Image copyright My Wardrobe HQ Image caption Emily Broughton says she loves to rent as she can try new looks

Emily Broughton, 24, a lifestyle blogger and entrepreneur, spends £200 a month on clothing on average, but she now spends part of that budget on renting clothes.

"I love to rent because you can get such amazing high quality items and try new looks," she says.

Once a regular High Street shopper, buying lots of cheap outfits, she now prefers to buy either second-hand designer clothes from vintage stores and charity shops, or to rent fashion from a range of platforms such as By Rotation, Hirestreet and My Wardrobe HQ.

"A few years ago I'd be going round to my friends' houses and sharing clothes with them from their wardrobes, and rental is opening that up," says Ms Broughton, whose blog Saving the Grace focuses on sustainable living.

Not all the outfits are expensive - she says she has rented clothes for as little as £10 for three days and typically rents one item of clothing a month.

Shoppers like Ms Broughton, could help drive a shift in how we shop, claims retail veteran Jane Shepherdson.

Topshop veteran

She's the new chairman of a high-end fashion rental start-up called My Wardrobe HQ, which is hoping to make renting clothes rather than buying them popular in the UK.

Ms Shepherdson, who has spent 35 years in the industry and is credited with building Topshop into a global brand, sees renting designer clothes as an opportunity for people to be able to wear beautiful clothing, shoes and accessories that they wouldn't typically be able to afford.

For example, she envisages women renting a dress or a fancy pair of Jimmy Choo shoes for £60 to wear to a wedding or fancy function, rather than buying them for several hundred pounds. But she also sees the service as a way for people who have bought expensive garments to earn some money by hiring them out several times in a season.

"Anything we can do to slow down the mass purchasing of clothes and share each piece a little bit more, the better. It's kind of trying to reward a more conscientious way of purchasing," she told the BBC.

"I don't think it's going to solve the fast fashion problem immediately. What I hope is that in the longer term it will start to change people's behaviour slowly."

Image copyright My Wardrobe HQ Image caption Jane Shepherdson is credited with building Topshop into a global brand

It's a potentially lucrative sector. US rival Rent the Runway, which claims to have pioneered the fashion rental concept in 2009, was recently valued at $1bn (£770m). It has a subscriber base of about 100,000 people who pay a subscription fee of $160 a month for unlimited rentals.

However, at £60 per dress, handbag or pair of shoes from My Wardrobe HQ, you'd still need to have a reasonable amount of disposable income in order to be able to afford such a lifestyle. It therefore seems unlikely that renting clothes at this level would appeal to Generation Z and younger millennials who are buying £5 dresses online.

Ms Shepherdson acknowledges that it will take a while before the British consumer is ready to spend this much on clothing that they don't get to keep.

Fashion for hire

The idea of renting clothing is not new in itself - in the West, men have rented wedding suits for years, while in Southeast Asia many women now rent several wedding gowns for photoshoots and ceremonies.

However, it has never really been a particularly popular option for womenswear, as consumers prefer to own garments, whether they be brand new or secondhand.

Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Is fashion rental only really applicable to people who have a lot of disposable income?

Popular mainstream brands such as American Eagle, Urban Outfitters and Ann Taylor are already offering retail rental services, while in Europe, major fast fashion retailer H&M recently begun a trial of renting out clothes at its flagship store in Stockholm, Sweden.

According to retail expert Natalie Berg, the future of retail is for products to become services, because it helps retailers to retain customer loyalty, as well as staying relevant.

She cites several examples of this, such as Ikea renting out furniture, electronic retailer AO renting out washing machines, and sports brand Adidas asking consumers to bring back old worn-out shoes and then trading up for a newer model.

"It's about consumers prioritising access over ownership," Ms Berg explains.

H&M is also using its clothing rental service to offer a new personal styling service, which serves to tie customers to its brand.

And although consumers are becoming more environmentally conscious, Ms Berg doesn't think that fast fashion will ever really go away, because cheap clothes are always in demand.

She said: "The reality is that fashion is a remarkably wasteful industry, and I think there's just this growing awareness across demographics that we need to do more as a society to address our culture of waste."