I'd have thought Nike more likely to regard this as 'brand transfiguration'. The craftspersonship is exquisite - it looks as if it has been plucked from the Parthenon frieze. The endorsement of Eternity shows that this shirt has legs. Consumers like that.
The iconography of religion gives way to the insignia of a kickball shirtmaker. Fair exchange, perhaps. Do you get a choice of heads with this one?
ReplyDeleteOh death, where is thy final whistle? O, grave, thy last-minute title clincher?
No head, just a shirt. D'you think Nike would object to the copyright theft?
ReplyDeleteI'd have thought Nike more likely to regard this as 'brand transfiguration'. The craftspersonship is exquisite - it looks as if it has been plucked from the Parthenon frieze. The endorsement of Eternity shows that this shirt has legs. Consumers like that.
ReplyDeleteBranded all the way to the grave. And they say the revolution will not be televised.
ReplyDeleteWasn't Nike the winged goddess of Victory? Won't the Jeebus god be jealous?
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