Pickleball apparel – performance polos, pleated skorts, color-blocked zip-ups – is crossing into Casual Friday wardrobes. Here’s how and why it works.
Author: Iris Duval
Handball jerseys from Eastern European club teams are becoming a quiet staple in South London’s street dressing. Here’s why the silhouette works and how people are wearing them.
Polo knee guards are moving off the field and into luxury accessory drops, with independent labels reinterpreting the sport’s protective equipment as high-end sculptural pieces.
Lacrosse pinnies are showing up in downtown New York street style, layered over long sleeves and paired with structured bottoms. Here’s how the look works and why it’s clicking.
The netball dress is leaving the court and entering summer wardrobes. Here’s why the silhouette works off-pitch and how people are wearing it.
Gaelic football jerseys are appearing across Nordic street style, worn as layering pieces and statement tops by dressers drawn to their functional design and zero brand association.
Hurling jerseys are crossing from GAA pitches into European streetwear, driven by bold regional color, functional silhouettes, and authentic sporting roots.
Rugby sevens kits – cropped jerseys, color-blocked shorts, hooped socks – are crossing over into festival dressing. Here’s why the look works and how to wear it.
Lawn bowls’ cream linen uniform is quietly shaping resort wear’s next wave – here’s how designers are borrowing the aesthetic and why it works.
Squash court clothing – slim polos, flat-soled sneakers, technical shorts – is crossing into after-work style. Here’s why the look works and how to wear it.










