In pictures: Was skiing better in the olden days?

children skiing - Switzerland Tourism/Carl Brandt, Kulturarchiv Arosa
children skiing - Switzerland Tourism/Carl Brandt, Kulturarchiv Arosa

It’s been a ski season to remember, for both the right, and sometimes wrong, reasons. British skiers and snowboarders have been more eager than ever to hit the slopes. After a turbulent start, plagued by border closures and Covid restrictions, as the season enters its final weeks the sun is shining, the snow remains strong and skiers are back to doing what they love most.

There’s never been a better time to celebrate all that is wonderful (and sometimes weird) about ski holidays. A flick through the archive is an inspiring reminder of the rich, varied and sometimes absurd history of our favourite winter pastime. From one-poled pursuits at the turn of the twentieth century to wild fashion statements decades later, skiing has long been forging its own track whether it be through architecture or on the sporting circuit.

Sit back, pour yourself a Gluhwein and join us on a trip through skiing’s somewhat colourful past.

Forget Gore-Tex, high-tech skis and GoPro cameras, in the olden days skiing was a smart affair

swiss skiers - Switzerland Tourism
swiss skiers - Switzerland Tourism

The women in early 20th-century Austria dressed appropriately for the era

women skiing - Zdarsky Ski Museum
women skiing - Zdarsky Ski Museum

Mathias Zdarsky was once described as the "father of alpine skiing" and was one of the first ski instructors in Austria, here he is with one of his first students, looking somewhat nervous about the lesson ahead

Nationalbibliothek Wien - Nationalbibliothek Wien
Nationalbibliothek Wien - Nationalbibliothek Wien

Yes, skiing with one pole was once a thing – luckily equipment has developed a lot since this young man took his first turns on the slopes in Slovenia in the 1950s. Snowplough, the first move every beginner learns, however, has lasted the test of time.

slovenia skier - Getty
slovenia skier - Getty

Skiers have long been stripping off as soon as the sun comes out in spring – one lady did it in style in Arosa, Switzerland in 1940

skiing woman - Switzerland Tourism/Ernst A. Heiniger 
skiing woman - Switzerland Tourism/Ernst A. Heiniger

While in Norway in the 1980s a glacier turned into a beach during the summer ski season

summer skiing - Getty/Bo Zaunders
summer skiing - Getty/Bo Zaunders

This young lady had a ball

summer skiing - Getty/Bo Zaunders
summer skiing - Getty/Bo Zaunders

Teaching children the joy of skiing has long been a family tradition in the mountains – one Norwegian toddler lived life on the edge in 1962

child skiing - Getty/Chris Ware
child skiing - Getty/Chris Ware

The Swiss have always been a fan of starting them young too – this pair of rascals in Arosa, Switzerland are smartly dressed for their day at ski school

children skiing - Switzerland Tourism/Carl Brandt, Kulturarchiv Arosa
children skiing - Switzerland Tourism/Carl Brandt, Kulturarchiv Arosa

Freestyle skiing might have only got its moment in the global spotlight in recent years, but it’s been around for decades – this chap in Mürren, Switzerland, proves just that

freestyle skiing - Switzerland Tourism
freestyle skiing - Switzerland Tourism

Things really skyrocketed in the 1980s – a freestyle competitor threw shapes in true head-band-wearing style on Blackcomb mountain, now Whistler Blackcomb, in Canada

freestyle ski - Getty
freestyle ski - Getty

Fresh tracks are just as thrilling whatever the year – on Mount Norquay in Banff National Park, Canada, a skier prepared for the World Ski Championships in fresh powder in 1937

banff - Getty/Underwood Archives
banff - Getty/Underwood Archives

Major events have long inspired people to go on ski holidays – the Winter Olympic Games first took place in Chamonix in 1924, the American skating team were poised ready for the podium, unfortunately (for them) the Scandinavian countries dominated the medal table

winter olympics - Getty
winter olympics - Getty

It’s not just the competitors who enjoyed themselves at these events either. At the Games in Squaw Valley, America, in 1960 a group of spectators rode a Tucker Sno-Cat to watch the action

Squaw Valley - Getty/The LIFE Picture Collection
Squaw Valley - Getty/The LIFE Picture Collection

It’s nice to remember ski holidays aren’t just about, well, skiing. In Arosa, Switzerland, locals enjoy a spot on curling in the 1930s

arosa curling - Switzerland Tourism/ Carl Brandt 
arosa curling - Switzerland Tourism/ Carl Brandt

Ski holidays have always been a excuse for friends and fellow enthusiast to gather – and pose with the locals

ski group - Erna Low
ski group - Erna Low

Austrian-born pioneer Erna Low is largely responsible for introducing Britons to ski holidays – her company has been taking groups to the mountains since the 1930s

ski mobile - Erna Low
ski mobile - Erna Low

When it comes to resort infrastructure, drag lifts have been provoking anxiety in skiers for many years – this group was waiting to take a hair-raising T-bar ride up the Flexenpass in Lech, Austria in 1937

lech - Doppelmayr Seilbahnen GmbH
lech - Doppelmayr Seilbahnen GmbH

Things weren't much easier in Sedrun, Switzerland

drag lift - Erna Low
drag lift - Erna Low

In the 1950s gondolas in Austria, like this one in Mellau in the Vorarlberg, were a far cry from the space-age modern engineering seen today

mellau - Doppelmayr Seilbahnen GmbH
mellau - Doppelmayr Seilbahnen GmbH

By the time the 1960s and 70s swung into action ski resorts architecture took an art-decor turn with the rise of purpose-built resorts in France, such as La Plagne

la plagne - La Plagne
la plagne - La Plagne

Flaine was another concrete jungle that sprung into life in the French Alps, pictured here in 1968

Flaine - Erna Low
Flaine - Erna Low

The interior decor was a modernist’s dream

La Plagne - La Plagne/Jean Biaugeaud
La Plagne - La Plagne/Jean Biaugeaud

And the fashion worthy of a place on the pages of Vogue

flaine skiers - Erna Low
flaine skiers - Erna Low

Even Royalty used the slopes as a catwalk – the Prince and Princess Of Wales and the Duke and Duchess Of York were regularly visitors to the Swiss slopes in Klosters in the 1980s

prince of wales - Getty/Tim Graham
prince of wales - Getty/Tim Graham