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Tennis Proby Lucia Heffernan
23" x 27" Framed Art Frame
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Keep Your Eye on the Ballby Lisa Danielle
33" x 19" Framed Artwork Frame
Sporting XIIby Naomi McCavitt
16" x 19" Framed Artwork Frame
Sporting Xby Naomi McCavitt
16" x 19" Framed Artwork Frame
Patchwork Athlete IVby Regina Moore
19" x 25" Framed Art Frame
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Patented Sport IVby Studio W
23" x 27" Framed Art Frame
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Round Robinby Lucia Heffernan
23" x 23" Framed Art Frame
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Sign for Royal Tennis Court (1875), Tasmania, Australiaby David Wall / Danita Delimont
24" x 33" Framed Photograph Frame
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Close-up of a tennis ball stuck in a fence, San Francisco, California, USAby Panoramic Images
43" x 19" Framed Photograph Frame
Close-up of a tennis ball stuck in a fence, San Francisco, California, USAby Panoramic Images
34" x 16" Framed Photograph Frame
Stadium in a city, Sports Authority Field at Mile High, Denver, Denver County, Coloradoby Panoramic Images
43" x 19" Framed Photograph Frame
Power - Tennis Playerby T.C. Chiu
24" x 30" Motivational Framed Art Frame
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Framed Tennis Art
Unlike team sports, where players depend on their teammates to win, tennis makes it extremely important to focus at the task at hand and play as well as you can. Athletes feel the enormous pressure weighing on their shoulders, but when they triumph they are entitled to take credit for their achievements.
Their success is celebrated through framed tennis posters at FramedArt.com, featuring athletes as they lift the trophy or score the decisive point in games of critical importance.
The racquet sport was invented in Birmingham England, more than a century ago and it used to go by the name of lawn tennis. The rules haven’t changed at all since then, with players being rewarded for putting the ball in the opposing field while preventing the other player from returning. The introduction of the tiebreak rules in the 1970s and the requirement for the server to keep one foot on the ground all the time are the only changes and they occurred many decades ago.
The somewhat awkward scoring system puzzles many beginners, but once they pick up the rules, tennis players will have no problem in keeping the score. The framed tennis posters bring in the spotlight famous players, but also athletes that are currently playing in Grand Slam tournaments. Tom Purvis has a slightly different approach and his framed tennis posters are featuring a solitary player sitting idle with his racket in hand. The Harper’s Weekly Tennis series has a vintage look to it and the black-and-white photographs look authentic and create a powerful impression on the audience.
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