Sign up to our newsletter and become a Club Huck member.

Stay informed with the cutting edge of sport, music and counterculture

The Women of the Sea Film Fund is granting £10k to tell femme-focused surfing stories

Finisterre x London Surf / Film Festival — Open exclusively to women to tell stories about other women, applications are open until March 8.

Surf clothing brand Finisterre and the London Surf / Film Festival have announced that they are teaming up for the fourth edition of the Women of the Sea Film Fund.

Applications are now open, running up until International Women’s Day on March 8, exclusively for women to pitch a short film between 10 to 15 minutes, which celebrates stories of women making waves in the surfing world.

The winner will be given a grant of £10,000 to help bring the project to life, and the film will be premiered at the London Surf / Film Festival 2026. It’s open to both emerging and established women filmmakers based in the UK, Ireland, USA and Canada.

Previous winners of the Women of the Sea Film Fund are Alice Ward, with her film SALT, an autobiographical film on the role of salt and the ocean as a person surfs and makes films while living with cystic fibrosis, Leah Rustomjee’s film on The Granny Grommets – a group of over-50s women who meet every Friday to surf – and Karen Song’s Surf, Eat, Repeat that highlighted the diversity of the New York City surf scene.

Commenting on the opening of the 2026 edition Bronwen Foster-Butler, CMO of Finisterre, said: The Finisterre x LS/FF Women of the Sea Film Fund has championed extraordinary filmmakers who celebrate the determination, joy and resilience of women in the water, and who challenge the traditional male-dominated surf culture.”

She continued: We’re proud to partner with LS/FF for a fourth year, opening doors for female-led storytelling. Finisterre was born from cold-water surfing, so we’re especially eager to see stories from cooler climes or rugged coastlines.”

Demi Taylor, award winning filmmaker and London Surf / Film Festival director said: We’re delighted to be working with our friends at Finisterre to bring this incredible opportunity for women in filmmaking to life and elevate these untold tales on a global platform. A recent study revealed that, at the current rate of progress, it will be decades before gender parity is reached across key creative positions in filmmaking, which is why a fund like this is so important in helping to change the narrative both in the ocean and in the creative industries.”

Submit your pitch to the Women of the Sea Film Fund at the London Surf / Film Festival website.

Isaac Muk is Huck’s digital editor. Follow him on Bluesky.

Buy your copy of Huck 82 here.

Enjoyed this article? Follow Huck on Instagram and sign up to our newsletter for more from the cutting edge of sport, music and counterculture.

Support stories like this by becoming a member of Club Huck.

You might like

Surf

What to catch at this year’s London Surf / Film Festival

Six of the best — Festival Director Demi Taylor picks her highlights from the 2018 lineup: from an epic exploration of cold-water surfing in Siberia, to Chas Smith’s celebration of surf icon Lisa Andersen.

Written by: HUCK HQ

Two people sitting on rocks by the sea, one shirtless man and one woman in swimwear giving thumbs up, with waves and shoreline behind them.
Sport

Inside Liberia’s nascent surf scene

We The Surfers — Once ravaged by civil war, the West African country’s waveriding crew and infrastructure is growing. Arthur Bourbon’s new film celebrates the Robertsport Surf Club and the locals who have created a joyous, idiosyncratic community.

Written by: Sam Haddad

Sport

Moshpits & kickflips at the Volcom Garden Experience 2026

Family affair — Last weekend, the skate, surf and snow culture brand hosted a free mini festival in its European backyard of Biarritz. We went along and chatted to legendary artist and surfer Ozzie Wright.

Written by: Isaac Muk

© Alex Williams
Sport

As the Cornwall & Devon coastline gentrifies, what’s left at UK surfing’s spiritual home?

Priced out – Once belonging to anyone willing to be cold and thrown around underwater, the sport is becoming increasingly inaccessible, as second homes and commodification reshape England’s southwestern shores.

Written by: Noah Petersons

© Agris Veckalnins
Sport

The rise of France’s rollerskiing scene, as its snowfall thins

Carving road — With changing climates forcing skiers to travel higher up mountains in search of quality powder, a small community is turning to tarmac and building a new vision of the sport that doesn’t rely on winter.

Written by: Flore Boitel

Huck 83: Life Is A Journey Issue

In Syria’s mountains, climbers are pitching new lines to a freer future

Vertical rebirth — Assad’s fall has opened up huge, previously untouched mountain areas for people to explore. Bushra Alzoubi meets a trio of sibling rock climbers who are building a scene from scratch.

Written by: Bushra Alzoubi

You've read articles this month Thanks for reading

Join Club Huck — it's free!

Valued Huck reader, thank you for engaging with our journalism and taking an interest in our dispatches from the sharp edge of culture, sport, music and rebellion.

We want to offer you the chance to join Club Huck [it's free!] where you will receive exclusive newsletters, including personal takes on the state of pop culture and media from columnist Emma Garland, culture recommendations, interviews and dispatches straight to your inbox.

You'll also get priority access to Huck events, merch discounts, and more fun surprises.

Already part of the club? Enter your email above and we'll get you logged in.