Anchor a rotation with the Blur Pullover Hoodie: Circle Logo — officially licensed Blur merchandise in blue cotton, printed with the band's circle-set wordmark.
Blur started in Colchester in 1988 around Damon Albarn, Graham Coxon, Alex James and Dave Rowntree, then carried Britpop through Modern Life Is Rubbish in 1993, Parklife in 1994 and The Great Escape in 1995 and the more recent The Ballad Of Darren from July 2023. The circle-set wordmark sits alongside the band's long habit of leaning on typographic album-sleeve identity, printed clean on a blue ground so it reads at distance.
Standard unisex pullover cut in blue cotton, sized Small through XX-Large so it layers over a tee. A tidy pick for a Britpop rotation, an indie club night or throwing on for a Ballad Of Darren catalogue play.
- Rockoff officially licensed product
- Style: Unisex Pullover Hoodie
- Design: Circle Logo
- Design Features: Long Sleeves
- Colour: Blue
- Material: cotton
- Great for: Britpop rotations, indie club nights, gifts for a Parklife-era fan
Anchor a rotation with the Blur Pullover Hoodie: Circle Logo — officially licensed Blur merchandise in blue cotton, printed with the band's circle-set wordmark.
Blur started in Colchester in 1988 around Damon Albarn, Graham Coxon, Alex James and Dave Rowntree, then carried Britpop through Modern Life Is Rubbish in 1993, Parklife in 1994 and The Great Escape in 1995 and the more recent The Ballad Of Darren from July 2023. The circle-set wordmark sits alongside the band's long habit of leaning on typographic album-sleeve identity, printed clean on a blue ground so it reads at distance.
Standard unisex pullover cut in blue cotton, sized Small through XX-Large so it layers over a tee. A tidy pick for a Britpop rotation, an indie club night or throwing on for a Ballad Of Darren catalogue play.
- Rockoff officially licensed product
- Style: Unisex Pullover Hoodie
- Design: Circle Logo
- Design Features: Long Sleeves
- Colour: Blue
- Material: cotton
- Great for: Britpop rotations, indie club nights, gifts for a Parklife-era fan