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New kits; 2023/24 Edition (bits and bobs from overseas)


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Atalanta taking the thinner stripes this season, staying with Joma but getting a new sponsor. Not bad but just looks like a fairly standard Joma kit
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I saw a thing the other day with lovely looking Atalanta adidas kits and nearly went to buy some before noticing they were only "concept designs" [emoji26]
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13 hours ago, pub car king said:

That goalie kit is a touch of class it's a classic template worn by Denmark and really suits the short sleeves.

hah - was just going to say that's a Schmeichel orignal !

love the signal flag touch, too - but I wdnt say that Bristol was particularly known for its maritime history - not as much as Porstmouth or Plymouth for instance, probably because of their royal navy provenance as opposed to Bristol's almost entirely mercantile approach

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Edited by Herman Hessian
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On 20/08/2020 at 18:43, DutchBorderer said:

Bristol City away, the purple and lime green is a popular combination for the club. Yes, the pattern is an almost complete 1:1 copy of that old adidas design. Sponsor kills it.

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Added bonus, goalie kits;

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'The away shirt includes bespoke semaphore flags across the inner neck. These flags spell ‘Bristol City Football Club’ in maritime flag alphabet, referencing the city’s rich nautical heritage.'

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Bristol City is a bit Wimbledon Ball Boy 

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30 minutes ago, Herman Hessian said:

hah - was just going to say that's a Schmeichel orignal !

love the signal flag touch, too - but I wdnt say that Bristol was particularly known for its maritime history -

How do you imagine they moved all those millions of slaves, plus vast quantities of tobacco and sugar?

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21 minutes ago, Stag Nation said:

How do you imagine they moved all those millions of slaves, plus vast quantities of tobacco and sugar?

using merchant ships - read what i wrote - plymouth and portsmouth have a more widely known maritime history for the layman due to being significant british naval bases - francis drake, the armada, the mary rose, the departure of the task force to the falklands etc etc are far more 'newsworthy' than a huge volume of merchant marine traffic

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On 22/08/2020 at 12:16, Herman Hessian said:

hah - was just going to say that's a Schmeichel orignal !

love the signal flag touch, too - but I wdnt say that Bristol was particularly known for its maritime history - not as much as Porstmouth or Plymouth for instance, probably because of their royal navy provenance as opposed to Bristol's almost entirely mercantile approach

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And also Motherwell back in the day 

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