Row One Brand offers over 19,000 historic sports wall art prints created from sports artifacts in the public domain under U.S. Federal Copyright Law. The 1928 game ticket design (above in video) by Poole Brothers, Inc. was never copyrighted, but would be in the public domain regardless due to it's age.
Row One's historic sports art is not affiliated with, licensed, sponsored, authorized, or endorsed by any college, university, team, league, artist, athlete, coach, venue, other brand, or any licensing entity.
Row One uses old historic cover art, tickets, schedules, magazines, books, films, cartoons, photos, illustrations, and paintings in the public domain under U.S. Federal Copyright Law to create our unique sports products.
Row One's physical college football memorabilia collection dates back to an 1876 Harvard-Yale football program and Row One's oldest game ticket is an 1893 Princeton Tigers vs. Pennsylvania Quakers college football ticket.
Team names appearing on old tickets and historic cover art are an important component of the designs because they describe who played or what team the art represents. Row One wants to portray history accurately and is not required to remove or "censor" any aspect of public domain creative works.
No college or university, pro team, artist, "brand," or publishing company has sole ownership of historic publications in the public domain under U.S. Federal Copyright Law and no license is needed to use historic public domain materials.
These creative materials include songs, films, footage, books, magazines, drawings, cover art, game ticket designs, paintings, cartoons, movies, illustrations, paintings, photos, and works of art that no longer have copyright protection.
Row One's historic sports art is not affiliated with, licensed, sponsored, authorized, or endorsed by any college, university, team, league, artist, athlete, coach, venue, other brand, or any licensing entity.