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Monday, October 31st, 2005 05:35 pm
I'm not just into sports for the athleticism, or the drama. Much like Jerry Seinfeld, I root for the uniforms. I read Paul Lukas' blog Uni Watch on ESPN.com. (Also published in Slate and the Village Voice)


And so, I post this review and comment on a fine website I've recently come across:

Dressed to the Nines: A History of the Baseball Uniform

It's an adjunct of the Baseball hall of fame, and one of my favorite exhibits. The site covers pretty much every aspect of the baseball uniform, and it's historical evolution. From desgins, the development of jerseys and knitting, the caps, and even stirrups and socks. That stuff fascinates me.

But the topper, of course, is the exhaustive database of every Major League team's uniform from every season, including variants. (The database from the last few years seems to be incomplete...)

Including the bad fashion statements of baseball history - even worse than the 1916 season when the Dodgers and Giants both wore checkerboard pattern uniforms. Worse than Houston's rainbow sunburst pattern, or the San Diego Padres taco uniforms or the 1979 Pirates.

The 1976 Chicago White Sox



The Shorts. The collars. Ack.
Tuesday, November 1st, 2005 01:23 (UTC)
The Village Voice ran an article on baseball uniforms a buncha years ago -- back when the stockings were just a narrow stripe of color over the sanitary socks, and if you wore your pants in the vicinity of your ankles, you were square. Funny how fashion changes in everything.

(And ay ay ay, those Sox unis!)
Tuesday, November 1st, 2005 02:09 (UTC)
Oh yeah. Remeber when basketball uniforms featured the nut-hugger shorts? As opposed to the giant drawers now favored thanks to the Fab Five...