Maud Watson (left) defeated her sister Lilian (right) in the inaugural ladies championship final in 1884. White clothing was worn as it helped mask perspirationPhotograph: PAFifteen-year-old British tennis player Lottie Dod in 1890, who won Wimbledon in a calf-length skirt (the shorter length was allowed as she was still a schoolgirl)Photograph: W. and D. Downey/Getty ImagesMay Sutton Bundy, the first American to win the women's single's championship, pictured in action. She caused a stir in 1905 by rolling back the cuffs of her dress, revealing her wrists. The sleeves, she complained, were "too long and too hot"Photograph: PA/PA
British tennis player Dorothea Lambert Chambers, who won Wimbledon seven times between 1903 and 1914, pictured in 1913. Lambert Chambers triumphed on court while wearing two or three stiff petticoats, as well as corsetsPhotograph: Topical Press Agency/Getty ImagesDaring French tennis player Suzanne Lenglen, competing at Wimbledon in 1926. Elizabeth Ryan, winner of 19 Wimbledon titles, said of Lenglen, "All women players should go on their knees in thankfulness to Suzanne for delivering them from the tyranny of corsets." Lenglen wore a flimsy, revealing calf-length cotton frock with short sleevesPhotograph: Central Press/Getty ImagesCalifornian tennis player Helen Wills Moody during a semi-final match at Wimbledon in 1933. Wills Moody made the golf-style eyeshade fashionable and played in a white blouse and pleated skirtPhotograph: Len Putnam/APAmerican tennis player Alice Marble at Wimbledon in 1937. Marble favoured tailored flannel shorts and crewneck T-shirts in a more masculine fashion statementPhotograph: Len Putnam/APHelen Jacobs at Wimbledon in 1936, another fan of the more masculine stylePhotograph: Len Putnam/APPauline Betz was one of the women who dominated the immediate postwar Wimbledon years. She wore jockey caps, short-sleeved shirts and skirts or shortsPhotograph: Paul Cannon/APDan Maskell coaches nine of Britain's leading women tennis players at Wimbledon in December 1946. Left to right: Kay Menzies, Jean Quertier, Joy Gannon, Molly Lincoln Blair, PJ Halford and Betty PassinghamPhotograph: F. Mott/Hulton-Deutsch CollectionAmerican tennis player Gertrude Moran, or 'Gorgeous Gussie', who was dressed by the tennis fashion guru Ted Tinling when she played the 1949 Championships. Beneath her regulation satin-trimmed white dress was the occasional glimpse of lace knickersPhotograph: George W. Hales/Getty ImagesAmerican tennis player Billie Jean King, seen here in 1965, made the headlines for her performance, not her outfitsPhotograph: Central Press/Getty ImagesOutfits became shorter and tighter in the 70s, as seen on Australian player Margaret Court in 1971Photograph: Frank Tewkesbury/Getty ImagesIn the 80s and 90s, breathable and lightweight fabrics were developed, as seen on Steffi Graf in 1999Photograph: Anja Niedringhaus/EPAIn the noughties, the focus switched to looks, with Anna Kournikova (seen here in 2002) and others wearing ever-shorter outfitsPhotograph: Al Bello/Getty ImagesMore fashion-focused elements were introduced, such as Maria Sharapova's tuxedo-style top in 2008Photograph: Clive Brunskill/Getty ImagesLast year, Serena Williams managed to sneak some hot pink into her Wimbledon outfitPhotograph: Ian Kington/AFP/Getty Images
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