Cadre T-shirt.

A graphic with its roots and reference in the tumultuous era of late 60’s Paris.

The representation of revolt against ruling powers when their methods become autocratic and unyielding as opposed to the current era we live in where too many times the frustrations of our situations turn the populace against each other.

Limited production release date 5-7-2016

 

 

 

Modern Studies 3: Narrative

 

Sometimes you get told a story that resonates with you so deeply that the meaning of the tale totally overwhelms the details.

As a result the unluckiest player I can think of is a player whose name I don’t now know and a player I’d seriously doubt anyone here will be able to identify or recall having seen. So, much so that I now wonder if he ever really existed at all.

His story was told to me by a great but sadly now little remembered football man called Tony Collins best known as Don Revie’s chief scout for Leeds and England, a man that was left in place to smooth the waters for Brian Clough at Elland Road and later became a key confidante for Sir Alex when he first went to Old Trafford.

Tony, who’d overseen a fantastic roster of star player transfers at Elland Road thanks largely to the great Scottish scout John Barr, regularly watched the forgotten player in question as an Arsenal youth teamer in the early 1970s until Don Revie became England boss in 1974 and he switched his attention to looking at international players and England’s opponents.

The scout describes seeing a modern-looking, I assume Gascoigne like midfielder with the world at his feet. A boy, possibly a Scot, perhaps with the surname Dick, though I can find no record of any player fitting the bill.

Collins went off to work for England, a role where he watched the likes of a young Maradona and many of the stars of the late 70s and 80s emerging abroad. For a whole year he saw nothing at all within the key youth tournaments and in international games to alter his impression that this Arsenal player really was the coming man, the future. The only proviso being that he would maintain the previous trajectory of his development. Then the world would be his oyster.

After a year had passed Tony Collins found himself in London and he jumped at the chance to see how his great white hope was shaping up as fate and the fixture list magically aligned.

Nearly 40 years on, he told the story back in the moment, recalling his anticipation for seeing a two footed player with effortless pinpoint passing short and long, a shot like a lazer, the ability to glide past opponents with a change of pace or a dropped shoulder and the mental strength to read and control games like an international number 10.

But, even before he’d reached his seat Collins knew something was wrong.

In the cruellest joke of biology imaginable the player’s genetic inheritance meant that the robust, athletic physique of all previous viewings was now clearly augmented by a giant backside out of all proportion to the player’s height and build. The effect was like transposing a racing thoroughbred into the body of a pantomime horse.

If the warm-up had sent alarm bells ringing the opening exchanges confirmed the worst. By his telling Tony Collins barely lasted 20 minutes at the game. Clearly, for this poor soul, the mind was willing but the flesh was unable to bend to its will. A formerly deadly, arced long pass evaded everyone and fizzled out tamely beyond the touchline, twice the player was pinched in possession by challenges he’d have barely registered a year before. Finally, he played a short pass into midfield in the centre circle and moved to receive his return from a teammate. But once where he’d have effortlessly glided into a position to regain possession, he now waddled two or three steps and crashed to the ground, banging the turf in despair in an act of symbolism every seasoned watcher in the near empty ground immediately understood. There was to be no happy ending, no thrilling fulfilment of potential for this player who had lost the ability to run and could no longer get about the park as he’d done without thinking just a few months before. Whether true or not, my sense is that the player left the action inconsolable minutes later. Never to be seen again.

The tragedy of the story, for anyone that watches football seriously, is not confined to those names and dates I can no longer recall but rather that it is a story played out every season at all levels of the game.

As such it is a story that is depressingly familiar and framed by small details. Would Eddie Gray really have been world class as predicted had he not picked up that injury that never healed? What really happened to Sonny Pike and all those lower league journeymen who appeared to have had it all to play for just a decade ago?

The likes of Platini, Ballack and even Abou Diaby are are really not so unlucky in the scheme of things. The players you have to feel for are the players who for whatever reason are never quite good enough – often through no fault of their own.

Concept and text: Greg Gordon

Greg is a Football scout and journalist based in Glasgow. A long term the supporter of 6876 he was the first person to feature the brand in a national newspaper

Photography: Brian Sweeney

Brecon Ripstop Ventile

 

Edition four of the Brecon jacket manufactured in 210 gram Olive L24 Ripstop Ventile

Custom made in the UK Ventile seam tape,Lampo zips and Italian cotton storm cuff rib

The jacket features large distinctive half bellows front lower pockets (left has a small inside pocket) and curved half bellows chest pocket.

Antique brass studs,shock cord adjusters and ends.

Fabric 100% Cotton manufactured in Portugal.

Cleaning instructions: Hand wash to ensure long standing weather protection and natural ageing. Dry cleaning is not advisable with relation to our custom made seam tape.

Photography: Arved Colvin-Smith

Model: Theo Gillard

 

Modern Studies 1: T.O.T.H.LAND

 

An animation of stills taken from the project Tothland by Donald Milne.
Butterburn Court and Bucklemaker Court at the Top Of The Hilltown Dundee 1971-2013.
Music: Zen and the art of jollification “schadenfreude” from Sleeping Gypsy.

The Fourness x 6876 #3

Season three of our collaboration with The Fourness features reinterpretations of two classic items from the Six Eight Seven Six archive.

The Haden jacket first produced in 2006

Details: Two horizontal chest pockets with angled flaps and zip openings which are counterbalanced with lower side seam pockets.

Zip out hood feature with cord and adjusters.

Manufactured in Japan 95% Cotton 5 % Polyurethane available in Navy & Beige.

The Work trouser first produced in 1998.

The style has a loose shape with elasticated double waist tab, front pocket tabs and back pocket tab featuring a military support panel.

The Fourness have reproduced the signature 6876 button of this era.

Manufactured in Japan 100% Cotton available in Khaki & Navy

 

 

 

Operai Studenti T-shirt

 

20th Anniversary T-shirt

Original Collection: 2002

Artwork donated by Stephen Yeo
Source: Bologna Italy 1969

T-shirt: Good Measure.
100% Cotton knitted and Made in England utilising 300 gram heavy weight jersey based on American collegiate wear and developed for this project by Good Measure for Six Eight Seven Six

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Barkas B1000

Trims: Italian sourced rib and Lampo zips.

Details: The garment incorporates stud fastening lower front pockets with two concealed front generic access chest pockets and distinctive partial zip storm guard.

Manufactured: London

Subject: Daniel Mason / Something Else

Photography: Leon Chew

Location: The Brunswick Centre

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Modern Studies

Modern Studies is a departure from solely product coverage on the website and its aim is to promote the many contributors that we have worked over the years with and continue work with to this day.

The fields of film making,Photography,sound and visual art will be represented in this new venture as and when our collaborators present new work in their particular fields.

So we hope you like this venture into a more fluid and magazine like aspect to the Six Eight Seven Six website.

6876 x Clarks Originals.

 

 

First part of our collaboration with Clarks Originals features a Six Eight Seven Six interpretation of the classic Desert boot which celebrates its 65 year and the Desert Trek which was a shoe worn at the inception of the 6876 journey.

Desert Boot

Premium veg tan runner board embossed with Clarks & 6876 logos.
Premium Steads Suede.
Dual branded Clarks/6876 fob.
Leather lace option.

Desert Trek

Premium veg tan runner board embossed with Clarks & 6876 logos.
Premium Steads British suede..
Dual branded Clarks/6876 fob.
The fob used on these silhouettes is the heritage, archival and original fob.
Leather lace option.

Leather versions of these products will be released early 2016.