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Cyril Morgan
Each year, creative director and award-winning hairdresser Cyril Morgan teams up with fashion students from Limerick School of Art & Design (LSAD) for a collaboration that celebrates imagination, innovation and Irish talent. What began in 2019 as an informal garment loan has evolved into a full-scale creative partnership, complete with annual shoots, professional showcases and even a dedicated Creativity Award. Here, Cyril talks about how the project fuels fresh thinking, bridges hair and fashion and keeps creativity evolving on both sides.
How did the collaboration start, and how long has this been running now?
“The collaboration with Limerick School of Art & Design (LSAD) began in 2019. It started quite organically; we would borrow garments from fashion students for our shoots and some of them even modelled for us. Over time, the partnership naturally evolved into something more structured and meaningful.
“In the past two years, we’ve developed a closer relationship with the education heads in the LSAD Fashion Department. Starting this year, we also officially sponsor a Creativity Award at the LSAD Graduate Awards, which is something we’re very proud of. It’s a lovely way to celebrate emerging talent and continue supporting the next generation of Irish creatives.”
What does each side gain from the collaboration?
“It’s a collaboration where everyone genuinely benefits. For us, the students bring a fresh energy and perspective that constantly inspires our creative direction. Their innovative designs push us to think differently about hair and how it can complement and elevate fashion. In turn, the students gain real-world experience and professional exposure. We build our annual collections around their pieces and host a large-scale photoshoot each year with our team of hair stylists, professional photographers and make-up artists. The students are invited on set to be part of the process – styling their own looks, assisting on the day and seeing how a professional shoot comes together from start to finish. The finished collections are featured in magazines such as Creative Head and across our digital platforms.
“We also collaborate with leading brands. For example, this year’s shoot was supported by Bumble and bumble, which gives students the opportunity to network and make valuable industry connections. Many of the students use the images in their portfolios and some have even gone on to be approached for other styling and fashion projects as a direct result of the collaboration. It’s incredibly rewarding to see that growth and to play a small part in helping them transition into the next stage of their careers.”
Talk us through both concepts and how they’re born – where do you start, how does a theme get agreed, how do you test the looks and work through what the final looks will be?
“We usually begin the creative process at the start of the year. Our artistic team comes together to brainstorm and present ideas – it’s a really collaborative process. Storytelling is central to everything we do. Each collection needs to say something and evoke a feeling that resonates beyond the hair itself. Once everyone has shared their ideas, we build mood boards and explore potential directions. There’s usually overlap in our thinking, which helps us refine the strongest elements into a single, cohesive concept. From there, we start testing techniques and developing the looks, experimenting with shapes, textures and finishes until the story really starts to take form.
“With Preservation (gallery above), the story was a love letter to the classics – those timeless shapes like the bob, pixie, mullet and curly cuts that continually resurface through the decades. We wanted to reinterpret them through a modern lens, blending heritage with contemporary edge. Encasing each look in glass became a symbolic way to ‘preserve’ these iconic styles for future generations.
“Disruption (gallery above), on the other hand, explored the complete opposite. Set in a dystopian, AI-driven future, it questioned what happens when creativity and individuality are surrendered to technology. The looks became more experimental, using unexpected materials, futuristic textures and unconventional shapes, pushing the boundaries of what hair could be.
“With the avant-garde pieces in particular, there’s a lot of trial and error involved, and some of the more complex looks take months to perfect. Even then, things can change on the day once we see how they come to life on camera. Once we have our concepts, we then collaborate with the LSAD fashion students to select garments that strengthen the visual story and enhance the overall aesthetic. Their creativity adds another dimension to the work, bridging fashion and hair in a way that feels authentic and exciting. Going forward, we’re planning to collaborate with them even earlier in the process by working alongside the students as they design their final-year collections. That idea really came to life while judging the Creativity Award earlier this year and it’s something we’re eager to develop further.”
How do hair and fashion cycle through nostalgia and novelty – and how might future styles be shaped by the technology we create?
“Hair and fashion have always existed in a constant dialogue between nostalgia and novelty. Trends are cyclical, the classics always find their way back, whether it’s a bob, a pixie or a mullet. Something is enduring about these shapes – they connect us to different eras and evoke a sense of familiarity. That’s why, in Preservation, we wanted to quite literally ‘honour’ those timeless styles by encasing them and preserving them as part of our collective visual history, while adding our own modern interpretation.
“Novelty, on the other hand, is about play and experimentation. It’s where we push boundaries and explore the unexpected. That’s what Disruption represented for us. It allowed us to ask, ‘What happens when creativity is influenced or even replaced by technology?’ The avant-garde side of our work gives us the freedom to imagine those possibilities and create something that feels new and slightly uncomfortable in the best way.
“As technology continues to evolve, it’s inevitable that it will shape how we create and experience hair. Artificial intelligence, 3D printing and digital fashion are already influencing how we design, communicate and consume style. But I think what will always remain constant is our human connection to creativity, the need to touch, feel and express identity through hair. Technology will give us new tools, but it’s the emotion behind the artistry that will keep driving trends forward.”
What advice would you share with any stylist/salon looking to collaborate with local fashion students?
“I would absolutely recommend it. Collaborating with local fashion students or emerging designers is such a rewarding experience and everyone involved gets something out of it. It’s an exchange of ideas and energy that keeps your creativity alive and pushes you to see things differently.
“For salons and stylists, it’s a chance to step outside of the everyday and reconnect
with the artistry of what we do. Students bring such a fresh perspective, they’re fearless in their ideas and not bound by traditional rules. That kind of openness can be really inspiring and can spark new directions in your own work. My advice would be to simply reach out and start the conversation. Offer support, share your skills and look for ways to build something together. Collaboration isn’t about hierarchy, it’s about inspiring each other and creating space for new voices. When you bring together different creative minds, the outcome is always something special.”
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One word keeps being used to describe the 2025 Most Wanted and It List Awards Grand Final, and that’s EPIC! If you were there, you know – and if you weren’t there? Well, perhaps this little film will share the sizzle. Incredible winners! A 48m long video screen! An after-party NO ONE wanted to leave! You press play; we’ll slay…
Take an old IKEA in Tottenham (all 6,485m sq of it). Send 550 impeccably dressed hairdressers up the famous travelator into the vast industrial space that used to be the superstore’s flatpack warehouse, now fitted out with panoramic screens, high-quality sound systems and immersive light displays. Serve delicious drinks and a sustainably sourced dinner at spotlit tables dressed with linen tablecloths and elegant lamps. And announce the winners of the 2025 Most Wanted and It List awards.
That, dear friends, is what Creative HEAD did last night. And boy, was it spectacular!
The 2025 Grand Final at world-leading music venue Drumsheds in north London brought to a close an epic year for our two competitions, as we marked Most Wanted’s 25th birthday and 15 years of ghd’s support of the It List. It had to be special, and it was.
Assisted by fellow compere, the comedian Lou Sanders, Creative HEAD’s editorial director Amanda Nottage announced 19 trophies – the six new talents taking their place on the 2025 It List (our first all-female It List in the competition’s history), the winners of our 12 brand-new Most Wanted categories, and the crowning of Grace Dalgleish as a Most Wanted Legend.
And afterward, at the Olaplex x MWIT25 After-Party, guests hit the dancefloor to the tunes of rising DJ star, Phoenix Brown (daughter of Spice Girl “Mel B”, no less), fuelled by an array of potent cocktails (and mocktails) served in cute retro glitterballs on a bar laden with stunning red florals. The immersive photo-booth was an inspired installation, capturing glamorous guests dressed in eveningwear that had to be seen to be believed. With so much fun to be had, it’s no surprise that party was still heaving when Drumsheds finally called time at 1.30am…
This was a brilliant night for British and Irish hairdressing – one that celebrated the courage of all the finalists and their commitment to their clients, teams, communities and fellow creatives. By doing things differently, as they have done over the past 12 months, by doing things better, they are reimagining how hairdressing looks, feels and operates. And it’s so exciting to watch.
A quick reminder, however, that this year’s Most Wanted awards so nearly didn’t happen. The fact that it did was down to an exceptional group of brands – BaByliss PRO, Electric, HairCon, Kérastase, L’Oréal Professionnel, Moroccanoil, Olaplex, Phorest, Redken and Wella Professionals – to decide that an industry without Most Wanted was an unthinkable outcome and to come up with the support that was needed. Our thanks go to all of them for ensuring this important night for the industry went ahead.
It was Creative HEAD’s biggest night of the year last night as Most Wanted celebrated its 25th birthday with a spectacular Grand Final ceremony at the epic Drumsheds venue in London.
With Lou Sanders as host and Phoenix Brown on the decks, the entertainment was certainly A-List. But the biggest names on the night were our 12 Most Wanted winners, whose commitment to clients, teams, collaborations and community were rewarded with trophies and standing ovations from the audience.
This had been a record year of entries for Most Wanted, but the winners who edged it had brought their A-game.
Creative boundaries had been pushed. Fears in business faced. Professionalism taken to new heights.
And. So. Much. More.
Intrigued? Let us introduce you to the names who are leading our industry into an exciting future.
The Most Wanted stars of 2025
The Most Wanted award for COLLABORATION: Samantha Cusick
The Most Wanted award for COMMUNITY: Craig Henderson
The Most Wanted award for CREATIVITY: Tariq Howes
The Most Wanted award for EDUCATION: Rachael Lomax
The Most Wanted award for ENGAGEMENT: Sarah-Louise Keane
The Most Wanted award for EXPERIENCE: Buller and Rice
The Most Wanted award for IMAGE: Casey Coleman
The Most Wanted award for LEADERSHIP: Samantha Cusick
The Most Wanted award for NEW SPACE: Williams & Hirst
The Most Wanted award for PURPOSE: Anna Cofone
The Most Wanted award for SESSION: Lauren Bell
The Most Wanted award for INFLUENCE: Ali Pirzadeh
Last night, Creative HEAD and the It List’s exclusive sponsor, ghd, announced the Rising Star, Salon Stylist, Editorial Stylist, Business Builder, Visionary and One To Watch of 2025 – and for the first time in the competition’s history, we have an all-female It List!
These formidable young women epitomise the energy, ambition and innovation percolating within British and Irish hairdressing right now, challenging ways of operating, both as creatives and in business.
We’re absolutely thrilled to introduce them to you now… Remember their names, because you’re going to feel a lot more of their Girl Power in the months to come!
The It List of 2025
The Rising Star: Amelia Krasinksi
The Business Builder: Chlöe Swift
The Editorial Stylist: Emma Vickery
The Salon Stylist: Elle Forman
The Visionary: Emy Roccabella
The One to Watch: Elle Forman