Designing Vancouver Canucks' special edition Diwali jersey a career highlight, artist says - Action News
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Designing Vancouver Canucks' special edition Diwali jersey a career highlight, artist says

The Vancouver Canucks will wear a special edition Diwali jersey designed by local artist Jag Nagra during their warmup at Friday night's game.

'It's going to be wild,' says artist Jag Nagra ahead of game where team will wear jerseys in warmup

A woman with brown hair tied in a ponytail and red glasses is pictured holding a bright yellow Vancouver Canucks jersey with a colourful Diwali-inspired design.
Visual artist Jag Nagra, 37, with the Vancouver Canucks special edition Diwali jersey she designed for the team's home game on Nov. 5. (Vancouver Canucks/YouTube)

Almost as soon as the email from the Vancouver Canucks appeared in her inbox, Jag Nagra knew what her answer would be.

Nagra,a visual artist from Pitt Meadows, B.C., had received a request from the NHL teamto design a special-edition jersey forDiwali, the festival of lights celebratingthe the victory of good over evil and lightness over darkness.

"Immediately, within 20 seconds of the email coming through, Iwas like, 'Yes, let's do this,'" said Nagra, 37,speaking in an interview Friday.

The Canucks will wear the jerseys during the warmupahead of Friday'sgame against the Nashville Predators, on the home team's fifth annual Diwali night.

Nagra had free range for her design, exceptone requirement: the teamasked her to use its classic "stick in rink" logo as a starting point. From there, she couldtransformit however she likedto symbolize Diwali, which is celebrated by Hindus, Sikhs, Jains and Buddhists around the world.

"I immediately started thinking of imagery that was part of my life growing up, with things to do with Diwali," Nagra told CBC's The Early Edition.

"I just put pen to paper and started drafting what I wanted it to look like."

A close up photo of a bright yellow Vancouver Canucks jersey with a colourful Diwali-inspired design.
The special edition Diwali jersey will be worn for the Vancouver Canucks' fifth annual Diwali night on Nov. 5 as the team warms up to play the Nashville Predators. (Vancouver Canucks/YouTube)

The new jersey is a brilliant yellow, with the reimagined logo incorporatingsymbols familiar to the festival, like colourfulfireworks, sparklers,a lotus flower anda mustard plant.

The vibrant orange, pink and blue colours seen inside the motifs are reminiscent of twinkling lights you'd see fromfireworks and lanterns atdusk on Diwali, Nagra explained.

The shoulder pad uses the familiar "V" patch,with Johnny Canuck replaced bya flame to represent adiya, a clay lantern lit as part of the celebrations.

Nagra saw one of thejerseys in real life for the first time last week.

"I was just blown away with how it looks. I cannot wait for tonight. It's going to be wild," said Nagra, who has been a Canucks fan since childhood.

"When I was a kid, especially, we used to watch all the games. What could be more exciting than the playoffs when you're 10 years old? It was such a bonding experience for us.

"So now, all these years later, as an adult, to be collaborating with them is wild."

The jersey features elements representing the festival of lights within the team's original 'stick in rink' logo. (Vancouver Canucks/YouTube)

Nagra, who launched her career afterteachingherself to draw nine years ago,said seeing her own work on the ice will be surreal but seeing an NHL hockey team incorporate cultureinto its jersey means something personally.

"It hasn't honestlybeen since the last two or three years where I really found an appreciation for my culture and my roots and a sense of pride that Inever had before," she said.

"If Ihad seen this sort of representation when I was 10, I think it would have done a lot for me."

Seth Rogentrades vase for jersey

Only hours after its design was made public, Nagra's jersey had attracted the attention of a hometown celebrity actor Seth Rogen, who grew up in Vancouver and and now dabbles in pottery.

Heoffered to trade one of his hand-thrown vasesfor one of the jerseys. (Rogen's work sells for thousands, with onepot sellingat the Vancouver Art Gallery's 2021 Art Auctionin June for $12,000 Cdn.)

Nagra was going to offer Rogen one of the two jerseys she was given as a memento,but said the team sent one tothe actorinstead.

She plans to pass down both of her jerseysto her children.

Partial proceeds from the sale of the jerseys will benefit the PunjabiMarket Regeneration Collective, which is working to preserve and revitalize the historic market in South Vancouver.

LISTEN | Jag Nagra speaks about designing the Vancouver Canucks' Diwali jersey: