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Saints row the third outfits
Saints row the third outfits









saints row the third outfits

  • Everyone - everyone - loves magnetic standings boards, am I right? Got ’em right here:.
  • And they even got Oakland’s white shoes right:
  • Oh baby, check out the radios shown on the next right-hand page.
  • No retail caps from New Era in 1976 - they were from American Needle:.
  • I had a poster like that, of Mets outfielder Tommie Agee, in my childhood bedroom, so I guess that was just the standard poster style at the time, but it seems oddly minimalist now: Seems kinda odd that they all have just a photo, without the player’s name or team logo.
  • For this next spread, check out the posters on the left-hand page.
  • Check that - nothing says 1970s like a team-logo bedspread:.
  • This next spread is right up my alley - helmet buggies and other miniature items on the left, striped team-logo tube sox on the right:.
  • I have no memory of either the shirts or the leather wristbands shown on this next spread - guess they weren’t a hit:.
  • You can almost feel those kids getting beaten up after school, am I right?
  • Oh man, look at the shorts on the next right-hand page.
  • saints row the third outfits

  • Why would you put other teams’ logo stickers on your favorite team’s helmet? Or on your clothing? Meanwhile, look at the sneakers on the right-hand page - I can imagine a young Brinke Guthrie being all over those:.
  • The kid wearing multiple wristbands! The raglan-sleeved T-shirt with the Royals’ logo on both sleeves! The numbered socks! Dig:
  • Oh man, so many interesting things on this next two-page spread.
  • Naturally, I love the green/yellow A’s rain jacket shown on this next spread:.
  • One of the few exceptions is shown on this next spread:
  • Sadly, almost all of the models in this catalog are White.
  • Gotta like the belt buckles shown on this next spread:.
  • Start ’em young with these bibs and toddler tees.
  • “Okay,” you’re saying, “but what about the merch?” Okay, okay - here’s some of what’s inside: Note, however, that there are five umpires, instead of the usual World Series contingent of six: The first full-page spread shows a Dodgers Stadium photo that I believe is from the 1974 World Series - Dodgers lined on up on the left, A’s on the right. The cover is shown above here’s the inside front cover and the first page: Like all of Kevin’s catalogs, this one was intended for retailers looking to stock their stores, not for consumers. We’ve already examined his NFL catalogs from 1970, 1971, and 1973, and today we’re going to shift sports and look at a 1976 MLB catalog. It’s time to take a look at another vintage sports merch catalog from Kevin “Gashouse” Cearfoss’s collection.











    Saints row the third outfits