Liverpool

Supplier / Name = name of kit template.

Liverpool's kit history is built around the club's famous all‑red identity, a look introduced by Bill Shankly in 1964 and now one of the most recognisable in world football, even though earlier eras featured red shirts with white shorts and a variety of trim changes. The club's early kits were produced by unknown manufacturers until Umbro took over in the early 1970s, defining the visual style through the era of Shankly and Paisley with simple, classic designs. Adidas then reshaped Liverpool's look from the mid‑1980s to the mid‑1990s, delivering some of the club's most iconic shirts, before Reebok introduced a more modern aesthetic from 1996 to 2006. A return to Adidas followed, bringing sleeker templates and European‑influenced styling, before Warrior Sports and later New Balance added bolder, more contemporary interpretations in the 2010s. From 2020, Nike supplied minimalist, modern designs that further evolved the all‑red tradition before Liverpool returned again in 2025-26 with an updated version of one of their former designs. Across all these shifts, Liverpool's kits have remained rooted in a powerful visual identity: red from head to toe, accented by subtle changes in trim, crest style and manufacturer influence.

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