Identity area
Reference code
Title
Date(s)
- Autumn Winter 2008 (Creation)
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Context area
Name of creator
Biographical history
Name of creator
Biographical history
Fred Perry Sportswear was founded in 1952 by British tennis player Fred Perry (1905–95) and Austrian entrepreneur Tibby Wegner (1906–95), initially producing sweatbands and later tennis shirts and shorts. The original Fred Perry shirts were inspired by those worn by French player René Lacoste. Wegner brought a Lacoste shirt from the sports department store Lillywhites, in Piccadilly Circus, took it to a factory in Leicester and had it replicated as a Fred Perry shirt. The laurel wreath logo was adapted from the wreath design that featured on the purple silk ribbons awarded to Wimbledon champions by the All England Tennis Club. The first Fred Perry shirts were produced in 1952 and were given away to players at Wimbledon that year. Selling for 21 shillings, they were stocked by Lillywhites and London department store Harrods. They marketed the shirts by giving them free of charge to celebrities including Charlton Heston, Bing Crosby and John F. Kennedy. Not long after, Wegner dyed several of the shirts in assorted colours for his golfing friends and began selling them, transitioning the business from sportswear to menswear.
In 1964 Wegner sold the company to rainwear manufacturer Mackintosh, who retained Fred Perry to market the products. Figgie International, based in Ohio, purchased Fred Perry Sportswear in 1973, expanding the brand from classic tennis shirts to include tennis, golf and leisure apparel. They sold the company in 1995 to Japanese licensee Hit Union. At the time, the company’s turnover was under US$20 million. In 2003 the company announced a partnership with Comme des Garçons to produce a Fred Perry / Comme des Garçons shirt range which launched in Spring Summer 2004. In 2005, Scottish tennis player Andy Murray was contracted to wear the Fred Perry shirt at Wimbledon. In 2006 the company launched a higher-end line called Blank Canvas, partnering with British designers, including Jessica Ogden and Peter Jensen. Fred Perry and Belgian designer Raf Simons collaborated on collections from Autumn 2008 to 2011, and then again from 2013 until the closure of the Raf Simons brand in 2023. In 2019 Fred Perry opened a flagship store at 483 Broome Street, New York, in addition to its existing stores in Boston and Brooklyn. In total, in 2019 the brand had 250 shops worldwide. In 2021 Fred Perry collaborated with Charles Jeffrey Loverboy on three separate capsule collections. Nicholas Daley, a British menswear designer, partnered with Fred Perry to create three capsule collections between 2019 and 2021. Fred Perry has also collaborated with several other brands including A Bathing Ape (2016), Mastermind (2019), Casely-Hayford (2020), narifuri (2020) and Akane Utsunomiya (2020). In 2021 Fred Perry bought British shoemaker George Cox.
Sources: Drapers; Hypebeast; Jon Henderson, The Last Champion: The Life of Fred Perry (London: Yellow Jersey Press, 2009); The Wall Street Journal; WWD.
Repository
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Content and structure area
Scope and content
Country of Manufacture: Italy.
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Colour/Print: Black
Details: Textured knit, polo
Label: Raf Simons Fred Perry Made in Italy. Small. Style: SK2009/02219/231 100% pure new wool.
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Note
Note
From Inside the Westminster Menswear Archive:
KNITTED TENNIS SHIRT
Raf Simons × Fred Perry
Autumn Winter 2008
In 1952, three-time Wimbledon champion Fred Perry began manufacturing tennis shirts. They were quickly adopted by British mods and remained popular with subsequent emerging youth subcultures, such as the Perry Boys of Manchester and Salford, who emerged in the late 1970s and who took their name from the shirts they wore. The aesthetic of Belgian designer Raf Simons is defined by his obsession with British youth fashion, which makes his collaboration with Fred Perry a natural fit. This Italian-made knitted shirt is from the first season of the collaboration, which was all-black and inspired by 1960s vintage Fred Perry skiwear. The knitting features bands of patterns worked in variations of garter, stocking and moss stitch based on traditional English fishing ganseys, with arrows or herringbone stripes at waist level.
Wool
Archive no. 2018.54