FashionIncomingWilliam Richard Green S/S11 FilmWe delve into the designer's oceanic-inspired spring summer season showing and exclusively premiere the film for the collectionShareLink copied ✔️December 22, 2010FashionIncomingTextKin WooWilliam Richard Green S/S11 Film Literally making a splash at the Menswear Day during London Fashion Week this season, was rising designer William Richard Green’s darkly nautical installation in the sheds out back at Somerset House. Following the industrial wasteland punks of his Fall collection, SS11 saw Green diving for inspiration in the murky depths of the ocean. “Last year I really got into watching 'The Deadliest Catch', this reality show about Alaskan fishermen,” shares Green of the offbeat muse for Spring, “It’s completely wild, all the fishermen look like they are Hell’s Angels. I really love the aesthetic that goes with the harsh weather conditions where you have to be really tough as does your clothing.” Green plays with the references lightly in a way that’s cool not gimmicky – combining d-rings with leather to create the impression of fish scales on leggings and shorts or dyeing fabrics with squid ink to produce a beautifully mottled and aged effect on jersey. Traditional heavy duty waxed cotton and neoprene are reconfigured onto modern silhouettes and he reprises his use of rubber, (his fetish-inspired rubber shirt was a hit last season) this time around utilizing it for a striking yellow vest and a translucent smoke-coloured jacket. In a short space of 3 seasons, Green is already building up a distinctive signature for a quirky, punky take on masculinity served up with a dose of black British wit. Summing up the emotions behind the collection, Green surmises, “I guess it’s a fusion of sorrow and humor!” Likewise the film for the collection, as directed by the award-winning filmmaker, Zaiba Jabbar (which follows their techno-inspired collaboration for Fall which won the A Shaded View On Fashion Film Award earlier this year) has a similarly mournful, deep sea aesthetic, with Jabbar cutting up and sampling images of sea anemones and octopuses and juxtaposing it with the collection. Says Jabbar, “The film exposed a quality of the clothing which was about a wound being scratched and probed, "the razor against a belly." It’s all about those underlying whirlwinds of energy that roar within.” Photography Leon MarkStyling Matthew JosephsFilm Zaiba Jabbar Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORELeather pups, Labubus and a Versace fallout: 2025’s wildest fashion momentsOakley Bad Education: Oakley goes back to school for AW25DHLInside singer Sigrid’s intimate walks through nature with her fans Lucila Safdie answers the dA-Zed quizEBiT is looking for models who speak openly about mental healthValentino is doubling down on its controversial RockstudHot pants, pubes and protest tees: The 2025 trend report is hereSalomon SportstyleLord Apex brings together community for 20 years of Salomon’s ACS PROThe designer making clothes with wool from gay sheepHeron Preston: ‘Almost losing your brand, you start to hate everything’Meet Bhavitha Mandava, the history-making, hobbymaxxing Chanel modelInside Michaela Stark’s provocative, Leigh Bowery-inspired 2026 calendar