Vintage Fred Perry Jacket Blue Track Tennis Sportswear 80s
An 1980s Fred Perry track jacket in navy cotton-poly, full zip with a ribbed collar, cuffs, and waistband, raglan sleeves, zip pockets, and the stitched-on laurel wreath patch sitting proud on the chest. Blue trim stripes, Sportswear tag at the neck — terrace-ready and built like the courts it came from.
Fred Perry the man was the real thing: a three-time Wimbledon champion and the first player to win all four majors, an Englishman who turned his name into a label in the late 1940s. The laurel wreath became one of the most quietly powerful logos in sportswear, and somewhere along the way the brand outgrew tennis entirely. Mods claimed it. So did the soul boys, the casuals, the terrace crowd, and a long line of British subcultures who prized the clean lines and the unspoken code of wearing one.
That double life is the appeal. This is athletic gear with a Wimbledon pedigree and a streetwear afterlife, equally at home on a baseline or a stadium terrace. The 80s construction holds up — proper ribbing, raglan cut for movement, the patch logo embroidered rather than printed, the kind of detailing that’s quietly disappeared from most sportswear since.
A champion’s name, a subculture’s badge, zipped up in navy.
ITEMS POSTED IN THE
NOSTALGIA GALLERY
HAVE ALREADY SOLD AND
ARE FOR DISPLAY ONLY.




