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Aberdeen

ReBrand: Banks O’ Dee FC

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BDFC badge new

Banks O’ Dee Football Club was established in 1902. The club was originally called the Rechabites, the origins of which are quite peculiar. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, the temperance movement was at its height in the United Kingdom. The Independent Order of Rechabites is a fraternal organisation that was established in England in 1835. It was established based on a commitment to total abstinence from alcoholic beverages. (The name was related to the biblical people called the Rechabites, who were committed to abstaining from wine and living a nomadic life.) It was in this vein of thinking that the club set up shop beside the River Dee in Aberdeen. As the story goes, a club committee member discovered that some of the players were enjoying a bevvy in a local hostelry and the Rechabites name was abandoned in 1920 in favour of the current Banks O’ Dee.

For most of its existence, the Dee has competed in regional junior leagues. They have amassed a large number of junior league honours, including winning the Aberdeen District Junior League seven times, the subsequent North East Premier Division eleven times, and the current SJFA North Superleague five times. These figures set Banks O’ Dee apart from other regional junior clubs, though success on a broader stage has evaded the club. Perhaps Banks O’ Dee’s greatest success came in their first-ever participation in the 2008/09 Scottish Cup tournament. Their first-round 10–0 victory against then-Highland League outfit Fort William is of particular note. The following season, the Dee applied to join the Highland League, but were unsuccessful. Despite this, the club became full members of the Scottish Football Association in 2014.

After the ascendence of Cove Rangers from the Highland League to the SPFL in 2019, Banks O’ Dee was invited to submit an application to take Cove’s place in the Highland League. The Dee declined the offer, remaining in the SJFA North Superleague. Their continued participation in the North Superleague wouldn’t last long as the Dee won the league by an overwhelming margin (with 24 wins, two draws and no losses and amassing a +117 goal difference) in the 2021/22 season. This set them up for a two-leg play-off against Fort William for a place in the Highland League. Due to player eligibility rules, Fort William were forced to withdraw, cementing Banks O’ Dee’s admittance into the Highland League, where they compete presently.

I find the current Banks O’ Dee badge endearing in its home-grown minimalism. My redesign is a ‘light’ reboot of the current badge, having clearned up the thistle design and incorporated a more bounded roundel.

BDFC badge

The kit redesigns are based on the current colours used by the club.

BDFC kit

BDFC badge new

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4 August 2022 E Tagged Aberdeen, badge, Banks O' Dee, Banks O' Dee FC, Banks O' Dee Football Club, crest, Dee, Europe, football, HFL, Highland Football League, Highlands, logo, rebrand, Rechabites, redesign, Scotland, Scottish Highland Football League, SHFL, sport, texture, UK, United Kingdom Leave a comment

ReBrand: Cove Rangers FC

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crfc badge new-01Cove Rangers Football Club was established in 1922. The club takes its name from Cove Bay, located in the southeastern corner of the city of Aberdeen, in which they play.

In 1947, the club became a founding member of the Aberdeen Amateur Football Association. That season, Cove Rangers won the first of their 11 amateur championships. In 1948, they began to play at Allen Park. Among them, their highlight came in the 1964/65 season, when the club went unbeaten in the league.

Cove Rangers competed as amateurs until 1985, when they became a junior side. The following season, they became a senior side and joined the Highland Football League. By the 1990s, Cove Rangers began to rack up local silverware and in 2001, they won the first of their six Highland League championships. In 2016, in order to comply with SPFL regulations, the club relocated from Allen Park to their new Balmoral Stadium ground.

The club continued their dominance of the Highland League, finishing at the top of the table over two consecutive seasons between 2017 and 2019. After being crowned league champions at the end of the 2017/18 season, Cove Rangers secured an SPFL promotion playoff by defeating the Lowland League champions Spartans. Ultimately, Cove Rangers lost 3-2 to Cowdenbeath over two legs to remain in the Highland League. The club remained competitive and secured another SPFL promotion playoff the following season with a 5-1 aggregate victory over Lowland League champions East Kilbride over two legs. This time, Cove Rangers faced Berwick Rangers. The Aberdeen side dominated Berwick, winning 0-7 over two legs and gaining promotion into the bottom tier of the SPFL for the 2019/20 season.

In redesigning the Cove Rangers badge, I wanted to call back to the early twentieth century. I was unconvinced by the olive branches encircling a griffin rampant and decided on a stylised monogram. After first illustrating the ‘C’, I realised that the ends of the legs resembled boots and decided to place a circle, representing a football, between them.

CRFC badge-01

For the home kit, I was inspired by the Cove home kit from the 1982/83 season. The layout of the away kit is also inspired by a Cove home kit from the 1980s – that used in the 1986/87 season.

CRFC kit-01

crfc badge new-01

14 January 201924 February 2020 E Tagged Aberdeen, badge, Cove, Cove Bay, Cove Rangers, Cove Rangers FC, Cove Rangers Football Club, crest, Europe, football, HFL, Highland Football League, Highlands, logo, monogram, rebrand, redesign, Scotland, Scottish Highland Football League, Scottish League 2, Scottish League Two, Scottish Professional Football League, SHFL, SPFL, SPFL League 2, SPFL League Two, sport, texture, Toonsers, typography, UK, United Kingdom, Wee Rangers Leave a comment

ReBrand: Dundee United FC

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DUFC badge new-01It is recorded that by the middle of the nineteenth century, nearly 20% of Dundee’s population were Irish-born immigrants. As Hibernian had been established in 1875 in order to provide opportunity for young Irish Catholic immigrants in Edinburgh, the Irish Catholic community in Dundee formed their own club in 1879 – Dundee Harp.

One match of note took place on 12 September 1885, when Dundee Harp racked up a remarkable 35-0 victory over Aberdeen Rovers (who competed from 1884 until 1889). What makes this feat even more peculiar is that it happened on the very same day that Arbroath achieved their record 36-0 victory over Bon Accord, the largest margin of victory in world football until 2002. Needless to say, 12 September 1885 was a bad day to be an Aberdonian club.

By 1894, Dundee Harp was facing serious financial difficulties, resulting in suspension by the SFA and eventual dissolution.

In 1909, Dundee Hibernian Football Club was formed with a mission similar to that of Edinburgh’s Hibernian, Dundee Harp and Celtic. After only one season, Dundee Hibernian were admitted into the Scottish Football League. In order to appeal to a base beyond the Irish Catholic community in Dundee, the club changed their name to Dundee United in 1923. The name ‘Dundee City FC’ had been floated, but this was protested by the club’s cross-town rivals, Dundee FC.

In the 1924/25 season, Dundee United secured promotion to the top tier for the first time. They remained there for two seasons, being relegated in 1927 and then returning in 1929. This 1928/29 second tier championship would be United’s last major honour for more than 50 years, when they won two consecutive Scottish League Cups (1979/80 and 1980/81). These League Cup victories signalled the beginning of the ‘New Firm’, when both United and Aberdeen would prove themselves as worthy competitors against Celtic and Rangers. United was also a relatively formidable football club on the European scene in the mid-1980s.

More recently, United won the 2009/10 Scottish Cup (their second victory in ten Scottish Cup final appearances). Having experienced a period of bad form in the 2015/16 season, United were relegated from the top tier. With the events of the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2019/20 season ended prematurely. At that point, United had all but won the second-tier championship with a commanding 14-point lead after 28 matches. Although the second-place Inverness Caledonian Thistle had a game in-hand, the final decision regarding the table placement came down to a ‘points per game’ ranking in which United’s 2.11 secured their first-place finish over ICT’s 1.67.

With my redesign, I have decided to stick with the somewhat jarring black and tangerine colour scheme because it’s been a ‘DUFC’ trademark since the late 1960s. But I found the black text on an orange field very unpleasing to the eye. I replaced the clunky, emboldened (and overused) Roman typeface and added the year of the club’s founding, 1909. The lion rampant has been replaced by two dragons for historical reasons, as the former Dundee Hibernian’s original crest was inspired by the Dundee coat of arms, featuring two dragons supporting an entwined ‘DH’. This was done away with when the club was renamed Dundee United. The lion rampant, which had featured on match programmes from 1956, was incorporated into a badge in 1967.

DUFC badge-01

Because of Dundee United’s place as part of the ‘New Firm’ that dominated Scottish football in the 1980s, the home strip redesign is inspired by the classic Adidas kits worn during that period. The away strip redesign is inspired by United home shirts from the late 1920s.

DUFC kit-01

DUFC badge new-01

As ever, I am indebted to Dave at Historical Football Kits for some of the historical information used above.

 

26 April 201816 June 2020 E Tagged Aberdeen, Aberdeen FC, Aberdeen Football Club, Aberdeen Rovers, Aberdeen Rovers FC, Aberdeen Rovers Football Club, Arabs, badge, brand, Championship Division, crest, design, dragon, DUFC, Dundee, Dundee Harp, Dundee Harp FC, Dundee Harp Football Club, Dundee Hibernian, Dundee Hibernian FC, Dundee Hibernian Football Club, Dundee United FC, Dundee United Football Club, emblem, Europe, football, Hibernian, Hibernian FC, Hibernian Football Club, Ladbrokes Championship, Ladbrokes Premiership, logo, New Firm, rebrand, redesign, Scotland, Scottish Premiership, Scottish Professional Football League, SPFL, SPFL Premiership, sport, Tangerines, Terrors, texture, The Arabs, The Tangerines, The Terrors, UK, United Kingdom 3 Comments

ReBrand: Aberdeen FC

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AFC badge new-01.jpgAberdeen Football Club was established in 1903. Since that time, the club has amassed a variety of honours. This includes seven Scottish Cups (fifth most, behind Celtic, Rangers, Queen’s Park and Hearts) and six Scottish League Cups (third most, behind Rangers and Celtic). The Dons have also been crowned Scottish Champions on four occasions (behind Celtic and Rangers and tied with Hearts and Hibernian, though the Dons’ 17 finishes in the second spot set them above both Hearts and Hibernian).

Within European competition, the Dons have won the UEFA Super Cup (1982/83 – the only Scottish club to have achieved this honour) and the now-defunct UEFA Cup Winners’ Cup (1982/83 – an honour shared only with Rangers, who won in 1971/72).

Additionally, the Dons are the last club outwith the Old Firm to have been crowned Scottish champions (1984/85). On the final day of the 2017/18 season, Aberdeen clinched the runners-up spot in the league table for the fourth consecutive season, demonstrating once again that they remain a formidable side within Scottish football.

Aberdeen’s current crest has been in use since 1986. For most seasons since 2005, two stars have been placed above the badge, which represent the Dons’ two European honours. I consider this to be a very strong badge, but there are a few weak aspects. For instance, the football looks a bit dated and the ‘AFC’ in the middle is a wee bit redundant (unless used without the accompanying circlet, which Aberdeen did from 1979 until 1986 and then again for the 2014/15 season).

For this redesign, I changed the surrounding typeface and employed a central ‘A’ of my own design, with the silhouette of a fleur-de-lis used as the counter. Because Aberdeen FC was formed by the union of the three Aberdeen-based clubs—the original Aberdeen (1881), Orion (1885) and Victoria United (1889)—I wanted to have some echo of the history and heritage of the city. I settled on the simplicity of the fleur-de-lis, which is featured as a royal tressure within the orle of the coat of arms of the City of Aberdeen. According to tradition, this honour was granted to the city by Robert the Bruce (1274-1329), King of Scots, indicating royal favour.

AFC badge-01

For Aberdeen’s home kit, I went with the club’s traditional red and white colours. So fond am I of the 2013/14 home and 2015/16 away Adidas kits, that I decided to opt for a large patch of white at the top of the shirt. There away kit is a more elaborate variation of this design, utilising a black, white and gold colour scheme, similar to that used in Aberdeen’s 2015/16 away kit.

AFC kit-01

AFC badge new-01.jpg

As ever, I am indebted to Dave at Historical Football Kits for some of the historical information used above.

23 April 201824 February 2020 E Tagged Aberdeen, Aberdeen FC, Aberdeen Football Club, AFC, brand, Dons, Europe, football, Ladbrokes Premiership, logo, Orion, Orion FC, Orion Football Club, rebrand, redesign, Scotland, Scottish Premiership, Scottish Professional Football League, SPFL, SPFL Premiership, sport, texture, The Dons, UK, United Kingdom, Victoria United, Victoria United FC, Victoria United Football Club 1 Comment
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