Pretty Green’s Spring ’26 Resonance & Bostall Range Hits Atom Retro.
This isn’t costume nostalgia. It’s heritage re-wired.
The Resonance Range — Style That Reacts
At the heart of the range is a hydrochromic, water-reactive finish. In dry conditions, garments look clean and understated. Add rain, sea spray, or festival sweat, and a hidden 1960s-inspired paisley blooms across the surface. As it dries, the pattern fades back into secrecy. Clothing that literally responds to its environment? That’s pure rock theatre.
The aesthetic fusion is classic Pretty Green:
1960s Mod sharpness meets 1990s Britpop attitude. Think Carnaby Street tailoring crossed with main-stage swagger.
Standout Pieces from Resonance

Resonance Water Reactive Hooded Jacket – Grey
A future classic. This lightweight shell keeps things minimal in dry weather, but when the rain hits, a psychedelic paisley reveal ripples across the fabric. It’s subtle rebellion — technical outerwear with a soul rooted in British guitar culture. Easy to layer over knits or tees, and festival-proof without screaming “outdoor gear.”
Resonance Water Reactive Paisley Bucket Hat – Black
The ultimate nod to terrace and Madchester style. Clean black most of the time, paisley explosion when wet. Equal parts functional and iconic, it’s a modern update on a silhouette forever linked to 90s indie and Britpop scenes.
Resonance Linear Paisley Cuban Collar Shirt – Black
Not water reactive, but pure Resonance spirit. This monochrome short sleeve shirt blends Mod minimalism with Britpop cool. The lightweight rayon drape gives it that authentic 60s summer feel, while the linear paisley keeps things graphic and sharp. Worn open over a tee or buttoned up with tailored trousers, it’s the kind of piece that feels vintage without trying.
Together, these designs echo Zeppelin’s own musical shifts — soft to heavy, folk to thunder — always evolving, never static.
The Bostall Range — Where Woodland Meets Wallpaper Art
The name references Bostall Woods in South East London, a historic area whose name comes from Old English meaning a place of refuge or a pathway up a steep hill. That sense of escape and elevation runs through the range.
Visually, Bostall pulls from the work of 19th-century designer William Morris, whose intricate floral patterns were themselves inspired by the woodlands of North London. Morris’ work later found its way into rock history — most famously in the interiors of Jimmy Page’s home, where ornate Arts & Crafts design sat alongside electric guitars and occult iconography. High art met hard rock long before fashion caught on.
Pretty Green translates that lineage into modern silhouettes.
Key Pieces from the Bostall Range
Bostall Printed Jacket – Navy
This cotton canvas hooded jacket carries a vintage-style floral print in soft greens and muted tones, echoing woodland palettes and Morris-inspired design. The deep navy base grounds the pattern, making it wearable rather than whimsical. With its adjustable hood and waist, flap pockets, and durable build, it bridges art-school romanticism and everyday street function.
It’s a jacket that tells a story — from forest floor to Victorian studio to 70s rock royalty to your daily rotation.

Adding to the story, the Bostall Floral Printed Shorts prove the range isn’t just about statement outerwear — it’s built for full summer looks. Cut from a breathable linen and rayon blend, they carry the same woodland-inspired floral language seen across the capsule, translating William Morris–tinged artistry into an easy, warm-weather silhouette. The soft green base and fluid drape give them a relaxed, vintage feel, while the elasticated drawstring waist keeps things rooted in casual, everyday wear. Whether styled with the matching Bostall shirt for a coordinated set or offset with a simple tee, they reinforce Bostall as a complete expression of art-meets-attitude dressing, not just a print but a mood running through the whole range.
Zeppelin Energy, Woven In
That influence lands directly in the Pretty Green ‘Zeppelin’ T-Shirt – Black. The bold chest graphic nods to the visual language created by design collective Hipgnosis, whose surreal artwork helped define classic rock imagery, including the era around Houses of the Holy. The result feels like a vintage tour tee discovered in a record shop crate — but cut with modern fit and fabric.

Pair it with the Bostall jacket and you’ve got art-school rock romantic. Throw it under the Resonance shell and you’re festival-ready with a hidden trick up your sleeve.
More Than Retro — It’s Cultural Continuity
What makes these ranges hit isn’t just the references. It’s how naturally they connect:
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Resonance = the live-wire energy of performance, change, and atmosphere
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Bostall = the artistic heritage and natural beauty that shaped Britain’s visual culture
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Zeppelin influence = the bridge between the two, where folk tradition, psychedelia, art, and amplification collided
That same blend defined the golden eras of Mod, glam, indie, and Britpop. Pretty Green simply keeps the thread unbroken.
Spring ’26 doesn’t shout about the past — it plays it back through modern amps.
And honestly? Gear that looks this good in sunshine and rain might be the most British design move of all.
Now landing at Atom Retro — the Pretty Green Spring 2026 collection.
History on your back. Weather in your favour. Volume up.

