With a week-plus of Wimbledon in the books, here's our latest edition of sartorial sleuthing, in which we round up the best- and worst-dressed on court at this, the season's only Grand Slam event where predominantly white threads win out.

Tommy Robredo's Sergio Tacchini attire: Classic, with great green trim to put some subtle pop in it. Whereas others opted for blasé, even boring all-white, Robredo put some fun into his look. Good on him, the Spin's best dressed ATP player at Wimbledon 2014.

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

Tomas Berdych scores points just for sporting H&M's short shorts that amplify his powerful legs and hark back to the 1970s. He says he's most comfortable in them. No one who saw ESPN The Magazine's Body Issue is complaining.

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

Venus Williams looks glamorous in see-through shoulder panels that make her EleVen by Venus dress intriguing. Too bad it's been reduced to doubles-only display now.

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

Petra Kvitova's Nike polo look befits her, as it often does Li Na. Suffice it to say, the Spin digs preppy Petra.

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

Well, fancy that: A flattering silhouette makes Caroline Wozniacki's adidas dress, all white, one of her best looks ever.

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

Uniqlo continues to outfit Novak Djokovic in great collared shirts. It's hard to tell here, but the Spin thinks his knee-length shorts need to come up a bit, though not to Berdych-level shortness, really. Someone as mobile and bendy as Djokovic just requires that sort of movement allowance.

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

As long as he's active on tour, Roger Federer never fails to reveal the best-fitting polo on any man competing in the Slam at hand. Kudos, Nike.

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

Alize Cornet's Lacoste look is a lot like Venus's dress, but with a button-up collar. Stylish and classy, it's a great look for one who pulled the upset of the tournament to date (and, unsurprisingly, lost in the next round).

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

Though it hovered around doily status, Camila Giorgi's dress ended up being a lovely look, girlish and soft, though "soft" not being a word anyone would ever use about her strokes. Even better: It appears to be from her mother's own sewing machine, in keeping with her quasi-doily white frocks from past years.

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

This is major: What should be a fail-safe gig—dressing Maria Kirilenko—became a fashion disaster. How adidas blew it is beyond me, but it almost looks like she was initially to don a Mariah Carey-esque midriff revealing top with the skirt, and then opted out of that, adding a white tank under it. But who's to know? The classed-up, collared tank is great until it gets to that ruffle (and everything below it). What a waste of talent.

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

Remember when Maria Sharapova took chances with style? This, for Nike, is not it. Anyone else longing for yesteryear's tux-tank and shorts look?

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

Serena Williams was bounced by Cornet, and that forsaken hemline went with her. Nike should really reevaluate that cut; in more ways than one, it's not proving a winner.

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

Simona Halep, wearing whited-out adidas logos, remains stuck in sartorial purgatory.

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

Rafael Nadal's Nike gear is a flat-out yawner. You'll find me over in the corner, missing his days of plaid-pattern shorts (and perhaps, at this point, even those pantalons).

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

Pity Vera Zvonareva. She deserves better from Fila, even when it's got to be a white motif, but she still wins in the hearts of many fans with her patent on that most common of accessories known as the towel.

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

In closing, just say no to Romina Oprandi's Lotto skirt.

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The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

The White Album: Wimbledon Fashion Winners & Losers

Got a tip or a point to make? Hit me on Twitter at @jonscott9.