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In a touching detail, the paint used was made from the flowers left as tributes to Jota and his brother outside Molineux.In an earlier Instagram post about the collaboration, the ex-Wolves skipper said: “Lately, I haven't been able to show you what I’ve been up to with my paintings.“It’s a project with the Wolves and it involves these paints. I hope you like them, I’ve really enjoyed painting them and they’re going to be done with these amazing paints.”Known as a no-nonsense defender in his playing days, Craddock made a combined 189 Premier League appearances for Sunderland and Wolves.
"I think it's common knowledge that I'm an artist. That's what I naturally went into when I retired from football.”He added: "When I retired, I then experimented with graffiti and photo realism.
Instead, the Wolves icon believes his passion can be traced back through his family.“When I left school, football obviously came first, but I continued to paint for my own enjoyment,” he told FourFourTwo in 2004. “It had become a passion, albeit not one I really discussed much with other people.”Craddock continued: "Ever since I can remember I've enjoyed drawing.
