| Full name | Brentford Football Club | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nickname(s) | The Bees | |||
| Founded | 1889 | |||
| Ground | Griffin Park Brentford, London (capacity: 12,300) |
|||
| Owner | Matthew Benham (2012–present) | |||
| Chairman | Greg Dyke | |||
| Manager | Uwe Rösler | |||
| League | League One | |||
| 2012–13 | League One, 3rd (play-off runners up) | |||
| Website | Club home page | |||
|
||||
Brentford Football Club are a professional football club based in Brentford, in the London Borough of Hounslow, that play in Football League One, the third tier in the English football league system.
They were founded on 10 October 1889 and play their home games at Griffin Park, their home stadium since 1904, after a nomadic existence playing at 5 previous grounds. Brentford's most successful spell came during the 1930s, when they achieved consecutive top six finishes in the First Division. Since the War, they have spent most of their time in the third and fourth tiers of English football. Brentford have been FA Cup quarter-finalists on four occasions, and have three times been Football League Trophy runners-up.
Founded on 10 October 1889, at the Oxford and Cambridge Hotel PH in Brentford – next to Kew Bridge – a meeting was held, between the members of the Brentford Rowing Club, to decide between association football or rugby union, to serve as a winter pursuit for the rowing club and its members. As a result of a vote, by 8 votes to 5, taken 6 days later, association football was successful as the sport to partake in.
The football club started out playing its home matches at the Clifden House Ground – this was recreational land between what is now Clifden Road and Lateward Road – in Brentford, from November 1889 to March 1892. The very first fixture, between Brentford FC and Kew FC, was on 23 November 1889. Due to ownership of the land changing hands, Brentford FC were on the lookout for a new ground, after only 30 months. In October 1892, Benn's Field – land behind The Plough PH Little Ealing Lane – in Little Ealing, was the clubs new home. The football club decided to move nearer to Brentford and in December 1894 they moved to Shotter's Field – what is now Gunnersbury School, The Ride – and stayed there until April 1898. Due to high rent increases, the club were once again forced to move on, so in September 1898 the club moved to the Cross Roads Ground, in Little Ealing – land on the north west side of the junction of Little Ealing Lane and Ealing Road – this was used until April 1900. As the club grew, therefore entertaining larger crowds, a move to a ground with the chance of improving better spectator facilities, with under cover enclosures and changing rooms, was looked for. Boston Park Cricket Ground, in York Road, Brentford – what is now land along the east side of Ealing Road and south of the Great West Road – was then used from September 1900 to April 1904. Finally, in January 1904, the club agreed a 21-year lease on an orchard, once owned by Chiswick brewers Fuller, Smith and Turner. The clearance of the orchard, over 200 trees, and the levelling of the land took several months. Griffin Park, as it became known – supposedly named after the local The Griffin PH once used as a changing rooms in the early years – was now ready for use as a football ground after banking was raised along three sides of the ground and an enclosure, moved from their previous ground, was erected. In August 1904 trial matches were played on the pitch. Then on 1 September 1904 the first competitive match was played, a reserve team game in the Western League v Plymouth Argyle. On 7 September 1904, Brentford and West Ham United played out a 0–0 draw, in the Southern League First Division, which was the first first team match.
In 1920, it was a founder member of the Third Division South. During the late 1920s and 1930s, the club began to make real progress. In the 1929–30 season, the side won all 21 of its home matches in the Third Division South, but still missed out on promotion. They are the last of six teams in English football to amass a perfect home record, and the only one to do so over a season of 42 matches or more. After several more near-misses, promotion to the Second Division was finally achieved in 1932–33. Two years later, Brentford reached the First Division and finished 5th in its debut season – which is still the club's highest ever league position – to complete a remarkable rise for the club. Brentford achieved more impressive placings in the league for the rest of the decade (6th in the following two seasons) before the Second World War interrupted.
During the war, Brentford competed in the London War Cup, losing in the 1941 final at Wembley Stadium to Reading and winning in the final against Portsmouth a year later. The club was relegated in the first season after the War, and a downward spiral set in, which culminated in relegation to the Third Division in 1953–54 and the Fourth Division in 1961–62. In the process Brentford became the first team to play the other ninety-one clubs in league football.
The survival of Brentford FC was threatened by a projected takeover by Queens Park Rangers in the late 1960s – a bid that was only narrowly averted with an emergency loan of £104,000 – while the club continued to yo-yo between the third and fourth divisions during the next three decades. The club won promotion in 1962–63, 1971–72 and 1977–78 but only on the final occasion was it able to consolidate its place in English football's third tier. Other bright spots in this period included reaching the final of the Freight Rover Trophy at Wembley in 1985, where the team lost to Wigan, and a run to the FA Cup quarter-finals in 1989 which included wins over three higher-division sides and was only ended by the reigning league champions Liverpool.
After a 45-year absence, Brentford were promoted back to the Second Division (renamed the First Division with the advent of the Premier League in 1992) in the 1991–92 season as Third Division champions, though they were relegated again the following year.
There followed several seasons of the club narrowly missing out on promotion. Former Chelsea FA Cup hero David Webb was appointed manager in 1993 and twice led the side into the play-offs. In 1996–97 he led them to the play-off final at Wembley, but the side were beaten by Crewe Alexandra. The club were then relegated to the Third Division (by then the bottom division of the Football League) the following year. Brentford won promotion as champions again in 1998–99 under manager and chairman Ron Noades.
The club suffered more promotion agony in 2002 under manager Steve Coppell as they lost out to Stoke City in the play-off final having been just minutes away from automatic promotion on the final day of the season, and again under manager Martin Allen in 2004–05, on that occasion losing 3–1 on aggregate to Sheffield Wednesday in the semi-finals after finishing 4th in League One.
Former BBC Director-General and Bees fan Greg Dyke was announced as chairman of Brentford on 20 January 2006 as part of the takeover by Bees United, the Brentford Supporters Trust. On 28 January 2006, Brentford beat Premier League strugglers Sunderland 2–1 in the 4th Round of the FA Cup, but lost 3–1 to another Premier League club Charlton Athletic in the 5th Round. Brentford finished 3rd in the league and lost to Swansea City in the play-off semi-final.
On 30 May 2006 Allen announced his resignation as manager of Brentford and the club named Leroy Rosenior as his successor on 14 June 2006. On 18 November 2006, following a run of 16 matches without a win – leaving the side in the relegation zone – Rosenior was sacked as manager, after the team lost 4–0 at home to Crewe. Following Rosenior's departure, youth team coach Scott Fitzgerald was appointed manager on a full-time basis on 21 December 2006 with Alan Reeves acting as his assistant. Fitzgerald was unable to turn around the club's fortunes, and Brentford were relegated to Football League Two – English Football's 4th tier – in April 2007. Fitzgerald left the day following confirmation of Brentford's relegation, with youth team manager Barry Quin due to act as caretaker in the managerial role until the end of the season.
Ex-England captain Terry Butcher was appointed as manager on 24 April 2007. Butcher's assistant was former Brentford winger Andy Scott, who was appointed on 9 May 2007. Butcher's reign at Griffin Park was, however, not a successful one, and his contract was terminated by mutual consent on 11 December 2007, after winning just 5 matches in 23. Butcher's assistant Andy Scott was appointed as manager on 4 January 2008 following a successful caretaker spell. (Scott's assistant is the experienced coach Terry Bullivant).
On 25 April 2009 Brentford sealed the League Two championship (English football's fourth tier) with a 3–1 win at Darlington. The Bees were awarded the Trophy in front of 10,223 fans at Griffin Park on 2 May. They were the second team (after Doncaster Rovers) to win the fourth tier three times, and the first to win the tier under its three names (Fourth Division, Division Three and League Two).
Scott's excellent first calendar year in charge was recognised with an award, the BBC London 'Manager of the Year 2008'. Scott was also awarded the League Two Manager of the Month award for April/May 2009, which recognised the above title was won in difficult circumstances; with 4 strikers hospitalised in 8 games.
During the 2008–09 campaign, three players also picked up awards:
2009–10: A total of 13 new players were bought in, mostly on free transfers.
On 5 August 2009, the amalgamation of fans' groups which help run the club – Bees United – announced they had ".. negotiated terms with Matthew Benham that will enable BU to continue in its role of ensuring the club is governed well, of protecting the long term interests of Brentford Football Club, and of giving you, our members, the right of veto over any unreasonable sale of the ground in which Brentford plays, so long as Brentford FC remains solvent".
The 2009–10 season saw the club stabalise in League One – with Brentford finishing 9th. A shaky start led to changes in personnel, notably loanees from Arsenal (Goalkeeper Wojciech Szczęsny) and Tottenham Hotspur (winger John Bostock). While the other promoted teams struggled, Brentford thrived, thanks to good home form, (Brentford only lost four home league games in two years) and some impressive displays against the richer clubs in the division (e.g. Leeds United, Norwich City, Southampton & Huddersfield Town). A new CEO was appointed, Andrew Mills.
The 2010–11 season saw a League Cup run, with Premier League opposition – Everton – beaten at Griffin Park, and Birmingham City taken to a penalty shoot-out. The Bees' league form took a dive in January 2011 however; and manager Scott and assistant Bullivant parted company from the club on 3 February; with senior pro Nicky Forster taking over as manager (with Mark Warburton, a former Watford Academy Coach as his assistant). Brentford reached the final of the Football League Trophy in which they lost 1–0 to Carlisle United.
At the end of the 2010–11 season, Nicky Forster was informed that he would not be getting the manager's job on a full-time basis, and on 10 June 2011 Uwe Rosler was confirmed as the new manager, on a two-year contract. The Management structure runs along the 'European model': i.e. a 'Sporting Director' (Mark Warburton) works with the Manager on sourcing players.
At the end of the 2011/12 season, in which the Club finished 9th in League One missing out on the play-offs by 6 points, the club's supporters voted to sell the entire club's shareholding to supporter-investor Matthew Benham. Supporters trust Bees United, the club's previous majority shareholders, elected at a special general meeting to bring its five-year deal with Benham to a conclusion two years early. Benham had initially come on board back in 2009, striking a deal which would see him take over the club in July 2014 if the trust were not able to buy him out by then.
Brentford FC have played at Griffin Park since September 1904. Griffin Park is unique in British football, in that there is a pub on each corner, The Royal Oak, The New Inn, The Griffin – which was used in the film Green Street – and The Princess Royal (which was once run by Brentford FC).
In 2007, the east stand, The Ealing Road end of the ground, had a roof installed after a grant given by the Football Trust, therefore making all 4 stands of Griffin Park covered. The Ealing Road stand still remains a terrace and is now the home supporters stand. It was re-opened for the first game of the season of the 2007/08 season, on Saturday 11 August 2007, against Mansfield Town (4,909 watched the game).
The Braemar Road stand, south stand, was renamed the 'Bees United' stand for the 2010/11 season. The New Road stand, north stand opposite, was renamed The Bill Axbey stand. The Brook Road, west stand, is used specifically as the Away supporters stand. Sometimes called the 'Wendy House'.
The dug-outs were moved from the Braemar Road side (south side) of the ground to the Bill Axbey side (north side) for the 2010/11 season.
Brentford, with the aim of securing a more financially sustainable future, have been considering relocation since 2002. Plans were announced in October 2002 for a new 20,000 capacity all seater stadium at a state-of-the-art arena complex in Lionel Road South, Brentford. It was announced on 7 December 2007 that the club had secured an option to purchase the site – a major breakthrough in the club's plans to relocate.
The new stadium moved another step closer on 22 February 2008 when it was announced that Brentford's development partner, Barratt Homes, had acquired a 7.6-acre (31,000 m) regeneration site in Lionel Road South, Brentford. Following this news, it was anticipated that the stadium would be completed in time for the 2012/13 season, and be used as a training venue for teams participating in the 2012 Olympic Games in London. However, due to the on-going economic downturn and fall in property prices, the club and Barratt Homes admitted, in early 2009, that this date would no longer be feasible.
The club's plan to move to a new community stadium took a massive step forward, on Thursday 28 June 2012, when the club, via Matthew Benham, purchased the 7.6 acre site in Lionel Road South, Brentford, from Barratt Homes who had originally acquired the site in January 2008. The club is planning to build a 20,000-spectator capacity stadium on the land. Along with outline planning permission for a Hotel and Apartment buildings, on unused land surrounding the site, to help fund the project, as well as applying for outline planning permission for Griffin Park which will also be sold to developers as to fund the Lionel Road South project.
Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
|
|
Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
|
|
| Name | Role |
|---|---|
| Manager | |
| Assistant Manager | |
| Sporting Director | |
| First Team Coach | |
| Goalkeeping Coach | |
| Fitness Coach | |
| Physiotherapist | |
| Head of Medical | |
| Kit Man | |
| Kit Man |
As of 22 April 2013. Only competitive matches are counted.
| Name | Nat | From | To | Record | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P | W | D | L | Win % | ||||
| William Lewis | August 1900 | May 1903 | ||||||
| Dick Molyneux | August 1903 | May 1906 | ||||||
| W G Brown | August 1906 | May 1908 | ||||||
| Jack McMahon | August 1908 | May 1912 | ||||||
| Ephraim Rhodes | August 1912 | May 1915 | ||||||
| Andy Gallagher | August 1915 | August 1921 | ||||||
| Archie Mitchell | August 1921 | December 1922 | 60 | 22 | 13 | 25 | 37 | |
| Fred Halliday | December 1924 | May 1926 | 68 | 22 | 12 | 34 | 32 | |
| Harry Curtis | May 1926 | February 1949 | 705 | 305 | 157 | 243 | 43 | |
| Jackie Gibbons | February 1949 | August 1952 | 150 | 53 | 40 | 57 | 35 | |
| Jimmy Blain | August 1952 | January 1953 | 23 | 7 | 5 | 11 | 30 | |
| Tommy Lawton | January 1953 | September 1953 | 33 | 8 | 10 | 15 | 24 | |
| Bill Dodgin, Sr. | October 1953 | May 1957 | 182 | 65 | 57 | 60 | 36 | |
| Malky MacDonald | May 1957 | January 1965 | 379 | 160 | 94 | 125 | 42 | |
| Tommy Cavanagh | January 1965 | March 1966 | 46 | 16 | 10 | 20 | 35 | |
| Billy Gray | 1 August 1966 | 30 August 1967 | 48 | 19 | 13 | 16 | 40 | |
| Jimmy Sirrel | 1 September 1967 | 30 November 1969 | 111 | 45 | 26 | 40 | 41 | |
| Frank Blunstone | 1 December 1969 | 11 July 1973 | 164 | 67 | 35 | 62 | 41 | |
| Mike Everitt | 1 September 1973 | 15 January 1975 | 70 | 21 | 22 | 27 | 30 | |
| John Docherty | 20 January 1975 | 7 September 1976 | 69 | 23 | 20 | 26 | 33 | |
| Bill Dodgin, Jr. | 16 September 1976 | 1 March 1980 | 166 | 71 | 35 | 60 | 43 | |
| Fred Callaghan | 1 March 1980 | 2 February 1984 | 176 | 59 | 52 | 65 | 32 | |
| Frank Blunstone | 2 February 1984 | 9 February 1984 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | |
| Frank McLintock | 9 February 1984 | 1 January 1987 | 151 | 51 | 43 | 57 | 34 | |
| Steve Perryman | 1 January 1987 | 15 August 1990 | 182 | 71 | 48 | 63 | 39 | |
| Phil Holder | 24 August 1990 | 11 May 1993 | 158 | 66 | 33 | 59 | 41 | |
| David Webb | 17 May 1993 | 4 August 1997 | 216 | 85 | 65 | 66 | 39 | |
| Eddie May | 5 August 1997 | 5 November 1997 | 20 | 5 | 5 | 10 | 25 | |
| Micky Adams | 5 November 1997 | 1 July 1998 | 33 | 7 | 15 | 11 | 21 | |
| Ron Noades | 1 July 1998 | 20 November 2000 | 130 | 51 | 33 | 46 | 39 | |
| Ray Lewington | 20 November 2000 | 7 May 2001 | 37 | 14 | 11 | 12 | 38 | |
| Steve Coppell | 8 May 2001 | 5 June 2002 | 54 | 27 | 12 | 15 | 50 | |
| Wally Downes | 28 June 2002 | 14 March 2004 | 97 | 29 | 22 | 46 | 30 | |
| Garry Thompson | 14 March 2004 | 18 March 2004 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | |
| Martin Allen | 18 March 2004 | 31 May 2006 | 124 | 54 | 36 | 34 | 44 | |
| Leroy Rosenior | 14 June 2006 | 18 November 2006 | 23 | 3 | 10 | 10 | 13 | |
| Scott Fitzgerald | 18 November 2006 | 10 April 2007 | 24 | 4 | 5 | 15 | 17 | |
| Barry Quin | 10 April 2007 | 7 May 2007 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 3 | 25 | |
| Terry Butcher | 7 May 2007 | 11 December 2007 | 23 | 5 | 5 | 13 | 22 | |
| Andy Scott | 11 December 2007 | 3 February 2011 | 168 | 64 | 55 | 49 | 38 | |
| Nicky Forster | 3 February 2011 | 7 May 2011 | 21 | 9 | 5 | 7 | 43 | |
| Uwe Rösler | 10 June 2011 | Present | 108 | 46 | 34 | 28 | 43 | |
as at 27 April 2013
| Name | Appearances in League and Cup | Career at Brentford |
|---|---|---|
| 559 (514 lge 35 FAC 10 LC) | 1949–1964 | |
| 524 (419 lge 21 FAC 40 LC 44 Other) | 1986–1999 | |
| 516 (471 lge 28 FAC 17 LC) | 1960–1975 | |
| 487 (411 lge 31 FAC 17 LC 28 other) | 2000 – present | |
| 435 (388 lge 27 FAC 20 LC) | 1959–1970 | |
| 409 (374 lge 21 FAC 14 LC) | 1970–1980 | |
| 379 (305 lge 18 FAC 26 LC 30 other) | 1984–1994 | |
| 374 (348 lge 20 FAC 6 LC) | 1955–1964 | |
| 371 (325 lge 17 FAC 19 LC 10 other) | 1975–1986 | |
| 350 (316 lge 19 FAC 15 LC) | 1967–1976 |
as at 1 October 2009
| Name | Goal Scorers in League and Cup | Career at Brentford |
|---|---|---|
| 163 (153 lge 9 FAC 1 LC) | 1951–1961 | |
| 136 (124 lge 12 FAC) | 1953–1962 | |
| 122 (119 lge 3 FAC) | 1932–1939 | |
| 105 (79 lge 7 FAC 9 LC 10 other) | 1987–1993 | |
| 90 (85 lge 5 FAC) | 1935–1938 | |
| 89 (79 lge 10 FAC) | 1929–1932 | |
| 88 (83 lge 3 FAC) | 1932–1947 | |
| 87 (76 lge 4 FAC 3 LC 4 other) | 1998–2002; 2005–2007 | |
| 86 (74 lge 12 FAC) | 1975–1979 | |
| 80 (77 lge 3 FAC) | 1932–1947 |
The following players earned international caps whilst playing for Brentford (number of caps awarded whilst at Brentford FC in brackets, if known and confirmed):
Full International
|
|
|
U-21 International
|
|
|
Youth International
|
|
|
Schoolboy International
B International
Amateur Internationals to have played whilst at Brentford FC are:
Martin Woosnam, Kevin O'Flanagan, Jackie Burns, Alec Barclay, Vivian Gibbins, T.H. Robinson, Maurice Edelston, A.H. Gibbons, Bill Slater
Victory International (Matches played soon after WWI)
War Time International (Matches played from 1939–1945)
|
|
|
Brentford's main rivals are Fulham and Queens Park Rangers.
Brentford have a long standing rivalry with Fulham. The two local rivals competed regularly until recent years when Fulham were taken over by Egyptian millionaire Mohamed Al-Fayed. In the past this fixture has been marred by crowd violence.
QPR are also considered to be rivals. Brentford and QPR clashed regularly until 1966 when QPR spent many years in higher divisions. It wasn't until 2001 that they met again. The rivalry intensified in 1967 when QPR failed in an attempted takeover of Brentford which would have spelled the end for Brentford and seen QPR move into Griffin Park. As with the Fulham rivalry, this fixture sees passions run high amongst both sets of supporters with local pride at stake.
Brentford's club song is "Hey Jude" by the Beatles. This is played at every home game and sung by the Brentford supporters throughout the game. In 1993 the band One Touch To Go recorded the song Red on White for the team. The track can be found on the album Greatest Hits 1983/1999. The song has been played at the ground till at least 2002. In 2001 Status Quo bassist John 'Rhino' Edwards recorded a track called Brentford's Big Day Out after the Bees reached the final of the LDV Trophy at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff. Lloyd Owusu, on his short comeback to Brentford recorded a track about himself and his connections with the club. Surprisingly, this spent a short while being downloaded rapidly off music websites. The track's main word is Owusu as during his time at the club Lloyd was a fans' favourite and whenever his name was read out the fans shouted back his surname as well as raised their hands. This referred to how he liked to 'raise the roof'.
Celebrity supporters include:
Actor and comedian, Bradley Walsh was a professional at the club in the late 1970s but never made the first team squad.
Late Jazz Band Leader, Billy Cotton, who hosted the long-running Billy Cotton's Band Show on Radio and TV, played for Brentford as an amateur in his youth.
Singer/pop icon Rod Stewart is often reported to be a former player, but this is believed to be a myth. Stewart admitted to not have been signed by Brentford in a 1995 issue of Q Magazine, but possibly had trials in 1961 and left before being offered any 'deal' to stay on.
Former Tottenham Hotspur manager Harry Redknapp was in the first team at Brentford in 1976 but only made one appearance.
Brentford's predominant home colours are a red and white striped shirt, black shorts and red or black socks. Away kits have varied over the years, with the current colours being all black.
Brentford have had several badges on their shirts since they were formed in 1889. The first one, in 1893, was a white shield, with 'BFC' in blue and a wavy line in blue, which is thought to represent the river and the rowing club, who founded the football club. The next known badge, the Middlesex County Arms, were on shirts donated by a club supporter in 1909. The Brentford and Chiswick arms, as a badge, was used just for the one season, in 1938–1939. The next badge wasn't until 1971–72 when a shield, formed into quadrants, which had a hive and bees in one, 3 seaxes in another and the other two with red and white stripes. In 1972, the club organised a competition to design a new crest, which was won by Mr BG Spencer's design, a circle with a bee and stripes with founded 1888. This was introduced in 1973 and used until May 1975, when it was brought to the clubs attention, via Graham Haynes, that Brentford FC were formed in 1889 and not in 1888. Therefore, a new badge, reputedly designed by Dan Tana – the clubs chairman at the time – was introduced for the 1975–76 season and continued until 1994 when the current badge was introduced.
In 2011 Russell Grant claimed to have designed the badge in a BBC interview, however it was in fact designed in 1993 for two season tickets by supporter Andrew Henning, following a request from Keith Loring the then chief executive. Russell's involvement was to suggest to Keith Loring the inclusion and then ensure the accuracy of the Middlesex arms prior to the badge's release.
The design of the new badge is based on a previous Brentford badge of the late 60s/early 70s that featured quadrants and included the hive and Middlesex arms (without the crown). The "Founded 1889" was included as the design exercise coincided with Graham Haynes's research into verifying the actual formation of the club to 1889 rather than 1888 as previous thought.
The badge was introduced initially onto the away kit for the 1993/94 season. It also featured on the programme for that season. For the 1994/95 season it was added to the home kit.
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||
HOT DESIGNS ▪ Premium designs ▪ Designs by country ▪ Designs by U.S. state ▪ Most popular designs ▪ Newest, last added designs ▪ Unique designs ▪ Cheap, budget designs ▪ Design super sale DESIGNS BY THEME ▪ Accounting, audit designs ▪ Adult, sex designs ▪ African designs ▪ American, U.S. designs ▪ Animals, birds, pets designs ▪ Agricultural, farming designs ▪ Architecture, building designs ▪ Army, navy, military designs ▪ Audio & video designs ▪ Automobiles, car designs ▪ Books, e-book designs ▪ Beauty salon, SPA designs ▪ Black, dark designs ▪ Business, corporate designs ▪ Charity, donation designs ▪ Cinema, movie, film designs ▪ Computer, hardware designs ▪ Celebrity, star fan designs ▪ Children, family designs ▪ Christmas, New Year's designs ▪ Green, St. Patrick designs ▪ Dating, matchmaking designs ▪ Design studio, creative designs ▪ Educational, student designs ▪ Electronics designs ▪ Entertainment, fun designs ▪ Fashion, wear designs ▪ Finance, financial designs ▪ Fishing & hunting designs ▪ Flowers, floral shop designs ▪ Food, nutrition designs ▪ Football, soccer designs ▪ Gambling, casino designs ▪ Games, gaming designs ▪ Gifts, gift designs ▪ Halloween, carnival designs ▪ Hotel, resort designs ▪ Industry, industrial designs ▪ Insurance, insurer designs ▪ Interior, furniture designs ▪ International designs ▪ Internet technology designs ▪ Jewelry, jewellery designs ▪ Job & employment designs ▪ Landscaping, garden designs ▪ Law, juridical, legal designs ▪ Love, romantic designs ▪ Marketing designs ▪ Media, radio, TV designs ▪ Medicine, health care designs ▪ Mortgage, loan designs ▪ Music, musical designs ▪ Night club, dancing designs ▪ Photography, photo designs ▪ Personal, individual designs ▪ Politics, political designs ▪ Real estate, realty designs ▪ Religious, church designs ▪ Restaurant, cafe designs ▪ Retirement, pension designs ▪ Science, scientific designs ▪ Sea, ocean, river designs ▪ Security, protection designs ▪ Social, cultural designs ▪ Spirit, meditational designs ▪ Software designs ▪ Sports, sporting designs ▪ Telecommunication designs ▪ Travel, vacation designs ▪ Transport, logistic designs ▪ Web hosting designs ▪ Wedding, marriage designs ▪ White, light designs E-COMMERCE DESIGNS ▪ Magento store designs ▪ OpenCart store designs ▪ PrestaShop store designs ▪ CRE Loaded store designs ▪ Jigoshop store designs ▪ VirtueMart store designs ▪ osCommerce store designs ▪ Zen Cart store designs CMS DESIGNS ▪ Flash CMS designs ▪ Joomla CMS designs ▪ Mambo CMS designs ▪ Drupal CMS designs ▪ WordPress blog designs ▪ Forum designs ▪ phpBB forum designs ▪ PHP-Nuke portal designs ANIMATED WEBSITE DESIGNS ▪ Flash CMS designs ▪ Silverlight animated designs ▪ Silverlight intro designs ▪ Flash animated designs ▪ Flash intro designs ▪ XML Flash designs ▪ Flash 8 animated designs ▪ Dynamic Flash designs ▪ Flash animated photo albums ▪ Dynamic Swish designs ▪ Swish animated designs ▪ jQuery animated designs WEBSITE DESIGNS ▪ WebMatrix Razor designs ▪ HTML 5 designs ▪ Web 2.0 designs ▪ 3-color variation designs ▪ 3D, three-dimensional designs ▪ Artwork, illustrated designs ▪ Clean, simple designs ▪ CSS based website designs ▪ Full design packages ▪ Full ready websites ▪ Portal designs ▪ Stretched, full screen designs ▪ Universal, neutral designs CORPORATE ID DESIGNS ▪ Corporate identity sets ▪ Logo layouts, logo designs ▪ Logotype sets, logo packs ▪ PowerPoint, PTT designs ▪ Facebook themes VIDEO, SOUND & MUSIC ▪ Video e-cards ▪ After Effects video intros ▪ Special video effects ▪ Music tracks, music loops ▪ Stock music bank GRAPHICS & CLIPART ▪ Pro clipart & illustrations, $19/year ▪ 5,000+ icons by subscription ▪ Icons, pictograms |
| Super Offers |
| Super Offers |
| Custom Logo Design $149 ▪ Web Programming ▪ ID Card Printing ▪ Best Web Hosting ▪ eCommerce Software ▪ Add Your Link |
| © 1996-2013 MAGIA Internet Studio ▪ About ▪ Portfolio ▪ Photo on Demand ▪ Hosting ▪ Advertise ▪ Sitemap ▪ Privacy ▪ Maria Online |