These are the blood-stained clothes Yousef Makki was wearing on the night he was killed - his favourite Nike Airmax trainers, his top, his trousers and his bubble jacket with a small rip where the knife went through.
They are bleak mementoes of an awful night.
All these items were gathered during the police investigation into the Manchester Grammar School pupil's death.
Now they are in a suitcase in the loft of the Burnage home where Yousef Makki, who was 17 when he died in March, grew up.
His sister Jade Akoum, who now lives in the house with her three children, asked GMP that his personal effects were returned and they were, in a forensics bag.
It may seem grim but these are treasured items for the Makki family.
Jade said they gave her some comfort: “It’s the last things he wore. Those trainers were his favourite pair.”
She notes that, aside from where the knife went in, there are no other marks on Yousef’s bubble jacket.
Joshua Molnar, 18, who had been socialising with Yousef on the night of his death, was unanimously acquitted of murder and manslaughter, and was only convicted of the crimes which he pleaded guilty to before his trial began - possessing a knife and perverting the course of justice.
But, as far as the Makki family are concerned, there are still questions that need to be answered.
They do not accept the verdicts, and cling to his clothes not just to remember him by, but because they were evidence.