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RightOn! Mojo Race British Racing Green BRG Guitar Strap

Righton!

Was: $59.99
Now: $49.99
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SKU:
Mojo Race BRG
UPC:
8419612000438
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A great looking teal strap!

High quality craftsmanship liked you'd expect from Righton! Straps.


All Mojo Charm straps are made of high-tech synthetic materials. The materials have been tested, so we can ensure the durability of them. As with all the MOJO Collection, this strap is made without any animal cruelty, they are vegan straps. It also has a microfiber lining that doesn't slip and is sweat-wicking. This strap is padded with 5mm latex which makes it very comfortable and lightweight. The front end tab has two small pockets for the picks, and in the back end tab has two "Fast dispenser pick". 
All the RightOn! Straps are designed and manufactured in Spain.

Width: 2.3" (6 cm)

Adjustable Length: 39.4" (100 cm) - 57" (145 cm)

Material: Synthetic + Textile

Color: Green with yellow stripes

British racing green, or BRG, is a color similar to Brunswick green, hunter green, forest green or moss green (RAL 6005). It takes its name from the green international motor racing colour of the United Kingdom. This originated with the 1903 Gordon Bennett Cup, held in Ireland (then still part of the UK), as motor-racing was illegal in England. As a mark of respect, the British cars were painted shamrock green. There is no exact hue for BRG – currently the term is used to denote a spectrum of deep, rich greens. "British racing green" in motorsport terms meant only the colour green in general – its application to a specific shade has developed outside the sport.

When Britain first competed in 1902, they had to choose a different color from the national flag colors of red, white and blue, because those had already been taken for the 1900 race by America, Germany and France respectively. When Selwyn Edge won the 1902 Gordon Bennett Cup race for England in his Napier it was decided that the 1903 race would be held in Ireland, at that time a part of the United Kingdom, as motor racing at the time was illegal in Great Britain. As a mark of respect for their Irish hosts, the English Napier cars were painted shamrock green.

 

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