Archive for the ‘Blog’ category
Debra Orton Illustration 1 – 0 Website Issues
Monday, February 11th, 2013
Die deutsche Fußballnationalmannschaft (German national football team) celebrate Debra Orton Illustration coming back on line
Hello all.
We’ve been having some website issues recently which put us out of action for a few days but now we’re back. Terribly sorry.
Good to see you all again.
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Gone fishing
Wednesday, June 20th, 2012We haven’t actually gone fishing but we will be away from the 25th June – 1st July and the office will be closed during that time. We will have limited email access but replies to queries will be slower than normal and all orders taken during that week won’t begin to be processed until we’re back.
If you have a tight deadline or request please email us first!
Debra and Adam
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Father’s Day 3: When sons go bad
Sunday, June 10th, 2012Dave Weston’s dad comes from the blue side of the Manchester divide. So you’d think it would be a formality he’d end up following in his father’s footsteps…
The merciless rise of the shiny, sanitised ‘English Premier League’ has resulted in whole generations of kids who don’t know what ‘real’ football used to be like. But I know.
I know because I listened to my Dad’s stories about life as a Blue, following Manchester City up and down the country in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s. I’ve seen his pictures too. Pictures of my Dad as a young man, with his long hair and his flared jeans. As a kid they made me think about the rock stars of the ‘70s and the hippies of the ‘60s. But there was no ‘peace and love’ in English football during that time. It was the age of the football hooligan.
With my dad’s passion for football, I’m surprised it took him as long as it did to try and take me to a game. And I can only imagine his discussions with my mum after he announced his plans to take me to Maine Road. Understandably, she didn’t think a stadium full of hoolies, in the middle of early-‘80s Moss Side, was the ideal place for her firstborn son.
My dad didn’t give up though. And between them, my parents settled on some arbitrary date when it would no longer be too dangerous for me to go along. 30th September, 1985. My seventh birthday.
I wish I could say that my excitement mounted in the days leading up to this momentous occasion. That I reached fever pitch – staring at the clock and wishing the time away so that I could take my place in the boisterous crowd, holding my dad’s hand as we surged towards the Kippax. But I can’t. My dad was definitely more excited about the whole thing than I ever was.
Like I said, in those days kids weren’t bombarded with glitzy images of multimillionaire footballers and their interchangeable model/popstar wives. Celebrity culture hadn’t kicked in and there weren’t games on TV every other night. I was much more interested in kicking a ball about with Mark, my nextdoor neighbour, than I was in standing on the terraces, struggling for a glimpse of players I wouldn’t even recognise if they walked past me on the street. City must’ve been playing away from home on my actual birthday because the game Dad decided to use as my introduction to top flight football was against Chelsea, a few days later.
On the Saturday before my birthday, my uncle came round to our house, offering to mind me while Mum and Dad went to the local supermarket for the weekly shop.
What my dad didn’t know was that his brother, my Uncle Barry, had planned a despicable act.
My dad and his brother are part of the last generation of Mancs to grow up watching United one week, City the next (and Stockport County on the rare occasion that there wasn’t a game in Manchester). My Dad was a Blue. My uncle, a Red. And while Mum and Dad shopped, I jumped on the train to town with my uncle.
He spent the entire journey telling me that I was going to Old Trafford to see the best team in the country. He filled my head with talk of Mark Hughes and Bryan Robson (“the best player in England”). But most of all, he kept telling me how funny it would be if I went home and told my dad I was a United fan.
I couldn’t tell you what colour Southampton’s shirts were that day. I don’t even remember seeing Mark Hughes’ winner. But I do remember going home and declaring that I was a Red.
Looking back, it was a horrible thing to do. I can only imagine my dad’s disappointment. Facing the fact that he’d been denied the opportunity to take his boy to the football on a Saturday afternoon – a rite of passage for every dad and lad, and something he’d probably been looking forward to for years.
I only half remember being dragged to Maine Road in the drizzle the following weekend and I’ve virtually no recollection of us standing there as a poor City side lost to Chelsea. What I do know is that the game certainly didn’t change any allegiances in our house.
After that, my dad kind of gave up. He didn’t try and convince me to change my mind. And he didn’t force me to go along to any more games.
What he did do was decide to avoid ever making the same mistake again. I don’t think my mum even put up a fight when Dad started taking my little brother to Maine Road, even though he was no more than a toddler.
I don’t remember seeing my dad get any more excited than the day my brother signed schoolboy forms with City. I doubt he missed a game during my brother’s six years on their books.
We’re a close family now. Even my dad and his brother eventually sorted things out and put the differences of my seventh birthday behind them. But whenever we’re all together at Christmas and the talk inevitably turns to football, my dad still calls my little brother by the title he was given in those early years: “Son Number One”. And it still rankles.
Growing up in the ‘90s and 2000s I watched my team set record after record, winning trophy after trophy. In 1999, days after United stunned everybody by winning the European Cup in the most dramatic way, my dad and brother were forced to take consolation in a play-off final win against Gillingham – and promotion out of the third tier of English football.
If I could go back to 1985 knowing what I know now, I wouldn’t change my decision. I’m pleased I became a Red. But that doesn’t mean I don’t occasionally still feel bad about stitching my dad up, leaving him to fight the Blue fight on his own until my brother came of age. The remnants of that guilt are probably why I’m not too cut up about City winning the league this year.
When I heard that my dad actually cried after City’s title-winning goal went in, it brought a smile to my face.
Enjoy it, Dad. Your team’s been rubbish for way too long.
Dave Weston is a big hitting media relations manager in academia. He also recently got engaged. Congratulations to you both from Debra and I
Tags: Bryan Robson, Chelsea, English Premier League, Kippax, Maine Road, Manchester City, Manchester United, Mark Hughes, Moss Side, old trafford
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Father’s Day 2: Me, My Dad and Norwich City
Wednesday, June 6th, 2012For this second Father’s Day article, Zoe Morgan recounts a few of the Norwich City supporting experiences she’s shared with her dad in 20 years and counting of following City around the country; experiences that help deepen the bond between father and daughter
I have been going to watch Norwich with my dad since the early 90s when my mother told him to take me somewhere for the afternoon so we were both out of her sight. This may not be strictly true, but it is how the story goes. The 2012/13 season will be our 20th year with season tickets. During that time we have moved to Yorkshire (summer 2000), I have been away at university (2002-2005) and I have moved to Manchester (2008-present). That we are still making the time to go to Carrow Road after all this time makes me incredibly proud.
I have no idea how many games we have seen together during this time – a count of the hundreds of programmes lying around both our houses might help. We always get a programme. I always buy it, usually with my dad’s money, and then he has to hold it during the game. There is no other way we can function. When I go to a game without him, I am at a loss as to what to do with the programme, as I am acutely aware that I should not be holding it.
I could talk for weeks about the last 20 years of watching football with my dad, but I don’t have weeks to spare, so I have picked out a few of the moments which either sum up one or the other (or both) of us, or that make me laugh when I think about them…
Fight
One of the only real fights I have ever seen at the football came when I was quite young and we still lived in Norwich. It was winter, and very cold (why this is relevant will become clear later in the story). We had been to an evening match and were walking up Carrow Hill on the way back to the car. We then saw someone haul a man out of his car, get him on the floor and start kicking him repeatedly. It was pretty scary, pitch black and rather testosterone fuelled. My dad is 6 foot 4 but he’s not exactly the kind of guy you’d be afraid of in a fight. So, I was a little apprehensive when he decided he was going to attempt to break up the kerfuffle. He stormed right over to the warring idiots, and promptly slipped over on a patch of ice and landed flat on his backside. I like to think that the ensuing laughter helped ease the tension slightly.
Stoke
It was late Summer 2005 and we had just returned from a holiday to Kenya. Norwich were playing at the Britannia Stadium one evening and we decided to make the journey down from Yorkshire. An hour and a half’s journey or so later and we were pulling into Stoke. It was only at this point we realised that neither of us had brought a wallet/purse, which, when you’re planning on paying at the gate, isn’t exactly the best idea. We didn’t know anyone else going to the game either, which is quite unusual, so without even the funds necessary to park up and devise a plan of attack, we turned around and drove home. Meanwhile, at the Britannia, Darren Huckerby was sent off and Norwich turned in a dismal performance.
Weasel
We once saw an eager weasel when sat in traffic on the A17. My parents call me weasel. We still talk about that weasel now.
Kick it out
The only time I have ever experienced racism in our quiet enclave of the South Stand, my dad turned round, said ‘I don’t think we want language like that around here’, and carried on watching the game. I was mortified at the time. Now all I feel is pride, and confidence that I would do exactly the same thing.
Criminal Behaviour
I have broken the law and ‘consumed alcohol in view of the pitch’ twice at Carrow Road. The first time, I had a bad chest infection, so my dad bought me a miniature of whisky for ‘medicinal purposes’. It worked a treat. There is absolutely no way I was 18 at the time. The other occasion was on the last day of the old South Stand, with its awful red seats and two ladies’ toilets for the entire stand. It was a sad day. We toasted the old sod with some sparkling wine, which my mum had decanted into a Sprite bottle earlier that morning.
So that’s a little insight into my life of watching Norwich with my dad. There is the football, of course, and the ups and down that life brings along which punctuate the last 20 years with actual events. But it’s the stupid, small things about which I have just written that leave an equally important mark on the memory. Here’s to another 20 good years. Hopefully we’ll remember our wallets next time.
Zoe Morgan has the proud honour of being one of Debra Orton Illustration’s first customers. When not dining out on this fact alone Zoe’s also a big hitting marketing manager within the sporting industry – you can follow her on Twitter here: @zvfm2. Because of the current uncertainty surrounding Grant Holt’s future at Norwich she may soon be left with no option but to enter an official period of mourning a la Queen Victoria. Finally for reasons that escape many she’s also Sue Pollard’s biggest fan and possibly the only one left. Hi-de-hi campers.
Tags: Britannia Stadium, carrow road, Fathers Day, manchester, Norwich City, Stoke
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Fathers Day 1. Fanatical French Footsteps: From Arsenal to France via Norwich
Friday, June 1st, 2012Come Euro 2012 most of us will be supporting England to a lesser or greater degree. For Ecky Limon and his son it’s a little more complicated than that…
England will shortly be playing France in their opening game of Euro 2012. I won’t be watching the game down the pub with all my fellow footballing enthusiasts, drinking lager and shouting at John Terry, but will be at home with my 8 year old son, Seb, in front of the telly, wearing my No 10 Tricolour Shirt and watching him battle with the same confusing emotions of national identity which I myself grew up with.
One of my earliest memories of football was watching France play and my Dad’s prophetic words. He often spoke to me in English and had an irritatingly slow, stylized, over-emphatic delivery. Clint Eastwood with a French accent. “Kid”, he drawled, “Watch out for that Platini, he’s gonna be a great player!” I felt at the time that this was the most precious piece of information that I had ever been given, a piece of arcane knowledge, right up there with the secret of eternal youth or why Dad spent so long on the toilet. I soon became obsessed with the French National side.
My Dad was a proud, arrogant Frenchman living in England with all the resentment, anxiety and nostalgic patriotism that this state of alienation can bring. My sister and I received daily lectures on why France was so much better than England, and as is often the case it was in the sporting arena where my dad and I found common ground and felt most comfortable with each other. However, I had been born in England, had grown up in England, went to an English school, all my mates were English, I was of an age where all a young boy wants to do is fit in, to not be different. It should have been the easiest thing to be able to shift my sporting allegiances, but there is something in the unspoken contract between father and son which is engrained far too deeply to be subject to whimsy.
My son is a massive Arsenal fan. He has Arsenal posters round his room, Arsenal bedding, Arsenal Pyjamas, socks, a watch, cups, rulers, pencil case ete. We regularly go to the Emirates, he joins in the songs and of course he loves Robin Van Persie. He asked me not so long ago “Dad, why do I support Arsenal, I live in Norwich?” It was probably around the time that Koscielny and Schezney had contrived to hand the Carling Cup to Birmingham. Of course I answered that he was entitled to support whoever he wanted, recognizing the early signs of a young boy wrestling with the demands of peer pressure. I had taken Seb to his first match when he was four and it was the dullest of experiences with a very poor Norwich side losing 1-0 to a very poor Coventry side. He will always remember his first game with the words “What a waste of money” ringing in his ears. I like to think that I gave him every opportunity to support Norwich.
Of course the real reason Seb supports Arsenal is because of Alan Ball, the little, ginger-haired, squeaky, industrious mid-fielder. It is possibly because he was the anti-thesis of a stereo-typical Frenchman, and that this was some sort of subliminal rebellion, but during the course of one game in the mid 1970’s I fell in love with him, with the red and white shirt, and with the gloriously totemic cannon on the badge, and I suppose at that point my son’s fate was also sealed.
Seb has an English mother; the “Frenchness” from my side of the family has become diluted.However when Seb and I watch the France v England game together I already have a feeling that he’ll be rooting for the French, stirred as I was by the opening bars of “La Marseillaise” and the throaty cries of “Allez les Bleus”, and maybe at the heart of a son’s natural emulation of his father’s passion for a team is a very simple instinct, one which we are stuck with for most of our lives; the visceral anguish of having to witness paternal disappointment.
When not screaming “La Marseillaise” or shrugging his shoulders at the Emirates with typical Gallic elan, Ecky Limon can be found at his award-winning gastronomic establishment, the Last Wine Bar & Restaurant in Norwich. More here: http://www.lastwinebar.co.uk/
Tags: Alan Ball, Arsene Wenger, Birmingham, Carling Cup, Clint Eastwood, Coventry, England, Euro 2012, Fat, Fathers Day, France, norwich, Platini, Robin Van Persie
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Queens Park Strangers
Tuesday, March 20th, 2012Queens Park Rangers are back in the top flight, but Duncan Barraclough isn’t sure who he’s watching any more
What is strange about being a QPR fan is that despite the agonisingly dreadful ride, you stay loyal to your club because you love it and you love supporting it. Once it’s in your blood, it leaves you permanently tinged with the blue and white. Despite often feeling that you need some kind of colonic flush to get over it.
Equally strange has been the return to Premier League football of my beloved club, after some 16 years of lower league exile. During that time we have had near administration, crippling debt, guns being waved about in the boardroom, and promising youth players tragically killed. The some multi-millionaires bought us, quickly turning themselves from heroes into villains with how they administered the club. And that’s just the half of it. Let’s not forget that my club was a founding member of the Premiership and, that season, London’s top-placed club, above Chelsea in particular. More recently a fly-on-the-wall documentary highlights just how haphazard the innards of my club had become. Strangely enough, a manager who polarises opinion, Neil Warnock, took the helm. Even stranger since then, a convincing Npower Championship title win, followed this season by a very QPR plummet down the league table. QPR face familiar territory, which to many other club’s fans might seem strange – another chance to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. This season, Premier League survival would have been enough for any Rangers fan to be celebrating. Long will we celebrate the 1-0 victory against Chelsea. A strangely hollow victory it will be if we go down.
I now go to Loftus Road, or places like Ewood Park, and watch a bunch of Queens Park Strangers playing in the QPR shirt. Players who on paper would represent a mid-table team – but on grass, fail to connect at all the crucial points. The team lacks incisive leadership – and a sense of pride in the badge it plays for. What it has in tweets, it lacks in tenacity. Red cards are almost as common as poor performances for QPR these days. I can count on a few fingers the number of Rangers players on the pitch who show pride in what they do.I want to appeal to my new Queens Park Strangers, in our dire time of need. It’s not too late for them to pull it out of the bag – and being QPR, it would be strangely appropriate. The players have not gelled in a disjointed team, yet they play in a shirt which bears my club’s crest on it, and it is that club which pays them the wages for them to afford their luxury pads, private number plates and pretty model-like arm companions.
I want to remind them that despite these trappings they are still human – that it should not feel strange or business-like to play for QPR – it should feel committed, passionate and just as loyal as the club’s supporters are.
Duncan Barraclough is a lifelong QPR fan. When he isn’t watching the Super Hoops with his QPR mascot son, you’ll find him in Cheshire, or just travelling the globe in the name of ‘work’.
Tags: Chelsea, FAC Les Havres, Les Ferdinand, Loftus Road, London, NPower Championship, Premier League, Queens Park Rangers
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A. Cooke’s Pie and Mash v The Man
Monday, March 5th, 2012You may have noticed that British Pie Week started this week. It aims to highlight that most staple part of many football supporters half-time entertainment, the Great British pie.
But whilst we rightly celebrate who ate all the UK’s pies, things are not quite as rosy in all parts of the pie world – especially if you’re a lover of pie and mash of which my east end lady, Debra, certainly is. Sadly her, and many others, are being deprived of their liquor quota because pie and mash shops are closing and as it currently stands, A. Cooke’s of Goldhawk Road, Shepherds Bush, W12, could be joining them. But it isn’t because of a lack of customers, far from it.
As per the norm these days, property developers, in this case Orion Land and Leisure, ably supported by Fulham and Hammersmith Borough Council, are threatening to flatten the part of Goldhawk Road their shop sits on for a block of ‘luxury’ flats. Cooke’s and the adjacent fabric shops et al will be gone and with it yet another part of London’s diminishing working class history.
As you might be aware they’re also featured in Debra’s latest painting. When we started travelling around the UK to paint the sights and places special to football supporters for our ‘More than a game’ series of prints, places like Cooke’s were exactly what it was all about: a shop serving the fans of QPR on a Saturday that is as much a part of many Super Hoops match day experience as the game itself (not to mention the wider Shepherds Bush populace). Because of the ‘QPR Championship Champions‘ painting we’ve got to know Cooke’s and I can vouch for what genuine people they are. And decent hard working folk certainly don’t deserve to have over 110 years of service to the local community wiped out for the sake of yet another bland regeneration programme.
It’s odd that in an era that purports to covet all things retro and vintage, we continue to kill off the living past that surrounds us in the supposed name of progress only to become wistful once it has gone. So if you remember West London before films like Notting Hill came along with it’s cosy soft focus close-ups; perhaps you’re a fan of The Clash or the Sex Pistols; maybe you loved Quadrophenia and you’re a bit of a mod; or a Queens Park Rangers fan, whatever, they’re all a part of Cooke’s centenary of history either directly or indirectly and they need your support.
So please sign their guestbook and help Cooke’s contribute to another 100 years fuelling Great British sporting and artistic culture and endeavour.
Adam
Tags: A. Cookes, British pie week, Fulham and Hammersmith Borough Council, Goldhawk Road, mod, Notting Hill, pie and mash, QPR, Quadrophenia, Sex Pistols, Shepherds Bush, The Clash, vintage, working class history
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And I’ve got…
Thursday, February 16th, 20121. The above illustration is by someone called Kay who I think might be Japanese. That’s all I know or I’d happily tell you more. Its featured on a football blog that’s new to me but contains some more of his or her work. See here
2. The old Templehof airport has become Berlin’s Hackney Marshes. Photographer Martin Gruttadauria documents some of the users in a series of excellent pictures (props and mad man love to the mighty In Bed With Maradona for bringing this one to my attention)
3. Shameless plug klaxon: This is a piece I wrote for the magnificent Two Unfortunates football blog all about the wonderful Mike Walker managed Norwich City side of 92/93
4. And speaking of football blogs. It is with great sadness that we must say goodbye to three who have sadly decided to go into voluntary liquidation without any pressure, to the best of my knowledge, from the HMRC. So please remove your hats, bow your heads, click here for musical accompaniment as you peruse the following links and take a moment to remember those that have served us so selflessly over the years:
- European Football Weekends (I wrote for this one not too long ago so hope it wasn’t my fault)
- The Equaliser
- Les Rosbifs
We must be brave and move on…
5. So we shall – last one for now. Here’s some of Huddersfield Town’s games presented in realist comic book form. Or some other vague cultural studies terminology that I’ve long since forgotten. Oh and good luck Lee Clark in wherever your next footerist job takes you.
Tags: Berlin, Hackney Marshes, Huddersfield Town, Kenny Dalglish, Lee Clark, Martin Gruttadauria, Mike Walker, Norwich City, Templehof, Two Unfortunates
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And I’ve got one, two, three, four, five…
Tuesday, January 31st, 2012Whilst we continue to get stuff done for your delight and delectation, here’s five football related gubbins from the world wide interwebs that grabbed our attention this week:
1. The illustration above is from splendid artist John Chandler. You can see more of his (mainly non footy) related work here. Or you can buy a collection of his ace cartoons for West Ham fanzine ‘Over Land & Sea’ here
2. Anyone that knows Debra and I will be aware of our love of all things Berlin, Bauhaus and Baufritz. Well this isn’t anything to do with the latter two but it is everything to do with the former. This is FC Union Berlin http://www.footballfairground.com/bundesbag/2012/01/former-gdr-clubs-prepare-for-ruckrunde.html
3. Ignore the poem about egg chasing and marvel at the Dirl Kuyt effort http://www.inthestands.co.uk/crap-poem/crap-poem.html
4. Reportage: Debra was born in a workhouse in Romford. She used to live in Dagenham and both her wonderful daughters still do. As a result she has a soft spot for the Daggers. Unfortunately they’ve not been doing too well recently but perhaps things are looking up… http://theballisround.co.uk/2012/01/30/millers-put-to-the-grind-stone/
5. Real Madrid as Finding Nemo film poster. Obviously http://coldbloodedenforcers.tumblr.com/post/8625777324
Tags: arsenal, Baufritz, Bauhaus, Berlin, Dagenham and Redbridge, FC Union, illustration, John Chandler, Over Land and Sea, Real Madrid, Romford, West Ham
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We haven’t gone away!
Thursday, January 26th, 2012I’m (Adam) currently writing a blog post for Two Unfortunates that’ll be live sometime in Feb.
There’s also a new range of screenprints from upcoming and established artists/illustrators being launched in March. We’ll kick off with four and take it from there (sneak preview of one here).
There’s also some other bits ‘n’ bobs going on which we’ll tell you more about nearer the time.
In the meantime here’s something from the ever brilliant Fisted Away about Paolo Di Canio
Tags: artists, Fisted Away, illustrators, Paolo Di Canio, screenprints, Two Unfortunates
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