Features
Meet the Liverpool stylists on the Sunday Times ‘must know’ list for 2025
4 hours ago
Two Liverpool-based stylists are using their experience working with top fashion magazines and brands to help women edit their wardrobes at home.
Amy Hanson-Bevan and Miriam Murphy launched Get Dressed, North West in January last year and have just featured in the Sunday Times Style’s ‘personal stylists to know.’
The pair met through mutual friends and found they had a shared love of shopping and a passion for helping people to feel more confident about their own style.
Both women had recently returned to Liverpool â Amy from living and working in London for over a decade, and Miriam after 10 years in Dubai â when they decided to combine their skills to start a business.
Amy explains:
âI had my daughter at the end of 2019 and we moved up from London at the end of 2020 and Miriam had worked in Flannels then lived in Dubai for 10 years.
âWeâre both very entrepreneurial and we had all this knowledge between us so we thought it would be a great idea to share that.
Most of 36-year-old Amyâs career in fashion has been as a stylist for magazines including Glamour and Stylist, working on photoshoots in the UK, New York and LA, and with presenter and noughties It Girl Alexa Chungâs stylist.
âWhen they know what I do people often say to me, âIâd love you to come and look in my wardrobeâ so this is about putting what Iâve learned working in magazines into practice,â she adds.
The idea of having a personal shopper can seem daunting if youâre not a celebrity, which is why the two women are keen to make Get Dressed, North West as accessible and friendly as possible.
âPeople might have the impression that weâre going to be these scary personalities telling them off but weâre actually here to empower women.
âWeâre both at different stages in life; Iâve got a 5-year-old, and Miriam is 51 and her boys are grown up, so weâre just real people and we see all kinds of different women â different sizes, shapes, ages.â
Amy and Miriam offer clients a choice of three different appointments: a wardrobe edit at home, where they ‘shop’ from someoneâs existing wardrobe then fill in the gaps, shopping in town and online style boards for people short on time.
In the year since they launched, the wardrobe edit has proved to be the most popular and itâs helped women not only realise what they might want, but to look again at what theyâve already got.
âA lot of people have already got the good bits in their wardrobe but they just donât know how to style it up or they donât look at it the same way we would look at it,â says Amy.
âWe might say, youâve got that long-sleeve T-shirt, have you thought about layering it under that summer dress?â and straight away youâve got a new outfit.
âWomen often want this capsule wardrobe, itâs just knowing what to have in it, so we go through their wardrobe and say, âyouâve already got that, you donât need to buy it, you can give it a new lifeâ. Itâs just a case of thinking differently about your wardrobe.â
The business partners think about sustainability, so theyâll encourage women to look beyond the high street too.
âI rent out my wardrobe, I sell a lot through Vinted and Iâll go to charity shops just to see what I can find, so weâll introduce some clients to that.
âBecause we donât work on commission weâre not going to be sending people to specific shops to buy things. Weâre professional shoppers, so we know where to shop, where to find the right-fitting jeans or different brands, and I love showing people how they can get a bargain.â
Using their stylist service is like taking a mate shopping only better, says Amy.
âLots of women donât have that friend they can shop with or if they do, theyâre not necessarily the best person. Weâre quite honest but in a fun way and weâre not there to sell them anything.
âWe look at where people are in their lives, embrace that and try to make them feel better about themselves.
âWe can all be our own worst enemies, so we just need to have the confidence and have someone to say, âtry thisâ and if it looks wrong weâll say so and try the next thing.â