1994:
The 'Páirc' design was ubiquitous in 1994, though Antrim were different from many counties in that they had contrasting sleeves.
1995:
Change to neck (with green and gold trim reversed), while the new GAA logo now appeared.
1995:
The county's football jerseys featured the logo of Flo-Gas.
1996:
Like a lot of other counties, Antrim had a brief flirtation with Connolly in the mid-90s. This strip had a lot of the same trappings as the Clare top of the time.
1996-98:
Whiskey manufacturer Bushmills took over sponsorship of both the county teams as O'Neills returned. Sleeve design changed while green trim disappeared.
1997-99:
Long-sleeved version of the new jersey. The size of the Bushmills logo could well have contravened GAA regulations.
1998:
For the All-Ireland quarter-final, Antrim played in an unsponsored jersey. A conflict between Bushmills and competition sponsors Guinness is our best guess as to why.
1999-2000:
New design with county crest on sleeves, while the Bushmills logo was also tidied.
1999:
Again, the jersey for the All-Ireland quarter-final was without a sponsor.
2001:
A stock O'Neills design for the new jersey, with black more prominent than it had been.
2003-06:
Green returned as the tertiary colour, though black remained central thanks to the sponsor's logo. Sleeve and body trim failed to line up, a common O'Neills fault, but the shadow pattern was rare to see.
2007:
With Bushmills having opted not to renew their deal, for a few games in early 2007 Antrim wore shirts with the logo of the county's supporters' club on the front.
2007:
Eventually, Creagh Concrete came on board, leading to a new, cleaner design with aspects of the new crest on the sleeves.
2008:
Front numbers added.
2008:
Anohter change later that year saw white cuffs appear.
2009:
Cuffs gone, and the GAA logo was also updated.
2010-12:
Brand-new clean design wth a v-neck, green now only present on the numbers.
2013:
White sleeves returned, after an absence, on another collarless shirt. Asymmetrical stylings were a new feature, with a hexagonal pattern also present, though the blue numbers raised an eyebrow.
2014:
New shorts used, with the saffron block featuring the same pattern as on the shirt.
2015:
Perhaps surprisingly, given that the previous shirt only lasted for two championships, this was launched at the end of 2014. A clean design which also manages to be progressive.
2006:
Interestingly, the county's hurlers and footballer both wore this design on the same day - the hurlers beat Antrim and the footballers lost to Clare in a Casement Park double-header. Not a bad design, one that was not seen on too many other shirts.
2011-13:
Colour-clashes with Wexford saw the hurlers don a simple reversal of the shirt launched in 2010.
2012:
An early-season game with Fermanagh was played before the footballers' new set for the year had arrived and they wore a previously-unseen black version of the pinstriped jersey.
2014:
For the league game against Wexford in 2014, the hurlers wore the black shirts with the new shorts - but, as Wexford's jerseys were now dark purple - the changed caused more of a clash.
2014:
In the Ulster football clash with Donegal, Armagh donned a new black shirt. Annoyingly, the shade of yellow trim didn't match that used on the normal kit, creating a mismatch with the shorts and socks.
2014:
When Antrim met Wexford in the All-Ireland hurling qualifiers, they changed again despite a clash not existing. Stylistically, this took a lot of cues from the saffron jersey.