December 8, 2025Evie Garbett was just 17 years old when one of her first TikToks unexpectedly reached 300,000 views. For many young creators, that kind of early success sparks excitement and ambition. For Evie, it sparked fear.Walking into school the next morning, she realized everyone had seen the video. The teasing was instant. “It was embarrassing,” she remembers. “I thought, ‘I can’t be doing this.’” The pressure became overwhelming, and she stopped posting entirely for six months.At the time, her dreams were focused elsewhere. She filled sketchbooks with fashion designs, planned on studying fashion at university, and tried to forget that something meaningful had briefly worked online.Then the 2020 lockdown changed everything.With school corridors cleared and judgment at a distance, Evie found the courage to try again. That second chance changed her life. One video hit three million views, and suddenly momentum followed—first on TikTok, then on Instagram, and finally on YouTube.“That’s kind of where it started,” she says.
“I emailed them once a week for almost two years,” she laughs. “That’s how I got noticed.”Today, she’s shifting away from heavy fast fashion.
“As I mature, I prefer better-quality clothing that lasts longer,” she says.She’s also honest about the realities of influencer culture.“A lot of creators will buy clothes, film in them, and return everything. I did that too when I couldn’t afford to keep it all.”Now, she keeps what she wears—and builds a wardrobe that reflects her real taste.
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Finding Her Voice in a Visual World
Evie’s early content leaned heavily into fast-fashion hauls and minimalist styling videos. The aesthetic was polished—but silent. Something was missing.“I used to be really shy to do talking videos,” she admits. “Now I’m just blabbering on all the time.”As she began adding personality to her posts, the response changed. Followers started seeing more than outfits. They saw her as a person.“People comment things like, ‘Oh, I didn’t realize you were nice,’ because from short clips, they don’t always realize there’s a human being behind it.”Each platform serves a different role in her creative routine:- Snapchat is her most personal space, where daily life unfolds in real time.
- Instagram is curated and professional—where brand work lives.
- TikTok is playful and pressure-free.
- YouTube is the most demanding: edited the same day, planned a week ahead, built with precision.
From Hardware Shop to Full-Time Creator
Despite growing online success, Evie kept a part-time job at a hardware shop from age 16 until early 2025. It was her safety net.“With social media, everything can be taken away at any moment,” she explains.That lesson became painfully real when her TikTok account—once at one million followers—was suddenly deleted without warning. She rebuilt from zero, only to lose her second account too. After a dispute with the platform, it was eventually restored.The experience reshaped how she views the creator economy.“It taught me not to rely on one platform for everything.”By 2025, her growth stabilized. With rising brand collaborations and renewed confidence, Evie finally took the leap into content creation full time.“I’ve actually really enjoyed it,” she says. “It’s helped me grow in confidence more than anything.”Crafting a Fashion Identity That Lasts
Evie’s signature look today is clean, glossy, polished soft-glam—a balance between editorial luxury and everyday wearability. Her content reflects a new maturity: elevated staples, refined silhouettes, and long-lasting pieces.She’s worked with major brands including:- SKIMS
- Fashion Nova
- Oh Polly
- Simmi London
- SHEIN
- EGO Official
- Outcast Clothing
“I emailed them once a week for almost two years,” she laughs. “That’s how I got noticed.”Today, she’s shifting away from heavy fast fashion.
“As I mature, I prefer better-quality clothing that lasts longer,” she says.She’s also honest about the realities of influencer culture.“A lot of creators will buy clothes, film in them, and return everything. I did that too when I couldn’t afford to keep it all.”Now, she keeps what she wears—and builds a wardrobe that reflects her real taste.
Growing With Her Audience
As her platforms have expanded, so has her approach. Outfit posts now happen outdoors instead of against blank walls. Talking videos replace silent montages. Snapchat diaries replace highlight-only perfection.Her audience hasn’t just watched her grow as a creator—they’ve grown with her as a person.Evie Garbett’s story isn’t just about algorithm-driven success. It’s about resilience, rebuilding, structure, and choosing authenticity over image. In a creator economy defined by speed and spectacle, she’s quietly proving that confidence, consistency, and character still matter most.I














