Arsenal's Premier League Victory Parade: A Roar of Celebration
North London turned red and white and refused to quieten. Arsenal’s victory parade, 22 years in the making, became less a procession and more a roar of release as players, staff and supporters flooded the streets of Islington to salute a Premier League title that had long felt out of reach.
Buses crawled through a sea of flags and flares, the champions framed by a skyline they had just reshaped. From early morning, Gooners packed every vantage point – hanging from windows, perched on lampposts, squeezed against barriers – all for a glimpse of the squad that finally dragged the club back to the top of English football.
This was not a neat, choreographed celebration. It was chaotic, noisy, emotional. Exactly what 22 years of waiting sounds like.
Amid the din, a different kind of work unfolded. Members of Arsenal’s Creators Club moved through the crowds, cameras raised, eyes scanning for the moments that would define the day long after the confetti had been swept away. Susana Ferreira, Josh Upton, Kya Banasko, Lily Craigen, Jahnay Fyffe, Romel Birch, Matt Dingle, Lowernorthbank and Raiyan Tafiq were everywhere – on pavements, in side streets, right up against the barriers.
They weren’t just documenting a parade. They were chasing the small details that usually vanish in the blur: the kid on their parent’s shoulders seeing their heroes for the first time; the older fan wiping away tears as the trophy edged past; the players leaning over the railings of the open-top bus, phones out, stunned by the sheer scale of it all.
Each photographer brought a different eye to the same story. Wide shots that showed the sheer weight of support swallowing whole stretches of north London. Tight portraits that caught the disbelief and pride etched across faces in red and white. Snapshots of banners that had clearly been stored away for years, waiting for this exact journey.
As the buses rolled through Islington and the songs grew louder, the camera shutters kept pace. Every flare lighting up the sky, every scarf held aloft, every chant that rattled the buildings along the route – all of it fed into a visual record of a club reconnecting with its own history.
For Arsenal, this was a title that demanded to be seen as much as celebrated. The Creators Club delivered that, freezing the emotion of a generational moment in a series of images that will sit alongside the great days of the past.
The trophy will return to its cabinet. The streets will clear. But those photographs – and the memory of a north London finally able to celebrate like champions again – will keep this day alive every time a Gooner scrolls back through the gallery and remembers where they were when Arsenal came home as Premier League winners once more.






