Skip to product information
  • Yellow polo jersey with embroidered crossed racquets motif.
  • White polo jersey with embroidered crossed racquets motif.
  • Green embroidered crossed racquets motif on white polo.
  • White polo jersey with embroidered crossed racquets motif.
  • Navy embroidered crossed racquets motif on white polo.
  • White polo jersey with embroidered crossed racquets motif.
  • Red embroidered crossed racquets motif on white polo.
  • Yellow embroidered crossed racquets motif on yellow polo.
  • Orange polo jersey with embroidered crossed racquets motif.
  • White embroidered crossed racquets motif on orange polo.
  • Red polo jersey with embroidered crossed racquets motif.
  • Light blue polo jersey with embroidered crossed racquets motif.
  • White embroidered crossed racquets motif on red polo.
  • White embroidered crossed racquets motif on light blue polo.
  • Models wearing the white and red Racquets Polo.
1 of 15

Rowing Blazers

Racquets Polo

Regular price 2.450,00 Kč
Regular price Sale price 2.450,00 Kč
Sale Sold out
Color
Size

Notes

100% pima cotton real piqué polo jersey with embroidered crossed racquets motif.

Details

Three-button placket (the good ol' fashioned way). Split tail. Crossed racquets on chest. 100% Peruvian pima cotton.

Size & Fit

Unisex (men's sizing). Classic / oversized fit. For a more fitted look, order one size down.

Provenance

The anti-logo. If anyone thought this was going to the be decade that people started thinking more about how and where their clothing was made and less about the logo on it, boy were they wrong. I like graphics, emblems, symbols as much as the next guy, but I don’t like being a walking ad. I especially don’t like emblems that are phony without even being tongue-in-cheek: fake coats of arms; bogus rowing club “crests” (often with the words “1st VIII” and maybe some random years from the 1930s); and the like. These crossed racquets are the ultimate anti-logo. They make no claim to belong to one club or another. And they aren’t ours exclusively: they don’t belong solely to Rowing Blazers and they aren’t a corporate logo. It’s a motif that is - literally - generic. For everyone. It’s timeless and transcends connotation. Wear it if you like tennis (or squash, or rackets, or court tennis, or badminton, or any other racquet sport) - or even if you don’t. In a logo-dominated world, it’s the simple, timeless, even generic that truly stands out.