Inter Milan have released a limited capsule collection in partnership with Pink Floyd and Sony Music Italy, marking 50 years since the release of Wish You Were Here. The 1975 album is among the most celebrated in rock history, and the collaboration brings its imagery into football through a small but carefully considered range of pieces.
The Collection
The centrepiece is the PFFC Polo, a blue polo shirt built around an unusual name. PFFC stands for Pink Floyd Football Club, a reference to the actual amateur side founded by David Gilmour, Roger Waters, Nick Mason, and Richard Wright in the 1970s. The band members played matches against each other during touring breaks, and the PFFC name gives this collection a genuine footballing foundation rather than a purely commercial tie-in.
The polo is rendered in Inter's characteristic blue with a flat-knit cream collar and matching cream cuffs on the sleeves. "PFFC" lettering sits on the chest alongside two white stars and the full "PINK FLOYD FC INTERNAZIONALE MILANO" typography. The Inter crest is embroidered on the left sleeve.
The defining detail is the handshake silhouette from the Wish You Were Here album cover: two figures shaking hands, one of them on fire. On the PFFC polo it appears as textured white embroidery on the right sleeve and again at the back of the neck with 50th anniversary branding.
Beyond the polo, the collection includes anthem track jackets with Nike Swoosh branding, stadium scarves in Inter colours with the album title, and graphic t-shirts carrying the album artwork.
The Background
Wish You Were Here was released in September 1975. Its central themes of absence, lost connection, and the alienation of commercial success gave the album a weight that has kept it in circulation for five decades. The handshake imagery, designed by Hipgnosis, became one of the most recognisable sleeves in rock.
The Pink Floyd Football Club, meanwhile, is not a reinvention. The band genuinely played football. The matches were informal, organised among bandmates and crew, but they were regular enough that the PFFC identity stuck. Roger Waters has spoken about the games as one of the few genuine releases during the pressure of touring in the 1970s.
Inter's choice to anchor the collection around PFFC rather than leading purely with album artwork keeps it grounded. It is not a shirt with a graphic slapped on the chest. The connection is built around the idea of football as something the band actually did.
The collaboration was developed with Sony Music Italy, whose involvement helped secure the rights to the album imagery and framed the release as a genuine cultural anniversary rather than a licensing exercise.
Inter Milan
All Inter Milan shirts in the catalogue
Browse the full Inter collection on ShirtSociety