The new tennis aesthetic: Play outside the lines
Once defined by rules and quiet etiquette, tennis is being reimagined by Club Volley. The LA-based community is shaping a new tennis aesthetic through style, fluidity, creativity and access.
The Traditionalists
Tennis has long been built on heritage. A hierarchy. And an unspoken sense that youâre meant to fit in before youâre allowed to belong. Itâs a sport defined by formal dress codes and steadfast code of conduct â one that engenders respect, as much as exclusion.Â
âI always thought this sport was only for rich people until I was able to play for fun,â says Ralph Cueto, a member of Club Volley who grew up in the Philippines.
That tension sits at the center of the traditional tennis aesthetic. Wimbledon whites and open-collar polos are iconic for a reason, but increasingly out of step with younger tennis players who may not see themselves reflected in an elitist world. âMost clubs ask you to fit into tennis and all of the spaceâs rules,â the founders say.Â
âTraditional clubs didnât reflect us.â
The Wildcards
Club Volley began as a question between friends: Could a traditionally formal sport feel more like the culture theyâre already part of â creative, expressive, mixed, curious? Stedmon Harper, Deyonteâ Davis and Michael Watson II decided to build the answer themselves.Â
June 2024. Los Angeles. A public court. A playlist. Analog cameras. A handful of rackets (and friends). âOne of us literally DoorDashâd a racket to the court just to jump in,â they say â a detail that captures the ethos immediately â no gatekeeping, no âproperâ experience required.Â
This wasnât a formal tournament or practice session, but an informal gathering that filled the gap where creativity and tennis could intersect. The court quickly turned into a muse.Â
âWe built a space where tennis expands to fit you,â they say. âIt wasnât about fixing it, but reimagining it.âÂ
Club Volley operates like an open studio rather than a structured club. Anyone can sign up and join the Sunday practice. Sessions move with the rhythm of whoever shows up: artists, designers, filmmakers, athletes from other sports or people pulled in by the music alone (their playlist on Spotify has earned over 1,000 saves). Â
âEveryone carries a different relationship to the sport, and thatâs the point,â the founders say. The court becomes a meeting place â less about etiquette and hierarchy, more about connection and flow. Â
The gap was obvious. Tennis already had space for tradition and recreation, but not for people who move through culture for a living. âThere was no place where the creative world and the tennis world naturally intersected,â they say.Â
At Club Volley, style is whatever reflects players' identity that day. Thereâs no prescribed uniform. Creativity unfolds in the session itself â in the photographs and film, in the designers they champion, in the stories they tell. Itâs a built-in artistic lens that reshapes how they approach a codified sport. Â
âThere needed to be a home court for the wildcard,â they say. For the cultural connector. For the person who found the sport sideways. For the people who bring a fresh perspective to the game.
The new tennis aesthetic
If the âold worldâ of tennis was defined by uniformity, the new one is about individuality â and it reaches beyond what you wear. The new tennis aesthetic is already here. At Club Volley, members remix the sport through the lens of culture shaping it now.Â
You can see it in the clothes: layering, silhouettes, subtle rebellions against the old rulebook. But it runs deeper than outfits. âItâs the way people move, the way they connect, the way the sport absorbs influences from music, fashion, art, and everyday life,â the founders say.Â
Tennis aesthetic becomes a new language. Rooted in sport, textured by street style, loosened by creative communities who treat the court as a social space. Crucially, it isnât dictated by federations or tradition. It emerges from designers, stylists, photographers, and players who treat tennis like a creative medium.Â
Because this shift is happening off-court as much as on it, tennis fashion has to keep up. Longstanding classic shoes are starting to feel like theyâre part of a byegone era. âA future tennis lifestyle shoe shouldnât be an ode to nostalgia,â the founders say. âIt should express where the culture is actually going.â People move between the court, the studio, the street, and social moments all in the same day. The footwear has to move with that rhythm.
A shoe that moves with culture
For Bueli Nâjheri, a member of Club Volley, the right shoe is in the details. She notices the small things â like the clip that tucks away the laces in THE ROGER Wildcard. âIt makes the shoe feel really sleek and intentional.âÂ
Theyâve ended up in her daily rotation. Disneyland. Grocery runs. Long convention days. âThey feel supportive but still light,â she adds, âso I wear them to the gym, on the courts, on the track.âÂ
Adonis Heron noticed comfort immediately. âThe soles looked like a mattress,â he laughs. âAnd it feels exactly how it looks.âÂ
For Sammi Gutierrez, the Wildcard adapts to whatever mood sheâs in. âIf I want to be more dramatic, the shoe can handle that with a funky sock or maybe a silly chain,â she says. âOn a more serious day, Iâll keep it simple with a color block or monochrome look.â Â
The flexibility is the point. Tennis fashion no longer switches off when the match ends. Itâs carried through the rest of the day. What you wear on your feet becomes a part of the story long before the first ball is even hit.
The new playground
At Club Volley, the court resists being boxed in. Itâs a social space. A creative space. A place you can enter from the side.Â
The founders imagine people who never saw themselves reflected in tennis, but feel an instant connection the moment they step onto the court: filmmakers, DJs, stylists, designers, photographers, athletes from other sports or people picking up a racket for the first time.Â
âThe next generation of tennis isnât defined by rankings or country clubs,â the founders say. âItâs defined by people who treat the court as a playground for creativity.â
Thatâs the bigger shift â tennis is becoming less about the court itself and more about the cultural movements around it. Old hierarchies are flattening. Participation shouldnât need a specific elitist background. Just curiosity and a willingness to play.
âTennis is no longer confined to courts,â the founders say. âIt lives wherever people gather.â They imagine a future where tennis is belonging-first, rather than performance-first; where courts are activated like parks or galleries; where people discover the sport the same way they find a new artist or restaurant â through vibe, curiosity and whatâs culturally relevant.