Recommended Video
For MEGA’s Female Forces issue, the focus is clear: artistry, influence, and women who shape culture on their own terms. To lead, one must carry the voice of many—and for Catriona Gray and Kylie Verzosa, that leadership comes with a certain defiance. They spearhead a generation that follows no path but their own, where a hint of rebellion sharpens their resolve. In their respective pursuits, they have lit a fire for womanhood that doesn’t conform, but transforms—shaping culture, shifting the landscape, and raising the bar for excellence.

RELATED: A Faster Kind of Responsibility: Stella McCartney Returns to H&M This May
Here, they take on Stella McCartney’s latest collaboration for H&M—one that brings together accessibility and long-standing commitment to conscious design. At first glance, it’s an unlikely pairing: the Swedish megabrand built on scale and speed; the British designer, grounded in sustainable, cruelty-free design. Yet, fashion these days is no longer a monolith—it adapts, evolves and fills gaps that not many others can. In that tension lies its power. This meeting of forces doesn’t cancel out their differences; it bridges them creating space for fashion that reaches further while standing for more.

Now, they’ve come together to proudly announce a collection that envisions clothing tailored with purpose, sold globally, and worn by women such as our cover stars that seek intention down to the threads they wear. They are—arguably—each other’s antithesis but there’s a rebellion in that contrast. Instead of opposing, these two forces meet in a place where sharp, conscious design becomes accessible—proving that even within contradiction, fashion can move forward with intent.
Rooted In Legacy, Designed for Tomorrow
On a farm in Scotland many years ago, the term sustainability didn’t exist yet for McCartney. Instead, it was the earthy smell of soil every morning. Fresh farm produce laid across her table. An upbringing spent watching her parents create gradual, meaningful change in a world that had not yet considered slowing down. The daughter of a rockstar inherited her father’s attitude—and the soul of rebellion that came with it.

Twenty years after their first collaboration, McCartney returns to H&M with a collection that reflects her past while looking firmly toward the future. Beloved signatures—oversized shirting, sweeping trenches, and sharp tailoring—stand alongside iconic pieces pulled from her early archive, from slogan tops to playful, bejewelled prints. Crafted predominantly from recycled and certified materials, organic cottons, responsibly sourced wool, and innovative alternatives derived from industrial corn and recycled vegetable oil, the collection carries the same spirit that has long defined her work: fashion that evolves without losing itself. Across the campaign, “&Stella” becomes both tagline and philosophy—&Here &Now, &Me &You—a reminder that style can still speak to connection, care, and continuity across generations.

And perhaps it’s poetic that she lets her moment-defining MET Gala look from 1999 loose for a second time through this drop: a DIY-inspired top that had the words Rock Royalty across the chest that continues to define her legacy now. That night on that red carpet, the world learned who she was and her knack for ingenuity. Two decades later, she has never stopped being Rock Royalty.
Catriona Gray Does Good, Even if It Isn’t the Kind That People Expect
It shouldn’t be any surprise to see Gray wear the Snake Pattern dress like it was made especially for her. After all, McCartney’s work has always been about more than visuals alone. It’s a soft embrace that brings together her frame and McCartney’s eye for detail, one that goes deeper than the make.

“I feel that Stella McCartney’s collection is driven by that sense of having a bigger purpose”, she says. In her eyes, it is larger than life. It has faith in looking good through doing good, and makes no apology for it. It’s a connection that feels pre-destined, coming into view as a reflection of Catriona’s penchant for a good story underneath the pretty surface.


Anyone familiar with Gray should be aware of her time off-camera. From textiles expertly crafted by local artisans to equally talented women burdened by circumstance, her advocacies align with the worlds she steps in. That threads together neatly with McCartney now. ” I love that this is a consciously made collection utilizing recycled, organic and certified materials.” The beads reborn from recycled glass arrayed on the Mesh Body symbolizes that union of craft and consciousness; one Gray seamlessly adopts. She continues, “These pieces feel archival, which I really love because I value a timeless type of quality in the pieces I add to my wardrobe; pieces that you know you’ll have and love for years”

True, lasting impact comes from a cause, and from a purpose that resonates deeply. Gray—a storyteller on and off the cover, comes to support a collaboration that conveys a narrative decades in the making; a tale spun in fashion concerned with timelessness and reverence to sustainability “This moment wearing the Stella McCartney H&M Collection feels in alignment with what I believe in and value, and for that I have a sense of pride.” It’s evident that Gray’s unwavering resolve forms a bond between woman and designer that might just stand the test of time. Speaking on that, “I’m a believer that life is full of opportunities to make a positive impact. You just need to see them and act upon them,” she shares. “[For me], being a rebel is seeing what everyone else is doing, taking part in the conversation, and doing what aligns with your values anyway, even if it isn’t what other people expect”

Kylie Verzosa Doesn’t Wait for Permission—She Just Moves
Verzosa hears the noise, and wants nothing more than to cut through it. It’s a principle she brings everywhere. “I like doing things my way. I’ve walked away from deals that didn’t align with who I am, even when the money was good. I started a podcast (Always Honest) when people said the market was saturated. I talked about mental health when it wasn’t glamorous. I don’t wait for permission — I just move.”

Garbed in the silver sheen of a Tassle bra hewn from recycled brass stones to a Cherry Print dress sewn from reused plastics , she inhabits a body of work that does the unexpected; echoing a sentiment she’s always been moved by . “What I love is that nothing feels like a compromise. Sometimes with sustainable collections you expect things to look or feel a certain way, a bit safe, a bit plain. But these pieces are genuinely exciting. I’m drawn to the tailoring, there’s a sharpness to it that still feels effortless.” Her connection is two-fold: she adores the fashion and admires the will it took to envision it.


Verzosa runs on a big heart. That’s to say, she cares deeply about the impact she’s capable of leaving; driven by each look of the collection she eagerly puts on “Stella McCartney on her own is aspirational, and H&M makes fashion available to everyone — so this collaboration is really about saying you don’t have to choose between looking good and doing good. That message matters to me.” These days, wearing your heart on your sleeve can be a frightening thought. For her—and by extension, McCartney—it is necessary. She continues, “It means something because the conversation around sustainability has matured. It’s no longer just a trend or a marketing angle — people genuinely care. Wearing these pieces now feels like being part of a movement that’s actually gaining real traction, not just noise. And Stella McCartney’s been doing this long before it was fashionable to care, so there’s real integrity behind every piece”

If anything, this moment is a breather for Verzosa. A time to pause, reset, and appreciate another woman’s work before strutting back into the bustling world she’s set for herself “H&M acknowledging that their model needs to evolve, and partnering with someone like Stella who’s built her entire career on this, is a powerful statement. It resonates with me” This is a fragment of her thesis: actions and choices that shake the room. Retold now by a duo that understands what it means to make an impression that remains. Verzosa concludes, “Honestly, I think this is what progress looks like. It’s not about being perfect—it’s about taking steps”

This Collaboration is a Defining Moment for Fashion
It’s not just what you wear anymore—and that’s the point. Dressing with intention carries a motive that doesn’t need to be spoken out loud; it shows in action. What inspires you says a lot and how you approach fashion points to something deeper. Catriona Gray and Kylie Verzosa dressed in Stella McCartney’s H&M collaboration line tells us one thing: our era’s icons believe in style that works for the greater good, and somehow, look all the better for it.
Photographed by BJ PASCUAL, Assisted by RUEL ESTRELLES, RICHARD DETITA, JOHN PAUL DELA CRUZ, ABEL SANTOS, and HENDRIX SANTOS, Creative Direction by MOND GUTIERREZ and ASH RYE, Hair (Catriona) by BRENT SALES, Styling by RURU CHRISTIAN of H&M, Hair (Kylie) by RENZ PANGILINAN, Makeup (Catriona) by ANGELINE DELA CRUZ, Makeup (Kylie) by ANTHEA BUENO, Art Direction (Static and Moving Cover) by BRIE VENTURA, Moving Cover by KARLO TORIO, Sittings Editor PEEWEE-REYES ISIDRO, Additional Text by OWEN MADDELA
Be a part of this moment in fashion. Secure your own piece of sustainable wear through H&M’s website.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Stella McCartney and H&M collaboration is a conscious fashion collection that pairs accessible, high-scale retail with sustainable, cruelty-free tailoring made from organic and recycled materials.
Miss Universe titleholders Catriona Gray and Kylie Verzosa front the campaign, representing a generation of women who champion personal values, cultural influence, and conscious fashion choices.
The collection primarily utilizes certified organic cotton, responsibly sourced wool, recycled glass beads, and innovative textile alternatives derived from industrial corn and recycled vegetable oil.
Stella McCartney first collaborated with H&M twenty years prior to this second release, establishing an early precedent for high-fashion designers partnering with mainstream global retailers.
The collection features reissued iconic pieces from McCartney’s early archives, including oversized shirting, sweeping trenches, playful bejeweled prints, and her historic 1999 “Rock Royalty” DIY top.
