Steel Dillo
Footballguy
Are there any main stream color combinations that haven't been used on an NFL uniform?
Tampa Bay used to have something similar.How about those colors that Louisville used in the final four? Sort of a bright orangish/red. Would that be burnt bittersweet?
Red and Green. I can see a Christmas weekend schedule involving this. Maybe orange and black for Halloween?At first thought...Maroon and White (not the same as red and white)Maroon and Light BlueOrange and GrayBrown and Yellow Black and WhiteBlack and GrayRed and GreenPurple and Blue
Bengals have that covered.Red and Green. I can see a Christmas weekend schedule involving this. Maybe orange and black for Halloween?At first thought...
Maroon and White (not the same as red and white)
Maroon and Light Blue
Orange and Gray
Brown and Yellow
Black and White
Black and Gray
Red and Green
Purple and Blue
Doesn't navy pretty much go with anything?The only regrettable "what-the-####-were-they-thinking?" color combination is orange/navy. There aughta be a law against that and the other hideous color combinations mentioned above. Even fushia pink/canary yellow is better.
Except for gold, purple and anything or maroon and anything. Vikings and Redskins are pretty much the only two teams to ever wear those colors (also Ravens with purple and black).Orange is pretty open -- Broncos wore it with blue, Bucs wore it with red. Gray is open as well, as only the Raiders have basically worn that (silver & black) and Bucs (red/gray).Brown? Outside of Cleveland, think it's wide open.Black and White are interesting. White is pretty much only paired with Blue, Green or Red, the primary colors, and usually "dark" versions of those colors (for obvious reasons). Black gets more vibrant colors - orange with Cincinnati, gold with the Steelers/Saints, purple with the Ravens, red with the Falcons, teal with the Jags, etc.Green generally stands on its own, going with black or white (think Jets/Eagles) or gold (GB) or silver (Eagles). The Seahawks do blue and green, but I don't think that looks too good. Green is probably untapped, though. If you look at college football, it's mostly the same thing, putting Green with gold or white or silver (Baylor, Marshall, MichSt, USF, etc.). The two notable exceptions are two of the more famous teams: Oregon with green and a neon yellow as opposed to a gold, and Miami with a green/orange/white look. Of course, the NFL Miami team is pretty close to that with a orange/white/dark turquoise look.Simple white+ might be the better look if going for being unique. In the early '60s, the Rams, Cowboys and Chargers also had blue and white before substituting a slightly different other color; only the Colts go blue and white now.The Jets are the only team with green and white, although the Eagles are often close (but usually silver and green).The Cardinals pretty much went from dark red and white to dark red and black. But they're the only team that's really gone red and white.So of the three primary colors, only a few teams pair them with white. On the other hand, black is paired with more colors like light blue (Carolina/Jags), gold (Saints/Steelers), and silver (Raiders) and the other colors listed above.At first thought...Maroon and White (not the same as red and white)Maroon and Light BlueOrange and GrayBrown and Yellow Black and WhiteBlack and GrayRed and GreenPurple and Blue
We need someone to use polka dots.Maybe if the NFL tries a league in Europe again they can have the Bohemian Polka Dots.
Agreed generally, but red/blue is the most common scheme out there. Pats, Giants, Bills, Texans all sporting that look (and arguably Titans, too).Not many contrasting color schemes have been used.For Example:Red/BlueRed/GreenPink/Light BluePink/YellowPurple/OrangeBrown has also seemingly been neglected as an almost neutral color hasnt been comined with much outside of white or navy.
The AKAs probably have that copyrightedPink & green.![]()
Even better.We need someone to use polka dots.Maybe if the NFL tries a league in Europe again they can have the Bohemian Polka Dots.I'd go with Bavarian Polka Dots. Bohemia can be the Rhapsodies.
Yeah that might be successful: http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2009/10/12/sports/12yankees.xlarge1.jpgGray woud probably be fine as a team's main color, though, with very thin trim in a dark color like Black or Navy Blue.
That's a good look... kind of like the Vancouver Canucks but w/ some yellow you zazz it up.Kelly Green (80s Jets) with Navy and Yellow trim
I would say that the Texans of this listed are the only ones to actually wear these combinations, they alternate through all the colors but never at the same time, except for the texans (their red unis are sick).Agreed generally, but red/blue is the most common scheme out there. Pats, Giants, Bills, Texans all sporting that look (and arguably Titans, too).Not many contrasting color schemes have been used.For Example:Red/BlueRed/GreenPink/Light BluePink/YellowPurple/OrangeBrown has also seemingly been neglected as an almost neutral color hasnt been comined with much outside of white or navy.