Football has quietly shaped modern menswear for decades. What began as functional matchday clothing evolved into a distinct style language built on practicality, identity, and expression.
Replica shirts were once worn purely as symbols of allegiance. Over time, they moved beyond stadiums and parks, becoming everyday fashion garments that carried cultural meaning. Worn with denim, joggers, or outerwear, they signalled belonging without needing explanation. In more recent years, the shirt has become less about the team on the pitch and more about the person wearing it.
Alongside this, terrace culture introduced a different approach to dress. Clean silhouettes, technical fabrics, sportswear mixed with premium labels. The emphasis was never loud branding, but knowledge of the labels that matter – understanding cuts, materials, and context. Style operated as a code within football spaces.


This influence is now visible across contemporary streetwear. Layered sportswear, retro colour palettes, lightweight outerwear, and football references appear in global fashion cycles. Yet the origins remain grounded in matchday routines, travel, and working-class self-expression.
Photographically, these details matter. Clothing reveals era, mood, and social identity as clearly as faces or gestures. Documenting football culture through style is not about trend; it is about continuity.
Lower Block approaches football fashion as lived culture – observed, contextualised, and preserved through photography and print rather than styled interpretation.
Lower Block works with photographers, brands, galleries, and cultural institutions to document football culture with integrity. For consultancy, archive research, or collaborative editorial projects, read more abut our services and how to get in touch.
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