Images
LoveShackFancy has become one of retail’s more fascinating growth stories.
Founded by former fashion editor Rebecca Hessel Cohen in 2013, the brand has evolved from a highly personal dress business into a global lifestyle company spanning fashion, beauty, fragrance, childrenswear and home. Alongside that expansion has come a carefully curated programme of partnerships with brands including Gap, Stanley, Pottery Barn, Crocs and American Girl, helping introduce LoveShackFancy to entirely new audiences while maintaining its highly distinctive identity.
Chelsea, UK: LoveShackFancy’s new Chelsea boutique brings the brand’s signature sense of romance to one of London’s most distinctive neighbourhoods, carefully balancing its recognisable aesthetic with the character, architecture and heritage of the historic building it now calls home.
LoveShackFancy
The opening of the brand’s second London store in Chelsea marks another step in its international growth story and arrives at a time when many retailers are wrestling with a fundamental challenge: how to scale globally without losing the emotional connection that attracted customers in the first place.
It is a topic I spend considerable time exploring. Retail leaders often focus on products, channels and transactions, yet consumers tend to remember how a brand made them feel long after they have forgotten what they bought.
As I often say, retail isn’t about what is on the shelf. It is about what is in the hearts and minds of the people who walk past it.
With that in mind, I sat down with Rebecca Hessel Cohen at today’s Chelsea launch to discuss global expansion, partnerships, preserving brand intimacy and why emotion remains one of retail’s most powerful growth drivers.
Team UK x USA: LoveShackFancy’s London-exclusive pieces blend the brand’s unmistakable American spirit with a sense of place, creating collectible designs that celebrate both its New York roots and growing connection with British customers.
Kate Hardcastle MBE
KH: Many brands can export products, but far fewer successfully export a feeling. LoveShackFancy has managed to translate a distinctly American dream into markets as diverse as London, the Middle East and Asia. What have you learned about which parts of the brand are universally understood by women, and which elements need to evolve market by market?
RHC: What has been so beautiful to see is that the emotion of LoveShackFancy really does translate everywhere. Romance, celebration, femininity, nostalgia and joy are universal. Women around the world want to feel beautiful, special and connected to something that brings a little magic into everyday life.
At the same time, we are very thoughtful about how that dream comes to life in each market. The way a woman shops in London may be different from how she shops in the Middle East or Asia. Styling, modesty, colour preferences, occasion dressing, climate, even the way she experiences a store – those details matter.
We never want to simply copy and paste. We want every store and every experience to feel authentically LoveShackFancy, but also deeply connected to the women and communities it serves.
The heart of the brand remains the same wherever we go. It’s the expression that evolves. And for me, that’s one of the most exciting parts of building a global brand, seeing how women around the world make LoveShackFancy their own.
The London From hand-painted florals to heritage-inspired prints, LoveShackFancy’s London collection reflects the brand’s ability to retain its distinctive identity while creating products that feel relevant to the communities and cities it serves.
Kate Hardcastle MBE
KH: Some of the most successful growth stories in retail today are being built through carefully chosen partnerships rather than traditional advertising. From Target and Gap to Stanley and Hunter, your collaborations have introduced LoveShackFancy to entirely new audiences. What makes a partnership commercially valuable rather than simply newsworthy?
RHC: For us, the best partnerships are never just about putting our print on something. They have to feel authentic to the way our customer lives, dreams, travels, celebrates, gets dressed, gives gifts and creates memories.
It has to introduce the brand to a new audience in a way that still feels true to who we are. It has to create desire and excitement, but it also has to have real product integrity. The item needs to be something people love, use, collect, wear, share and talk about long after the initial moment.
The magic happens when both brands bring something powerful to the table. With our collaborations, we are often taking something iconic or familiar and reinterpreting it, adding romance, emotion, femininity and a sense of collectability.
That’s when a collaboration becomes more than a marketing moment. It becomes a cultural moment.
The best partnerships are the ones that feel instantly obvious. When the customer understands immediately why the two brands belong together.
The Consumer Mindset
One of the strongest lessons from consumer behaviour research is that customers rarely organise their lives in the neat categories businesses create.
People don’t think, “Today I am shopping fashion.” They think about holidays, weddings, birthdays, homes, children, friendships and experiences.
The partnerships that endure are usually the ones that understand that reality.
KH: I’ve spent much of my early career studying what happens when beloved brands scale. The challenge is rarely growth itself, it’s preserving emotional connection as the audience becomes larger. As LoveShackFancy opens another UK store and continues to expand globally, how do you protect the intimacy and romance that customers fell in love with in the first place?
RHC: That is something I think about constantly.
LoveShackFancy began in such a personal way, from my own love of vintage, family, celebration, travel and creating beautiful memories. As we grow, the most important thing is that the brand still feels personal.
We protect that intimacy through the details – the storytelling, the hand-painted prints, the way a store smells and feels, the flowers, the music, the styling, the little surprises, the events and the way our teams connect with customers.
Every store should feel like you are stepping into our world, not just walking into a retail space.
We also stay very close to our customers. She is not just buying a dress; she is buying something for a birthday, a vacation, a bridal shower, a graduation, a first date, a moment with her daughter.
We never want to lose sight of that. The emotional connection comes from understanding that we are part of her memories.
Growth only works if the dream still feels intimate. That is always the goal. Rebecca Hessel Cohen, Founder LoveShackFancy
Scale Up In Size, But Close To The Detail
There is a tendency in retail to discuss scale in operational terms.
Consumers experience it very differently.
They notice whether the welcome feels genuine. Whether the environment feels considered. Whether a brand still feels like it knows them.
The businesses that continue to grow are often the ones that remember that trust, loyalty and affection are built through thousands of small moments, not one large campaign.

Leave a comment