
Connoisseur: The Fashion Masters
A sartorial salute to the most stylish men and women to ever grace a putting green.
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Golf is, of course, a sport famously defined by dress codes—a mindset that dominated much of its early history. As golfers are so often wanton to do, players in the early 20th century clung stubbornly to ideals of a bygone era, with players like Bobby Jones cutting now-iconic silhouettes in the tailored coats, ties, knickerbockers and knee-high socks that were staples in Victorian times.
Here we review a few of the finest dresser.
Walter Hagen
Golf’s stylistic lynchpin for much of the early 20th century. Knickerbockers, shirts, ties and cardigans were all common staples in Hagen’s time, but no one else carried them off with such glamour—augmented by his habit of arriving to the course in a chauffeured limo. Always eager to buck tradition, Hagen helped popularise the transition from knickers to tailored trousers throughout the ’30s, setting in motion the radical changes that would follow in the post-war years.

Ben Hogan
Perhaps more than any golfer, the nine-time major winner is responsible for the way we dress for the course today, pivoting away from the sport’s attachment to Victorian-era tailoring and towards a more casual, yet neatly tailored look, supplemented of course by his iconic white Scottish cap.
Arnold Palmer
What Hogan instigated; Palmer perfected. Tanned, muscly and effortlessly talented, the American legend embraced pastels, patterns and a relaxed sense of flair to set golf fashion down a more casual path.

Seve Ballesteros
As golfers embraced the wider fashions of the ’70s and ’80s, Seve turned the wearing of big collars, turtlenecks and knitwear into an artform.

Payne Stewart
Modern golf’s great revivalist, refining the game’s most old-school silhouette with the addition of modern polo shirts and smart knits. No one has done it like him since.
Tiger Woods
While Tiger himself was always a straightforward dresser, his relationship with Nike changed golf fashion forever—helping to instil a radical, fashion-forward mindset that reset a landscape dominated by lame polos and uncomfortable slacks. That’s not to mention his iconic Sunday red, either.

Adam Scott
One of golf’s last traditionalists, Scott has a renowned knack for putting together simple, effortlessly fashionable fits week-in, week-out on tour. The Aussie sticks to the classics, never trying to be overly modern or ostentatious, which when combined with his silky-smooth swing, makes for a picture of pure class out on the tee box.
Charley Hull

Hull is what you get when you combine the slightly hedonistic swagger of John Daly with a contemporary fashion mindset—the hard-smoking Brit’s recent link-up with Malbon seeing her arrive at the links in all manner of flamboyant knitwear, shirts and skirts. The aviators are a great touch, too.
Min Woo Lee
Having burst onto the scene with his trademark mullet, a wispy mo’ and a penchant for razor-sharp tailoring, the young Aussie’s on-course attitude is matched only by the bold sartorial moves he’s made just a couple of years into his career. Let him cook.
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