Leeds United
Supplier / Name = name of kit template.
Leeds United's kit history is defined above all by the dramatic shift in 1960–61 from their earlier blue‑and‑gold colours to the all‑white strip that has become one of English football's most recognisable identities. Before that transformation, Leeds moved through black‑and‑white stripes, then blue‑and‑white stripes inherited from Huddersfield Town, and later blue with old gold trim, reflecting their evolving post‑Leeds City identity. Once the all‑white look was established, a succession of manufacturers shaped its presentation: Umbro dominated the 1960s through the early 1990s with clean, traditional designs; Admiral brought the boldness of the 1970s and early 80s; Asics and Puma defined the mid‑to‑late 1990s; and Nike introduced a sleeker, modern aesthetic in the early 2000s. Later eras saw Diadora, Admiral again, Macron and Kappa each reinterpret the template before Adidas took over in 2020 with contemporary, minimalist takes on the club's classic look. Across all these changes, the all‑white home strip has remained the constant—an identity marker as strong as any in the English game.
Away 1969-70
Manufacturer: Unknown
Home 1970-71 (version 2)
Manufacturer: Unknown
Worn during: Leeds v Juventus, Fairs Cup Final 2nd Leg, 2 June 1971.
Away 1970-71
Manufacturer: Unknown
Third 1970-71
Manufacturer: Unknown
