For the Dartmouth game on Jan. 24, the team will be wearing special commemorative jerseys honoring the 1970 team, and those game-worns will be for sale afterward. In the meantime, these are available non-game-worn:
https://hockey-innovations.com/cornell-store
Zoom in on the white stripes. The player names are in the sleeves, the game results on the bottom stripe in back, and what I assume are the championships won on the front but having hard time making out on my phone.
pretty cool.
Quote from: JasonN95Zoom in on the white stripes. The player names are in the sleeves, the game results on the bottom stripe in back, and what I assume are the championships won on the front but having hard time making out on my phone.
Well, fuck. That is sweet.
I dare someone to get the sweater with a 1 and "Dryden." ::banana::
Quote from: TrotskyQuote from: JasonN95Zoom in on the white stripes. The player names are in the sleeves, the game results on the bottom stripe in back, and what I assume are the championships won on the front but having hard time making out on my phone.
Well, fuck. That is sweet.
I dare someone to get the sweater with a 1 and "Dryden." ::banana::
I had that exact thought. :-}
I can't afford a $200 joke. But it would be a fine one.
Quote from: TrotskyI can't afford a $200 joke. But it would be a fine one.
Shit, for way under $200 I bet you could buy a red jersey with white stripes and some iron-on letters and make your own Dryden #1 jersey.
One beauty of doing so is that it'd be almost impossible to infringe on anyone's intellectual property rights: if Hockey Innovations were selling a jersey like this as a 50th anniversary commemorative jersey, that would be fraud; and if some other company were selling similar jerseys with Dryden and #1, that might be infringement because they're selling them; but if you made one for yourself, with no commercial purpose, it would be "fair use" at the very least, especially since Dryden was a politician.
Quote from: SwampyQuote from: TrotskyI can't afford a $200 joke. But it would be a fine one.
Shit, for way under $200 I bet you could buy a red jersey with white stripes and some iron-on letters and make your own Dryden #1 jersey.
One beauty of doing so is that it'd be almost impossible to infringe on anyone's intellectual property rights: if Hockey Innovations were selling a jersey like this as a 50th anniversary commemorative jersey, that would be fraud; and if some other company were selling similar jerseys with Dryden and #1, that might be infringement because they're selling them; but if you made one for yourself, with no commercial purpose, it would be "fair use" at the very least, especially since Dryden was a politician.
One time in Korea, I saw a shop near Osan Air Base that would make any jersey you wanted for you for a ridiculously low amount. They had a 1960's ere Canadiens sweater complete with laces at the neck available as a display model. I thought about having them make a Cornell Dryden sweater, but I never wound up going back to that town,
What could've been...