Warburton’s Spring/Summer 2025 campaign unfolds far from the city, in the quiet warmth of a rural estate in Murcia. Captured by photographer Toni Hernández, models Fernando Bravo and Yasmin Spilt wander through sunlit courtyards and weathered walls, styling a capsule that merges sun-faded textures, technical detailing, and the brand’s signature streetwear energy.
Distressed graphic tees in pink and red with subtle rips, beige versions reinterpreting England’s coat of arms, and the gothic Southside logo sit alongside squared-neck tank tops in black and white with diagonal seams. A long-sleeve indigo tie-dye, punctured and divided into dual logo panels, joins the mix for summer nights, while updated Murcia caps in washed beige and pink, plus a new Klein blue trucker, anchor the headwear offering.
The denim chapter injects a utilitarian streak: ripped shorts with reflective thigh bands, a tonal bucket hat, and a large, hard-wearing tote with distressed edges and seams, all signed off with the crisp white W. logo. These new pieces sit within Southside’s evolving visual language, now enriched with warmer tones, new fabric treatments, and experimental printing techniques such as rongeant, used to lift gothic lettering from a Scottish newspaper for a black embroidered tee and a faded shoulderless pink style.
Behind the clothes lies a return to roots. Conceived by brothers David and Daniel Megías Warburton, this Spring/Summer 2025 instalment of the Southside series draws on the spirit of their annual Murcia pop-up, a gathering point for the brand’s community, and channels it into a collection made entirely in Spain, in line with their sustainability ethos. After solidifying their place in the global streetwear conversation, collaborating with figures like Lunay, Daddy Yankee, Anuel, Odell Beckham, and Gervonta Davis, and taking the helm of UCAM’s creative direction, the label continues to expand its archive, reaffirming that its future is built on where it began.





