More Blacks More Dogs More Irish T-Shirt

£9.9
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More Blacks More Dogs More Irish T-Shirt

More Blacks More Dogs More Irish T-Shirt

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
£9.9 FREE Shipping

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Nearby Kilburn of course had a large Irish community at the time and I suspect the tales of hard-drinking, fighting men worried the landladies of such establishments. com, the Sell on Etsy app, and the Etsy app, as well as the electricity that powers Etsy’s global offices and employees working remotely from home in the US. Gaelic humor design perfect for lovers of Ireland - features a unique typography that looks like it’s in a drunken mode and Irish I had another beer sayings.

But since these new pictures have emerged, T-shirts have been sold in Ireland, the UK, South Africa, Tokyo, New Zealand and Australia. Irishman Richard O’Gorman, 36, designed the T-shirt for himself six years ago, and the once dormant idea came back to life when musician DJ Swiss from So Solid Crew shared a picture of himself and Richard wearing the T-shirt on Instagram.Given the big Irish populations in many big British cities, I don’t imagine any landlord displaying such a sign would escape the attention of my fellow Irish lads! Keep in mind that anyone can view public collections - they may also appear in recommendations and other places. Feel free to browse other products as you can add other items such as badges, key-rings, memorial cards and save on postage. John Lydon (aka Johnny Rotten) famously used the same provocative phrase for his 2004 autobiography, No Blacks, No Dogs, No Irish. Such a professional service and will definitely use in future for any other clothing I need personalising.

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Richy O’Gorman and Taurayne McKen, an Irish-Jamaican couple living in South London, have made a t-shirt that is the perfect antidote to the “No Blacks, No Dogs, No Irish,” signs seen in boarding houses and bars around London decades ago. The shirts bear the words, “More Blacks, More Dogs, More Irish,” a twist on the racist messages said to have been posted up by landlords in Britain in the 1960s. The pair, from Camberwell, took to the streets of Brixton with their three dogs wearing T-shirts emblazoned with ‘More blacks, more dogs, more Irish’. The assessment process is globally standardised, independently conducted and updated at least once a year based on new scientific information or regulatory requirements. She said: ‘My grandfather spoke to me about the history behind the ‘no blacks, no dogs, no Irish’ signs in the Brixton area, so we thought we should put the message out there after Brexit.The couple said they will donate a percentage of the sales to the Camden Irish community centre and the Black Cultural Archive in Brixton. Two months ago, O’Gorman was walking around Brixton wearing the t-shirt when he was spotted by DJ Swiss, former member of MOBO award winning garage group So Solid Crew, who asked to take a photo with him and posted it to his own Instagram account. I can remember the ‘no Irish’ signs in what were known as ‘boarding houses’, when I was growing up in north London in the fifties, especially in Kentish Town and Camden Town.



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
  • EAN: 764486781913
  • Sold by: Fruugo

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