WASHINGTON — Out of style, out of position, out of order.

Definitely not out of sight, however.

Aaron Judge is no longer the beau of the ball at Major League Baseball’s premier summer event. Far more important, he remains a recognized elite player in his sophomore year. The Yankees’ gentle giant, the one American League starter from baseball’s second-best club, will patrol left field and hit sixth in Tuesday night’s All-Star Game at Nationals Park.

“It’s special,” Judge said Monday. “We had a team meeting, and [AL manager] A.J. [Hinch] kind of went around the room and mentioned some of the first-timers. And some of them, they’ve gone 10 years in the league and getting their first All-Star Game, 12 years in the league and getting their first All-Star Game.

“For me to get my second one in my second year, I still can’t believe it. I still keep pinching myself over here. I don’t think it’s real.”

It’s real, and it’s spectacular. If his .296/.392/.544 slash line, with 25 homers in 351 at-bats, falls short of the levels he reached last year as one of the league’s all-time best rookies, they still rank him among the industry leaders and make him a deserving honoree.

He just didn’t dominate the scene as he did last year, when he received more votes than any other AL player, won the Home Run Derby and hit third while starting in right field.

No Derby this time, not after his 2017 title came with the high price of a left shoulder injury that required surgery after the season. And Judge will hit sixth and start in left field, where he hasn’t played in the major leagues, although he spent seven games there with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre in 2016.

“I’m ready for it,” he insisted.

No one doubts him. It’s just that not as many are documenting him.