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A Century of Claret and Blue: A Special Exhibition

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A Century of Claret and Blue: A Special Exhibition

Burnley Football Club is gearing up for special VIP launch of the new replica kit to celebrate 100 years of Claret and Blue.

A century ago, the club took the historic decision to change the club colours to those now known and recognised worldwide.

And as we prepare to unveil the new home kit to be worn in the 2010/11 campaign, the club is delighted and proud to announce a unique exhibition.

For the first time, all 34 claret and blue shirts worn by Burnley Football Club over the past 100 years will be housed in one exhibition, open to the general public.

Naturally, the star of the show will be the new Puma-branded home shirt, bearing the club's new sponsors, Fun88 com.

And for one month, commencing Saturday, April 3, this exhibition is the ONLY place supporters will be able to see the centenary shirt in all its claret and blue glory!

 But this one-off exhibition, located in the Long Gallery at Towneley Hall, will also house every other notable shirt from the club's illustrious past.A Century of Claret and Blue: A Special Exhibition

A reproduction of the first ever shirt worn by the club following the change from green to claret and blue in 1910 is at the heart of the collection, which also houses a reproduction of the 1914 FA Cup final shirt worn at Crystal Palace in the 1-0 victory over Liverpool - the only time the club has lifted the most famous trophy in English football.

The famous shirt worn when the Clarets last lifted the First Division title in 1960 will be proudly displayed, along with Brian Miller's priceless shirt from the 1962 FA Cup final v Spurs.

In addition to Miller's shirt, former players Jim Thomson, Andy Farrell and Ashley Hoskin have donated notable shirts from their eras.

Jim's shirt bears the old swirly 'BFC' crest from the 1969-75 era, while Andy has agreed to display the shirt worn in the 1988 Sherpa Van Trophy final at Wembley.A Century of Claret and Blue: A Special Exhibition

And the landmark moment Burnley survived becoming the first team ever to be relegated out of the Football League is commemorated by Hoskin's shirt, worn in the famous Orient game at Turf Moor in May 1987.

The exhibition, in the Long Gallery at Towneley Hall, Burnley, is FREE to the general public (see below) from 12pm on Saturday, April 3 to Friday, April 30.

A special souvenir programme costing £5, featuring glossy photographs of all the shirts and a short biography of each, will also be available to accompany the exhibition. This booklet will also be sold in the club shop from Saturday, April 3.

Exhibition Opening Times (including Easter)
12pm-5pm daily (Closed Fridays)


Click here

Comments 

 
+2 # 2010-03-26 12:47
They are going to regret moving to Puma who have had some shocking templates this year !
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+3 # Gazhorn 2010-03-26 12:58
It won't be Puma. It will be a licencee which will be even worse.

Like Reading, Cov City, all produced by a company called Genesis who are a registered licencee of Puma in the UK. They also used to make the Kit@ branded kits for Watford and Reading all those years ago. Only Tottenham have the exclusive Puma contract.
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-1 # 2010-03-26 16:55
and newcastle and bristol city oh and cardiff........
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0 # 2010-03-26 17:38
Quoting Gazhorn:
It won't be Puma. It will be a licencee which will be even worse.

Like Reading, Cov City, all produced by a company called Genesis who are a registered licencee of Puma in the UK. They also used to make the Kit@ branded kits for Watford and Reading all those years ago. Only Tottenham have the exclusive Puma contract.

I knew that cov city, raith etc have very basic puma kits but i never knew anything about genesis. Suppose that you can tell which clubs have the exclusive contracts with having a unique design and having the club's initials on the socks usually
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-1 # Gazhorn 2010-03-26 21:11
Well most of the big Premier League teams such as Liverpool and Chelsea have exclusive deals, despite them wearing the same templates as other adidas-supplied kits. You can tell this by the quality of the shirts, the players wear the Formotion kits whereas the other lesser teams have the park-style ClimaCool replica quality shirts.

Tottenham are the ONLY team in the UK to have the exclusive Puma kit deal, everyone elses "Puma" kits are made by Genesis, a licencee of Puma in the UK.

Arsenal and Manchester Utd are the only English clubs to have the Nike deal, everyone elses are made by another company licenced by Nike to use their designs and branding.

A few years ago, Diadora was a big name in the supplier business, making kits for Watford, Sheffield Wednesday, Bradford, Preston, etc. But these were made by Diadora UK, a trading name for a sportswear company (not sure of the name), but they went bust last year I think. You could tell there was a difference between the Diadora teams in the UK, to the European clubs supplied by Diadora.

The tell tale sign is the make quality of the shirt.
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-1 # Gazhorn 2010-03-26 21:11
.....and the marketing that goes with it.
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+1 # 2010-03-28 00:29
I'm preQuoting Gazhorn:
Arsenal and Manchester Utd are the only English clubs to have the Nike deal, everyone elses are made by another company licenced by Nike to use their designs and branding.
.


Villa as well, it's only Fulham that wear Nike Teamwear.
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0 # Gazhorn 2010-03-29 11:37
Yes, I forgot about the Villa, sorry!
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-1 # 2010-03-28 14:29
Quoting Gazhorn:
Well most of the big Premier League teams such as Liverpool and Chelsea have exclusive deals, despite them wearing the same templates as other adidas-supplied kits. You can tell this by the quality of the shirts, the players wear the Formotion kits whereas the other lesser teams have the park-style ClimaCool replica quality shirts.

Tottenham are the ONLY team in the UK to have the exclusive Puma kit deal, everyone elses "Puma" kits are made by Genesis, a licencee of Puma in the UK.

Arsenal and Manchester Utd are the only English clubs to have the Nike deal, everyone elses are made by another company licenced by Nike to use their designs and branding.

A few years ago, Diadora was a big name in the supplier business, making kits for Watford, Sheffield Wednesday, Bradford, Preston, etc. But these were made by Diadora UK, a trading name for a sportswear company (not sure of the name), but they went bust last year I think. You could tell there was a difference between the Diadora teams in the UK, to the European clubs supplied by Diadora.

The tell tale sign is the make quality of the shirt.


Aston Villa is also an offical nike deal
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-2 # Gazhorn 2010-03-26 21:14
Standard template to have the clubs initials on the socks. Everyone does it.
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-1 # 2010-03-26 20:14
What about Bristol City? Are those made by Genesis too?
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-1 # 2010-03-26 15:58
Sorry gaz but both newcastle and burnley have both signed contracts with Puma. They won't be farmed out to outside companies. They will both have 100% Puma kits
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-1 # Gazhorn 2010-03-26 20:59
I suppose we will see when the new kits are unveiled. I am convinced it will not be an exclusive making.
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-1 # 2010-03-27 21:15
The Burnley deal is definitely with Genesis, just read the blog post: http://www.footballshirtculture.com/sponsorship/burnley-announce-puma-kit-deal.html or go to the Genesis site: http://www.genesissports.co.uk/Clubs/Pro-Clubs

I was under the impression the Newcastle deal with Puma was similar to tottenham's, I could be wrong though.
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0 # Big Jim 2010-03-30 10:43
I don't know about Newcastle, but the Burnley deal is definately through Genesis. Puma, Nike and Adidas all use UK distributors to handle contracts that they consider to be too small to deal with directly.
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+3 # 2010-03-26 16:08
Its with Genesis Jedi
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-1 # 2010-03-26 17:13
you know that god awful Uruguay kit? with the silly collar and cheap, shiny material? Yeh, nice
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+2 # 2010-03-26 18:58
A kit made by a Puma licensee, and sponsored by an online gaming company. What a shame, after the Errea kits from this season.
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-1 # 2010-03-27 01:23
Claret and Light Blue is a classic combination. Aston Villa, West Ham United, Burnley.
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-1 # 2010-03-27 04:30
Yeah Newcastle will have a contract with Puma and not a 3rd party or Puma. I also think SPurs are changing to Adidas, atleast thats what the rumour was, but they might of extended their cotract with Puma, I don't think theirs been any official word on this by Puma or Spurs yet.
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-5 # 2010-03-27 18:39
itsa shirt get over it
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+5 # 2010-03-27 23:38
Quoting nubnub:
itsa shirt get over it :zzz

Yeah but this is a website about shirts
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0 # Big Jim 2010-03-30 13:44
Was that an attempt at humour, or are you really that stupid?
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-1 # 2010-03-30 22:59
yeh but u take it so seriously e.g the puma templates ......
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-1 # 2010-03-30 23:00
jedi master u big nurd
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0 # 2010-04-08 23:29
What I can't understand, is they're celebrating playing in claret and blue for 100 years, when in reality they've only been doing so for 90 years because they played in white for 10 years between 1935 and 45 but why would they let the facts stop them with the marketing campaign!!
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