
The most inclusive fashion show that’s ever been staged in Manchester is coming to the city ahead of Disability Awareness Month. Sixteen models – female, non binary and male – will travel down a specially constructed runway at Aviva Studios, home of Factory International, on Saturday 27th June 2026.
Aged from 20s to 50s, every model is disabled, neurodivergent or chronically ill, and all will wear adaptive fashion designs from a young, ambitious Manchester label. RECONDITION was founded in 2025 by Manchester Metropolitan University fashion graduate Ellie Brown.
Read: Mentallyunstitched: The Clothing Brand Supporting Mental Health And Neurodivergent Wellbeing
Adaptive clothing and inclusive design in everyday fashion
Ellie’s eyes were opened to how unaccommodating fashion can be in 2021, when she badly broke her ankle, which resulted in her using a wheelchair for several months.
Each garment in RECONDITION’s denim-centred collection, has been designed with and for disabled people.
Adaptations built into the label’s inclusive designs include front pockets on jeans for wheelchair users, ring pull zips for people with reduced dexterity and sleeves with poppers along their full length to help accommodate prosthetic limbs or medical equipment from feeding tubes to insulin pumps.
Ellie’s Manchester city centre-based company now works alongside a co-design group who all have varying lived experiences of disability. This ensures that her designs are truly fit for purpose, whether that’s accommodating stoma bags, providing comfort and practicality for wheelchair users, or offering an easier “on and off” experience for people with reduced grip strength or dexterity.
Read: Inclusive Fashion For Wheelchair Users: Designing With Empathy, Functionality, And Purpose
“Accessible fashion is fashion for all”: a neurodiverse model set to take to the Disability Pride Catwalk
Aaliyah Rice, 24, from Bury, Greater Manchester, is one of the models taking part. Diagnosed with ADHD aged 21, the advertising creative signed up after seeing an open casting call on TikTok. She said she thought it would be “such a fun experience and a chance to meet like-minded people”.
“Mainstream fashion on a whole is entirely unaccommodating even for an able-bodied person. Things like sizing and fit are generally a nightmare. I can only imagine the extra layer of hell having a physical disability brings to clothes shopping.
“My own personal experience is with clothes that give me sensory issues – things like tags, textures and seams that cause me distress and take my focus away from other things. It makes it more challenging to shop, as most of the clothes that don’t cause me sensory issues aren’t fashionable, and when you don’t feel confident, you can’t embrace life the way you want. I’m a strong believer that accessible fashion is fashion for all.”
The label’s first catwalk collection includes the popular dark blue denim Reconditioned Jean, which is already on sale and debuts several new adaptive designs, including a denim miniskirt, a dress, a jumpsuit, a top and a further new cut of jeans.
Read: Adaptive Fred Perry Shirt Launches: A Step Forward In Accessible Fashion
Tackling exclusion through an inclusive fashion show
Research from disability charity Leonard Cheshire found that mainstream fashion in the UK does not meet the needs of three-quarters of disabled people.
According to government figures, a quarter of people in the UK have a disability – that’s 16.8 million people. And among state pension-aged people, the figure rises to almost half (45%).
Ellie says that RECONDITION’s first major catwalk show, called Disability Pride Catwalk: A Space for Each Other, is “part performance, part social commentary”, and will “reflect on who fashion is for, how access is built (or denied) and what it means to create space collectively”.
The purpose-built runway at Aviva Studios features a double-height bar, which is inclusive to wheelchair users and people of short stature and acts as a metaphor for how the built environment enables or disables people.
Ellie said: “The Disability Pride Catwalk is a safe space for people to celebrate bodies of all kinds whilst enjoying the atmosphere and experience of a runway show.
“I also hope the event will provoke useful discussions about how fashion – and society as a whole – can take more accountability for inclusivity.”
The Disability Pride Catwalk: A Space for Each Other will take place on Saturday 27th June 2026, 6pm to 8pm at The Undercroft, Aviva Studios, Water Street, Manchester, M3 4JQ.


