Underground England

Underground England Authentic. British. Subculture Inspired. A place where people can reconnect with their favourite music artists or discover something 'Never Known'.

An independent British company known for its independent and fearless creativity, Underground is a collective space that houses footwear and clothing including limited editions and collaboration pieces.

SOLE OF THE NATIONUnderground is more than a shoe brand, it’s a cultural statement.Born in Manchester and raised on the ...
03/05/2026

SOLE OF THE NATION

Underground is more than a shoe brand, it’s a cultural statement.
Born in Manchester and raised on the music and subcultures that shaped Britain and beyond, our footwear is rooted in rebellion, individuality, and attitude.
These soles have stomped through subculture, style, and resistance.
Crafted in the U.K., our Original Creepers are more than product, they are part of a living tradition. Made in the country that gave them meaning, they carry forward generations of craftsmanship, skill, and subcultural history.
Supporting UK manufacturing means supporting the makers behind the culture, preserving specialist skills, sustaining local industry, and reinvesting in the communities that shaped the underground in the first place. There are no shortcuts her an no outsourcing of identity.
Craftsmanship RebelSoles SubculturalFootwear

THE ORIGINAL WULFRUN CREEPERLaunched in the 1980s and never switched off, the Wulfrun Creeper stayed standing when fashi...
02/05/2026

THE ORIGINAL WULFRUN CREEPER
Launched in the 1980s and never switched off, the Wulfrun Creeper stayed standing when fashion looked the other way. Through the 90s and 00s, Underground held the line, keeping the silhouette alive until it returned to the centre, redefined for a new generation as an all-gender archetype.
More than a shoe, it’s a signal. Born from British subculture and shaped by music, the Creeper speaks to those outside the frame, misfits, obsessives, and anyone who refuses the script.
The underground isn’t a place you can pin down. It flickers between visibility and disappearance, always shifting, never fixed. The Wulfrun exists in that space, timeless, disruptive, and impossible to ignore.





GLOBAL SUBCULTURE JOURNEY - 9CLUB: BUILDING THE UNDERGROUND IN HANGZHOU Before subculture music scenes travel, they need...
01/05/2026

GLOBAL SUBCULTURE JOURNEY - 9CLUB: BUILDING THE UNDERGROUND IN HANGZHOU

Before subculture music scenes travel, they need somewhere to stand. In Hangzhou, that place is 9Club (酒球会). As part of our Global subculture journey, we head to the Chinese city for a look at this bastion of subculture,
Operating since 2011, 9Club has established itself as one of China’s key independent live houses, hosting over 200 shows a year, working with both domestic and international artists, and consistently creating space for underground music to exist on its own terms.
This isn’t just programming, it’s continuity. With a flexible space that can shift from intimate shows to 800 capacity standing gigs, and a history of bringing in artists from across scenes and geographies, 9Club functions as infrastructure for a wider cultural network.
In a landscape where independent venues are under constant pressure, spaces like this don’t just reflect a scene, they actively build it. Ahead of the fourth edition of their THIS IS SKA festival that presents local and international Ska and Punk acts we sit down with the team behind the venue.
Read the article on the Underground subculture blog

SKA: THE RHYTHM THAT REWIRED BRITISH SUBCULTUREWith the arrival of The Music Is Black: A British Story, at the V & A , t...
30/04/2026

SKA: THE RHYTHM THAT REWIRED BRITISH SUBCULTURE
With the arrival of The Music Is Black: A British Story, at the V & A , there is renewed institutional attention on something that has always been there: the deep, structural influence of Black music on British subculture.
But exhibitions, by their nature, frame things. They define edges, assign timelines, and turn movement into narrative.
Ska resists that, because ska was never just a sound. It was and is a system, a way of organising space, rhythm, identity, and community.
When it moved from Jamaica to Britain, it didn’t arrive as a trend. It arrived, instead, as a living culture that was carried by people, embedded in place, and then absorbed into the fabric of British working-class life.
To understand British subculture properly, you have to understand the importance of Ska music within those cultures
Read the article on our subculture blog- link in bio
The article traces the influence on the Two Tone movement of the late 1970’s
Through 2 Tone Records and bands like The Specials and Madness, the sound is reinterpreted for a different Britain. This time it is faster again, its sharper and its more urgent.
This moment, often labelled as Two-tone, is shaped and driven by the economic decline, specifically in the English midlands, Coventry and Birmingham , by urban tension and the need for unity across racial lines
Visually, it’s stripped back: with Black and white graphics, sharp tailoring and that same dancefloor energy. Musically, it reconnects to ska’s core principles with Rhythm as a collective force and Music as a shared space
But this isn’t where ska begins again, it’s where it’s reframed.
&ska

THE ORIGINAL WULFRUN CREEPER ARCHETYPELaunched in the 1980s, the Wulfrun Creeper didn’t wait for approval. While trends ...
29/04/2026

THE ORIGINAL WULFRUN CREEPER ARCHETYPE
Launched in the 1980s, the Wulfrun Creeper didn’t wait for approval. While trends flipped and brands folded through the 90s and 00s, Underground held the line, backing the Creeper when it was written off, mocked, and left behind. This wasn’t revival culture; it was underground refusal.
Before “all-gender” was a slogan, the Wulfrun was the first Creeper made for anyone who chose it, no categories, no permission, no compromise. That defiance is what dragged the Creeper back into the spotlight in 2010, on our terms bringing the shoe to a new audience and era and presenting itself as more than footwear, becoming An archetype.
Wulfrun is Batch-made with no excess and a with an enduring independent spirit

Available in single and double sole.




SKA: THE RHYTHM THAT REWIRED BRITISH SUBCULTURE With the arrival of The Music Is Black: A British Story at the V&A there...
28/04/2026

SKA: THE RHYTHM THAT REWIRED BRITISH SUBCULTURE

With the arrival of The Music Is Black: A British Story at the V&A there is renewed institutional attention on something that has always been there: the deep, structural influence of Black music on British subculture.
But exhibitions, by their nature, frame things. They define edges, assign timelines, and turn movement into narrative.
Ska resists that, because ska was never just a sound. It was and is a system, a way of organising space, rhythm, identity, and community.
When it moved from Jamaica to Britain, it didn’t arrive as a trend. It arrived, instead, as a living culture that was carried by people, embedded in place, and then absorbed into the fabric of British working-class life. Starting out in House parties, or “blues dances” basement spaces became sites of release and resistance, and pirate radio began to circulate the sound beyond immediate communities.
Ska, alongside its evolution into rocksteady and reggae, became a core part of this environment. It didn’t enter mainstream Britain immediately, but it existed in parallel forming its own circuits, its own spaces, its own logic. In the seventies it influenced Punk, the infrastructure that ska helped establish was already in place: sound systems, independent record circulation, dancefloor culture, and a working-class audience attuned to rhythm over virtuosity, By the late 70s it was Two Tone that drew on the unmistakable rhythm and culture of Ska
Ska didn’t just influence British subculture, it helped build it, and like all foundational systems, it continues to operate, sometimes visible, often not, shaping how music is played, how spaces are organised, and how people come together.

Read the full article on the subculture blog …. Link in bio

THE ORIGINAL STEEL CAPBuilt in Britain’s factories, forged in the army, and adopted on the streets, the Original Steel C...
27/04/2026

THE ORIGINAL STEEL CAP
Built in Britain’s factories, forged in the army, and adopted on the streets, the Original Steel Cap was never just functional, it has, through consistency and irreverence, become a subcultural icon..
From 60s skinheads to 80s terrace culture, then claimed and recharged by punks, the Steel Cap has always carried weight, through class, identity, and defiance. Every generation rewrites it, riot grrrls, cyberpunks, Harajuku kids infusing the same silhouette with a different energy.
Underground doesn’t soften that legacy. We preserve it producing batch made, hardwearing. and uncompromising boots to be worn by those who don’t negotiate with the world around them.
The underground isn’t fixed, it flickers in and out of view and the Steel Cap stands right in that space.




Brash imagery of shaven skulls, cavalries of scooters or leather fetish-wear may appear tough and threatening, but the u...
17/04/2026

Brash imagery of shaven skulls, cavalries of scooters or leather fetish-wear may appear tough and threatening, but the underground is a fragile phenomenon⁠ How do you define something which is hidden? Ever elusive, attempts to grapple with the underground are magnificently futile. Somewhere in that intangible frequency between absence and presence, the underground resides
Authentic.
British.
Subculture inspired.
Since 1981.

UNDERGROUND - OUR MISSION IS TO PROPOGATE BRITAIN’S REBELLIOUS UNDERGROUND STYLE HERITAGE⁠ ⁠Underground is more than a s...
17/05/2025

UNDERGROUND - OUR MISSION IS TO PROPOGATE BRITAIN’S REBELLIOUS UNDERGROUND STYLE HERITAGE⁠ ⁠

Underground is more than a shoe brand — it’s a cultural statement. Born in Manchester and raised on the music and subcultures that shaped Britain and beyond, our footwear is rooted in rebellion, individuality, and attitude.
From the Original Wulfrun Creeper to our Steel Cap boots, we create for the outsiders, the misfits, and the music obsessives.

Brash imagery of shaven skulls, cavalries of scooters or leather fetish-wear may appear tough and threatening, but the underground is a fragile phenomenon⁠ How do you define something which is hidden? Ever elusive, attempts to grapple with the underground are magnificently futile. Somewhere in that intangible frequency between absence and presence, the underground resides

Authentic.
British.
Subculture inspired.
Since 1981.







OUR MISSION IS TO PROPOGATE BRITAIN’S REBELLIOUS UNDERGROUND STYLE HERITAGE⁠ ⁠ Brash imagery of shaven skulls, cavalries...
03/05/2025

OUR MISSION IS TO PROPOGATE BRITAIN’S REBELLIOUS UNDERGROUND STYLE HERITAGE⁠ ⁠ Brash imagery of shaven skulls, cavalries of scooters or leather fetish-wear may appear tough and threatening, but the underground is a fragile phenomenon⁠ How do you define something which is hidden? Ever elusive, attempts to grapple with the underground are magnificently futile. Somewhere in that intangible frequency between absence and presence, the underground resides

Authentic.
British.
Subculture inspired.
Since 1981.

ON THE UNDERGROUND SUBCULTURE BLOG GLOBAL SUBCULTURE JOURNEY : MOSHING IN CHINA WITH PHOTOGRAPHER, LEMPHEKIn our ongoing...
02/05/2025

ON THE UNDERGROUND SUBCULTURE BLOG

GLOBAL SUBCULTURE JOURNEY : MOSHING IN CHINA WITH PHOTOGRAPHER, LEMPHEK
In our ongoing series of posts, we take to the road to explore and report on the thriving subculture scenes around the world. Keeping it authentic we link up with champions, supporters, or activists in the scene to get a down on the ground underground report.
China’s underground is fast-moving, unpredictable, and deeply interconnected. And few document it like award winning photographer, Lemphek. From the sweat of mosh pits to the hyper-stylized excess of Decora fashion, their work moves through subcultures that exist on the fringes, capturing them from within. In this conversation, we talk about their artistic approach, the overlap between subcultures, and the challenges of documenting moments that are both fleeting and deeply significant.

THE ORIGINAL WULFRUN CREEPER ARCHETYPE⁠ ⁠“Having launched the Originals collection in 1980’s, Underground remained commi...
01/05/2025

THE ORIGINAL WULFRUN CREEPER ARCHETYPE
⁠ ⁠“Having launched the Originals collection in 1980’s, Underground remained committed to the collection, even when the tide of fashion washed in another direction. ⁠ Questioned by many as to the relevance of the Creeper – it was Underground that held the style aloft through the 90’s and 00’s, when it was shunned by many, and no doubt brought it back to the centre stage for new generations in 2010, powerfully asserting itself as an Allgender archetype.”⁠ ⁠

The Pink Suede and Leopard print, thanks to

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