Fashion

A Look Back at the Fanciful Fashion History of Tennis

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Photo: Getty Images

Throughout the 1800s, it was regulation that all players—men and women—strictly wear all-white. (Today, the Wimbledon tournament still follows this rule, though women are now allowed to wear colored undershorts.) What the court looks lacked in color back in the 1800s, they made up for in extreme silhouettes; It wasn’t unusual for women to don skin-tight corsets during a match, which were often worn over floor-length dresses. Why so snazzy? At the time, tennis was viewed as a high-class sport, and the court looks matched the fashion trends of the moment as a result.

This elevated approach to tennis style lasted for quite a while. It wasn’t until the 1920s that things began to loosen up. Colored trims were slowly allowed, and trailblazers such as French tennis player Suzanne Lenglen defied convention by wearing short-sleeve or sleeveless tops with skirts (nodding to the flapper silhouettes of the era). Since then, tennis outfits have gotten far more casual and fashion forward; Never forget Serena Williams’s Off-White tutu at the 2018 U.S. Open, for instance.

These days, what players wear on the court are designed for one primary function: To help them win. It’s more about function over fashion. But there is something charmingly extravagant (if not a little absurd) about the early days of tennis, when players once swatted around rackets in full-on fashionable garb. What a time.

Below, more photos from the fanciful fashion days of tennis.