WHAT TO WEAR WHEN YOU WANT TO PLAY TENNIS
Mutton sleeves & long voluminous skirts.
Still puffed but shorter
sleeves. Hats had best be pinned on
tightly.
Long tight-fitting sleeves
might cramp your swing a bit?
Matching outfits with long
sleeves loose at the top and pretty decorative skirts.
Looser long sleeves and
slimmer skirt, but now you have a tie flapping in your face. In the photo she does have her tie tucked into her belt, but you know it's not going to stay there.
Mixed Doubles
Gradually skirts began to get shorter and tops more easy-fitting. But again, with the ties? Why?? (flap flap) At least two of the gals are smart enough to know better.
There was the occasional
publicity shot, of course.
Back to the sedate ‘30s.
A couple of these gals
appear to be wearing knee-length shorts.
Lucille Ball in the 1940s
Rita Hayworth. I love the outfit. :)
Women’s 2-piece tennis
outfit in 2026. Are women’s tennis
outfits headed in the same direction as those worn by beach volleyball
players? Interesting thought, but I
can’t quite see it. Then again, women
playing tennis in the 1890s would be flabbergasted at the thought of wearing
something like this!
Or this!
Women somehow managed to run around a court and swing a racket in many kind of clothes. I like when the whites finally gave way to more interesting designs.
ReplyDeleteThis was a fascinating timeline on the evolution of athletic fashions. Considering how women dressed, and men, too, in those early decades of tennis, their game play must have been more tame than today's pickleball. How did they manage to keep those long white dresses clean on clay and grass courts? The players at the French Open this week are complaining about the heat. They should be glad that tennis fashion has changed.
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