Men's Physique Board Shorts Colour Guide: What Works on Stage

LearnColour Guide

Men's Physique Board Shorts Colour Guide: What Works on Stage

Written by Ali Bilal — IFBB Elite Pro & Founder of ALITE WEAR

Ali Bilal is an IFBB Elite Pro Men's Physique competitor and founder of ALITE WEAR. He has worn every colour imaginable on stage and knows exactly which choices the lighting, the tan, and the judges reward.

Colour choice is one of the few things in Men's Physique you can control on the day of the competition. You've done the training, the dieting, the posing practice. Your shorts colour is a decision you make weeks out — and it costs you nothing to get right.

Here is what actually works on stage, why it works, and how your skin tone and tan changes the calculation.

Why colour matters more than you think

Under stage lighting, colour behaves differently than it does in a changing room or a photo. Lights wash out pale tones. They intensify contrast. And a competition tan — typically several shades darker than your natural skin — changes what colours read as "sharp" versus "blended"...

The wrong colour doesn't just look off. It can soften the visual separation between your torso and your legs, making your midsection appear less defined than it is. The right colour creates a clean visual break that sharpens your overall presentation.

Colour ratings: stage performance guide

Best choice

Black

Maximum contrast against any competition tan. Slims the waist visually. Works under all stage lighting. The universally safe pick.

Best choice

Navy Blue

Strong contrast against a competition tan. Dark enough to read clearly under stage lights. A popular alternative to black for athletes who want colour without risk.

Good choice

Deep Red / Burgundy

Works well against a medium-to-deep tan. Bold without being distracting. Reads as confident and polished from the judges' table.

Good choice

Royal Blue

Strong enough to stand out under lights. Works best against a deep tan. Can clash with lighter natural skin tones if no tan is applied.

Use with care

Forest Green

Can work against very dark tans but risks blending into warm-toned skin. Test under artificial lighting before committing.

Use with care

Grey

Mid-grey can work in well-lit venues but washes out in others. Light grey especially loses contrast. Dark charcoal is safer.

Avoid

White

Washes out completely under stage lighting. Shows tan transfer immediately. Makes the midsection appear larger. Avoid entirely.

Avoid

Orange / Bronze

Blends directly into a competition tan. Your lower body disappears. One of the most common colour mistakes in Men's Physique.

How your competition tan changes the calculation

This is the part most competitors miss when they're buying shorts months before a show. You're not choosing a colour to wear against your natural skin tone — you're choosing a colour to wear against a competition tan that will make you 3–5 shades darker on show day.

Competition tan depth Best colours Avoid
Light (natural or self-tan) Black, Navy — high contrast still works White, pale pastels, orange
Medium (spray tan, 1–2 coats) Black, Navy, Deep Red, Royal Blue White, orange, tan-adjacent browns
Deep (spray tan, 2–3 coats) All dark colours — black, navy, royal blue, burgundy White, orange, bronze, neons
The backdrop factor

Check what colour backdrop your competition venue uses. A dark backdrop (common in NPC shows) rewards lighter dark colours like navy and deep red. A white or light grey backdrop makes black the strongest contrast choice. If you can't find out in advance, black works on any backdrop.

Patterns: what works and what distracts

Patterns are permitted under NPC and IFBB rules, and they can work — but they require a more specific choice. The rule is: the pattern should frame your physique, not compete with it.

Patterns that work on stage

  • Subtle geometric prints — small repeating geometric shapes on a dark base. Adds visual interest without breaking up your lines.
  • Colour-block side panels — a dark main body with a contrasting side stripe creates a slimming vertical line and enhances the V-taper.
  • Tonal patterns — same-family colours (e.g. black-on-charcoal) create texture without visual noise.

Patterns to avoid

  • Busy tropical or floral prints — pull the eye to the shorts, not the physique. Too much movement in the pattern distracts from your conditioning.
  • High-contrast irregular prints — anything that breaks up the silhouette of the shorts reads as visual noise under stage lights.
  • Camouflage — the pattern is designed to make things harder to see. That's not useful on a competition stage.

Quick decision guide: which colour to choose

  • First competition, no idea what to pick: Black. Every time.
  • You want to stand out slightly but stay safe: Navy blue.
  • You have a deep competition tan and want bold: Royal blue or deep red.
  • Your venue has a dark backdrop: Navy or deep red over black for better separation.
  • You're going to a well-lit venue with a light backdrop: Black for maximum contrast.
Test before show day

Put on your shorts after applying your competition tan (or a similar level of self-tan) and stand in front of a bright light — the closer to stage lighting intensity the better. Take a photo. Check the contrast. This takes ten minutes and eliminates guesswork on show day.

Frequently asked questions

What colour board shorts should I wear for Men's Physique?

Black is the universally safe choice. It contrasts against any competition tan, slims the waist visually, and works under any stage lighting. Navy is a strong second. Bold colours like royal blue and deep red work well for competitors with a deep tan.

Should I wear black or coloured board shorts?

If it's your first competition, wear black. If you've competed before and want to experiment with colour, navy and deep red are the lowest-risk departures. Bold colours require more thought about your tan depth and venue backdrop.

Can I wear patterned board shorts for competition?

Yes. Geometric prints, colour-block designs, and tonal patterns all work. Avoid busy, high-contrast prints that pull the eye away from your physique.

What colours should I avoid?

White (washes out, shows tan transfer), orange and bronze (blend into your tan), neons (too distracting), and pale pastels (lose contrast under lights).

Does skin tone affect my colour choice?

Your natural skin tone matters less than your competition tan depth. After a full spray tan, most athletes are in the medium-to-deep brown range — which means dark colours like black, navy, and deep red will always provide strong contrast.

Every Colour. Built for the Stage.

ALITE WEAR board shorts are available in black, navy, and a rotating selection of stage-tested colours — all in opaque performance fabric, all competition compliant.

Shop Board Shorts Full Board Shorts Guide

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