There’s a certain expectation when it comes to Masters style. It should feel elevated but never loud, polished but never stiff. Augusta doesn’t reward peacocking. It rewards control. This year, Peter Millar leans all the way into that idea, dressing its roster in looks that trade flash for nuance and let fabric, fit, and color do the talking.
Across Sam Burns, Cameron Young, and Ryan Gerard, the playbook is clear. Keep the palette grounded in spring-ready neutrals. Layer with intention. And when you do introduce color, make it feel like it belongs to the landscape. What Peter Millar is doing here is less about statement outfits and more about building a cohesive identity. This is golf style that understands where the game is right now.
The throughline is consistency. Elevated basics. Thoughtful layering. Fabrics that carry as much weight as color. It’s a wardrobe built for four days at Augusta, but it easily translates beyond the ropes.
Cameron Young: Pastels Without the Cliché
Cameron Young’s lineup could have easily leaned too sweet. Pastels at Augusta can go sideways fast. Instead, this is how you do it right.
The tones are softened, not saturated. Orange sorbet, willow, and white play together in a way that feels airy but grounded. The key is how they’re styled. Anchored by sharp, tailored trousers in navy and grey, the looks never drift into overly seasonal territory.
The Surge Performance Trouser is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. Clean lines, a proper taper, and just enough technical performance to keep things functional without looking overly athletic. It’s the kind of pant that works just as well off the course, which is exactly the point.
Layering rotates between the Stealth Quarter-Zip early in the week and merino-based pieces through the weekend. That transition from technical to natural fibers is subtle but smart. As the tournament progresses, the fits feel softer, more relaxed, more in tune with Sunday afternoon energy.
Sam Burns: Soft Power in Navy and Pink

Sam Burns is working in a palette that feels right at home under Augusta’s canopy. Navy anchors everything, but it’s the subtle injections of pink that give the lineup its personality.
Thursday is the headline moment. The Mariner Sea Island Cotton sweater polo isn’t just a flex, it’s a statement about where golf style is heading. Ultra-luxury fabrication, heritage sourcing, and a silhouette that blurs the line between classic and contemporary. It’s the kind of piece that doesn’t scream for attention but gets it anyway.
From there, Burns settles into a rhythm. Crisp white performance polos. Tailored five-pocket pants in rotation. Clean, modern, and quietly dialed. The Bingham pant continues to prove why five-pocket styling has taken over fairways. It reads more lifestyle than traditional golf, and that shift matters.
Layering is where things get interesting. The Winsome hybrid and the occasional crewneck bring texture without bulk. Nothing feels forced. Everything feels considered.
Ryan Gerard: Texture Play and Under-the-Radar Luxury

Ryan Gerard might have the most interesting lineup of the three, purely off texture alone.
There’s a quiet confidence in how his looks come together. Performance jersey and cotton piqué polos keep things familiar up top, but the layering pieces shift the conversation. The Valencia Escorial wool full-zip on Friday is the kind of garment that insiders notice immediately. Escorial wool isn’t common, and that rarity brings a level of depth you can’t fake.
Color-wise, Gerard stays in a slightly warmer lane. Faded scarlet, biscotti, oatmeal. These tones feel sun-washed and natural, like they’ve already spent time in the Georgia heat. It’s a subtle move, but it separates his looks from the cooler palettes worn by Burns and Young.
The Surge trouser shows up again, reinforcing just how central that silhouette has become. Clean, versatile, and modern without trying too hard.
