Shirts versus skins

In sports, shirts vs skins (or shirts and skins) is a common form of denoting team affiliations in a pick-up game or in school; typically, when played by boys on a public court or field, such as in a city park or schoolyard, or during physical education class or intramural sports at school.

The identification by manner of dress negates the need to remember the division of players among friends, or to learn the faces of strangers in a pick-up game.

The system is most frequently applied to male participants, due to female toplessness taboos.

Alternatively, or at greater female-to-male ratios or when a balance between male and female players is sought, players in pinnies can be recognised by teammates and opponents as 'skins', should such pinnies be available.

At least one prominent charity football event uses blonde versus brunette hair color as an alternative to shirts and skins, with competitors allowed to dye their hair to match their respective team.

five children stand in-frame and another mostly off-frame; three are wearing no shirts, one of whom is swinging a stick at an airborne ball
A stickball game in progress in 1999 in Havana, Cuba