FC Dinamo Tbilisi is a Georgian professional football club based in Tbilisi, Georgia that competes in the Erovnuli Liga, founded on 1 January 1925. This page brings club history and collector guidance together, and Walkouts lists signed football shirts and framed pieces from key eras, with match provenance and player signatures where available.
One of the Soviet era's most prominent sides, Dinamo Tbilisi earned continental acclaim by winning the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1981, beating FC Carl Zeiss Jena in Düsseldorf, and the club remained a regular challenger in the Soviet Top League. That run, guided by coach Nodar Akhalkatsi, created some of the most collectible shirts from late 1970s and early 1980s squads and ties collectors to final day provenance and city stage venues.
At home the team plays at the Boris Paichadze Stadium, a regular backdrop to domestic success and international fixtures. Dinamo are recorded as 16-time Georgian league champions and have won the Georgian Cup multiple times, and those domestic title seasons remain key targets for collectors seeking shirts worn or issued during title runs and cup campaigns.
The club produced a long list of notable players across generations, names that drive autograph demand include David Kipiani, Ramaz Shengelia and, in later years, Temur Ketsbaia and Kakha Kaladze. Collectors prize shirts associated with landmark figures and decisive fixtures, and provenance that ties a signature to a named player is central to desirability.
On the collector side, commemorative releases remain important. Pieces tied to the club's post-1970 milestones such as a 75th anniversary 2000 commemorative formula are often chased for their limited runs and special detailing. Fanshop shirts and retail releases from those runs, including region-specific editions and early production runs, are collected alongside match-issued items, and many collectors explicitly seek fanshop variants as signed retail pieces rather than only match-worn shirts.
Seasonal magnets include the 1978 Soviet title season, when the team claimed the domestic crown under Akhalkatsi, and decisive European legs such as the 1981 Cup Winners' Cup campaign, both of which drive interest in shirts from players who featured in those campaigns. Iconic away colourways, historically leaning towards white with blue trim, are tied to memorable cup ties, and shirts linked to named finals carry stronger provenance when accompanied by photo or witness statements.
For signed retail demand, authenticated pieces are crucial, and listings will note an accompanying COA or equivalent verification where provided, with many buyers looking for exact photo proof or witnessed signing details. Free worldwide shipping is offered on selected items, and Walkouts closes this page with curated selections spanning the 1978 Soviet title season and the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1981 run, so collectors can compare era, player and provenance before they browse.