ellliottt

design & illustration

Menu

Skip to content
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
  • GRAPHIC
    • ALL GRAPHIC DESIGN
    • AUTOMOTIVUS
    • REBRAND: SPFL
      • Premiership
        • Aberdeen
        • Celtic
        • Dundee United
        • Heart of Midlothian
        • Hibernian
        • Kilmarnock
        • Livingston
        • Motherwell
        • Rangers
        • Ross County
        • St Johnstone
        • St Mirren
      • Championship
        • Arbroath
        • Ayr United
        • Cove Rangers
        • Dundee
        • Greenock Morton
        • Hamilton Academical
        • Inverness CT
        • Partick Thistle
        • Queen’s Park
        • Raith Rovers
      • League One
        • Airdrieonians
        • Alloa Athletic
        • Clyde
        • Dunfermline Athletic
        • FC Edinburgh
        • Falkirk
        • Kelty Hearts
        • Montrose
        • Peterhead
        • Queen of the South
      • League Two
        • Albion Rovers
        • Annan Athletic
        • Bonnyrigg Rose
        • Dumbarton
        • East Fife
        • Elgin City
        • Forfar Athletic
        • Stenhousemuir
        • Stirling Albion
        • Stranraer
    • REBRAND: SHFL
      • Brechin City
      • Brora Rangers
      • Buckie Thistle
      • Clachnacuddin
      • Deveronvale
      • Formartine United
      • Forres Mechanics
      • Fraserburgh
      • Huntly
      • Inverurie Loco Works
      • Keith
      • Lossiemouth
      • Nairn County
      • Rothes
      • Strathspey Thistle
      • Turriff United
      • Wick Academy
    • REBRAND: SLFL
      • Berwick Rangers
      • Bo’ness United
      • Broomhill
      • Caledonian Braves
      • Civil Service Strollers
      • Cowdenbeath
      • Cumbernauld Colts
      • Dalbeattie Star
      • East Kilbride
      • East Stirlingshire
      • Edinburgh University
      • Gala Fairydean Rovers
      • Gretna 2008
      • Spartans
      • Tranent Juniors
      • University of Stirling
  • 2D
  • 3D
    • ALL 3D
    • INSTALLATION
  • PHOTO
  • SHOP

Cumbernauld

ReBrand: Cumbernauld Colts FC

graphic

CCFC badge new-01Cumbernauld Colts Football Club was established as a youth football club (hence, the use of ‘Colts’) in 1969.

During these early years, the club developed several players who went on to success in senior football, including Scottish internationals Derek Whyte (who went on to play for Celtic, Middlesbrough, Aberdeen and Partick Thistle) and Jackie McNamara (who went on to play for Dunfermline Athletic, Celtic, Wolverhampton Wanderers, Aberdeen, Falkirk and Partick Thistle).

In the 1990s, several of the club’s teams disbanded and during the 1998/99 season, the final Colts club folded. The following season, the club was relaunched and continued to grow, gaining full membership into the Scottish Football Association and admittance into the Lowland Football League in 2015. Since that time, the Colts came in runners-up in the 2016/17 Scottish Football Association South Region Challenge Cup in and won the 2017/18 Lowland League Cup.

I find the club’s current badge to be a bit dated and it reminds me of an amateur American football club logo. For the redesign, I decided to opt for simplicity by illustrating a more anatomically correct silhouette of a horse within two ‘C’s.

CCFC badge-01

The home kit employs the club’s traditional yellow and blue with a 1970s feel, while the away kit is dark grey, accented with a large silhouette.

CCFC kit-01

CCFC badge new-01

Advertisement
3 June 201924 February 2020 E Tagged badge, Colts, crest, Cumbernauld, Cumbernauld Colts, Cumbernauld Colts FC, Cumbernauld Colts Football Club, Dunbartonshire, Europe, football, LFL, logo, Lowland Football League, Lowlands, North Lanarkshire, rebrand, redesign, Scotland, Scottish Lowland Football League, SLFL, sport, texture, UK, United Kingdom Leave a comment

ReBrand: Clyde FC

graphic

ClyFC badge new-01Clyde Football Club was established in 1877. The club’s first home ground was called Barrowfield Park, located near the Glasgow district of Bridgeton, on the northern bank of the River Clyde, from which the club took its name.

In 1891, Clyde joined the Scottish Football League and their first league match resulted in a dominant 10-3 victory over Vale of Leven. By 1898, the club had outgrown their home at Barrowfield and relocated to Shawfield in Rutherglen, where they would compete until 1986.

During the first half of the twentieth century, this modest club, nicknamed ‘the Bully Wee’, had become a formidable side within Scottish football. Clyde won the final of the Scottish Cup three occasions (1938/39, 1954/55 and 1957/58) in six appearances.

By the late 1960s, many urban areas in Glasgow were being cleared for new developments. Large swathes of the population in these areas were forced to relocate to more remote regions of the city. A significant number of Clyde’s supporters resided in Bridgeton, Dalmarnock, the Gorbals, Oatlands and Rutherglen, all of which experienced significant population reduction during this period. Clyde’s support dwindled and the club has bounced around the lower divisions ever since their last spell in the top tier, which ended in 1975.

In addition to bouncing around the lower tiers of Scottish football, Clyde has moved their home several times since leaving Shawfield in 1986. And although they are now based in Cumbernauld (where they have played since the middle of the 1994/95 season and some nine miles north of the River Clyde as the crow flies), they retain their original name.

At the end of the 2018/19 season, Clyde finished second in the League Two (the bottom tier of the Scottish Professional Football League) table, qualifying them for the League One play-offs alongside third-placed Edinburgh City and fourth-placed Annan Athletic. In the play-off semi-final, Stenhousemuir, who finished second-bottom in League One, were drawn against Annan, while Clyde faced Edinburgh City. After dispatching Edinburgh City with a 4-0 aggregate score over two legs, Clyde faced Annan in the two-leg play-off final. Annan came out ahead in the first leg with a 1-0 victory over Clyde, but the Bully Wee made up the difference with their 2-0 victory in the second leg, securing their promotion from the bottom tier.

To celebrate their centenary in 1977, a version of the current Clyde badge came into regular use, though some version of it may have appeared as early as 1934. This badge features a ship in full sail encircled by a floral wreath. My redesign is an update of this badge. To commemorate their three Scottish Cup victories, I have included three sails for each of the ship’s three masts.

ClyFC badge-01

The redesigned home kit is inspired in part by the 2012/13 home kit. For the away kit, I decided to go with an all-red number (used as the third kit colour scheme as recently as the 2019/20 season), a reference to the left-wing political movement known as ‘Red Clydeside’, a major figure of which, James Maxton, served as an MP for the Bridgeton district for more than two decades.

ClyFC kit-01

ClyFC badge new-01

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

23 May 201824 February 2020 E Tagged badge, brand, branding, Clyde FC, Clyde Football Club, Cumbernauld, East Kilbride, Europe, football, Glasgow, Hamilton, Ladbrokes League 1, Ladbrokes League One, logo, North Lanarkshire, rebrand, redesign, River Clyde, Scotland, Scottish Cup, Scottish League 1, Scottish League One, Scottish Professional Football League, South Lanarkshire, SPFL, SPFL League 1, SPFL League One, sport, UK, United Kingdom Leave a comment
Widgets
Create a website or blog at WordPress.com
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • ellliottt
    • Join 53 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • ellliottt
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...