The crew neck is the most democratic piece in menswear and also the most abused. Every brand makes one. Most of them are wrong in ways that take a few wears to fully reveal: the neck that stretches out, the fabric that pills after two washes, the fit that looked fine on the model and looks like a sack on an actual person. We’ve been through enough of them to know what separates a crew neck that becomes a wardrobe staple from one that gets quietly retired by February.
What we were looking for here is simple enough to say and harder to find than it should be. A neck that sits clean without being tight. A weight that works over a shirt or under a jacket without adding bulk. Fabric that improves with wear rather than surrendering to it. Color options that go beyond grey marl and navy, though both are well represented because they earn their place.
These are the ones worth the drawer space.