I can only begin to imagine your delight when you spotted that.
Regardless, what you're saying is our shirt is identical to the Malaga shirt, other than the multiple differences. Gotcha.
We've done the Barcelona kit already. It is still ironed on with no break in the stripes upon the shirt.
I suspect if the Albion's colour scheme was stripes of two dark colours, then we would have similar individual letters. Having stripes of such contrasting colours means that individual...
I'm not sure phone snapped images indoors are doing the iron-on logo any favours, particularly when the transfer is reflecting the light.
By all accounts the new look store and Nike merchandise are pretty impressive. I'll reserve judgement until I've seen it for myself.
PB's responses in green below.
- Nike uses plastic iron on-style logos on all its shirts - including Barcelona, Juventus and Man U; the sublimation printing option (as per Errea's last kit) isn't available to any club from Nike. Maybe so but they don't look half as bad as this one. If I have...
That's still a printed logo on a striped shirt, with no break in the stripes.
The difference there will be Qatar Airways permitting their logo to be used without a border of space around it.
No need, I have an email from Paul from when the shirts were first unveiled. Copy and pasted below:
- Nike uses plastic iron on-style logos on all its shirts - including Barcelona, Juventus and Man U; the sublimation printing option (as per Errea's last kit) isn't available to any club from...
Simply, because the outfield shirt has stripes on it, and Nike do not have a shirt which has a break in the stripes to accommodate a sponsorship logo.
If our home shirt was all blue, say, or Nike had a shirt with a break in the stripes then they would have applied letters in the same way as has...