John Lydon/This Is Not A Love Song
Theme: England
Never Mind the Grater, Britain is a punk-inspired, tongue-in-cheek tribute to the one and only John Lydon — a man who’s grated against the grain his entire life. Drenched in the unmistakable pink and yellow punk aesthetic, the design reimagines the Union Jack as a flag of defiance, absurdity, and buttered-up rebellion. It’s part satire, part salute — and all Lydon. The line “This Is Not A Loaf Song Without Butter and Lydon” cheekily twists PiL’s This Is Not a Love Song, turning it into a surreal declaration of Britishness as something that just doesn’t work without a bit of anarchy — and a generous spread of weird. This design celebrates the uniqueness of Lydon’s voice, style, and legacy through humour, wordplay, and just enough dairy. Compared to the cheesier A Brie Road, this one’s still got flavour — but it cuts deeper. Because sometimes the best way to say something real is through something ridiculous — punk, after all, was never just noise. It was a laugh, a snarl, and a refusal to be grated down.