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Shirts That Go With Most Things

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Claire's Picks

Shirts That Go With Most Things

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Corduroy Shirts That Don't Look Cheap
33 items

Corduroy Shirts That Don't Look Cheap

Corduroy shirts have a cheap version problem and it is everywhere. The thin, floppy ones in polyester blends that lose their wale after two washes and bag out at the elbows before winter is over. We've seen enough of them to know exactly what goes wrong, and it usually starts with the cord weight. A good corduroy shirt should have some body to it. Enough that it functions almost like a light jacket when worn open, and holds its shape when buttoned up with a collar that lies flat. The color matters too. Washed out or overly saturated and the whole thing slides toward costume. The best options sit in that middle ground where the fabric does the talking without shouting. We've been looking specifically at shirts with a heavier wale, proper button quality, and enough structure through the chest to wear tucked or untucked without looking like an afterthought. These are the ones worth the money.

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Crepe Shirts Worth the Slightly Higher Price
35 items

Crepe Shirts Worth the Slightly Higher Price

Most men have never owned a crepe shirt and that is genuinely a gap worth fixing. The fabric sits in a very specific place that plain poplin and Oxford cloth cannot reach. It has texture without being casual, drape without being fussy, and a surface that moves well enough to earn its place at dinner or a slightly elevated weekend situation. It also travels better than almost anything else in a shirt drawer, which matters more than it sounds. The price step up from a basic cotton shirt is real, but it buys you something that looks considerably more considered with almost no additional effort. We have been particularly interested in pieces with clean collars that work with a blazer but do not demand one, and colors that hold their own without needing to prove anything. The ones here justify the spend clearly. You will not look at your other shirts the same way afterward.

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Denim Shirts That Hold Their Shape
35 items

Denim Shirts That Hold Their Shape

Most denim shirts fail in the same way. They look fine on the hanger, decent enough in the first few wears, and then they go limp. The collar loses its structure, the chest pockets start to sag, and what was once a considered piece starts to look like something you throw on to paint a fence. The fabric weight is almost always the culprit. Too light and it has no body. Too stiff and it never breaks in properly. We've been looking specifically for denim shirts that sit in the right middle ground. Ones with enough weight to hold their shape through repeated washing but enough softness to wear comfortably untucked over a t-shirt or open over a crewneck in cooler weather. The construction around the collar and placket matters more than most people realize. These are shirts we'd wear with chinos, with workwear trousers, with jeans in a tonal way that actually works. Built to last and to look better for it.

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Satin Shirts That Justify the Fuss
33 items

Satin Shirts That Justify the Fuss

Most men write off satin shirts because they've seen them done badly. Too shiny, too loose, worn with the wrong trousers to the wrong occasion, and suddenly the whole category gets a reputation it doesn't deserve. We think that's a shame, because a well-cut satin shirt is one of the sharpest things you can wear when the occasion calls for something more considered than cotton. The fabric does something no other shirt material does. It catches light without announcing itself, adds a quiet formality that works for evenings out, and sits flat against the body in a way that rewards a good fit. The key is weight and finish. A heavier satin drapes properly. A lighter one just looks cheap under real lighting. The shirts in here have the structure to back up the sheen. Worn open over a white tee or tucked into tailored trousers, they pull their weight. The fuss, it turns out, is worth it.

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Silk Shirts That Don't Look Cheap
35 items

Silk Shirts That Don't Look Cheap

Silk shirts have a credibility problem that has everything to do with the wrong ones being everywhere. Too shiny, too loose, too obviously trying to signal something. The cheap versions look like they belong at a resort pool in 2003 and the category has been fighting that association ever since. The good news is that the right silk shirt is one of the best things you can add to a warm weather wardrobe or a going out rotation. The difference comes down to weave weight, how the collar behaves without a tie, and whether the color reads as considered or costume. We have been through a lot of them. The ones in here are cut properly, use silk that has some body to it rather than that liquid drape that photographs badly in person, and work as well tucked into tailored trousers as they do worn open over a white tee. These are the ones worth wearing.

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Viscose Shirts That Justify the Fuss
35 items

Viscose Shirts That Justify the Fuss

Viscose gets dismissed more than it deserves, usually by men who've only encountered the cheap version. The cheap version pills, clings in the wrong places, and goes shapeless after two wears. We understand the skepticism. But the better viscose shirts are a different conversation entirely. The fabric has a natural drape that cotton simply cannot match, a slight sheen that reads as intentional rather than shiny, and a weight that makes it ideal for warmer weather and travel where linen would wrinkle beyond recovery before you've even checked in. What we've been looking for specifically is construction that justifies the material. Clean seams, collars that hold their shape, cuts that fall correctly whether tucked or not. Viscose rewards a good shirt pattern in ways that cheaper fabrics hide. The shirts in this collection are the ones that changed our minds about the fabric, and we think they'll do the same for you. The fuss, it turns out, is warranted.

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Voile Shirts That Actually Earn Their Keep
26 items

Voile Shirts That Actually Earn Their Keep

Hot weather is where a lot of men's wardrobes quietly give up. The heavier shirts that work everywhere else just stop working. You need something lighter, something with actual airflow built into the fabric, and voile is the answer most men haven't tried yet. The problem is that voile done badly looks like a mistake. Too sheer, too flimsy, cut like an afterthought. You end up looking underdressed in a way that reads as careless rather than relaxed. The ones we've pulled together here avoid all of that. We've been looking specifically at shirts where the construction is tight enough to hold shape, the collar behaves with or without a button fastened, and the fabric has enough body to layer lightly over a plain tee when the evening cools down. These are the shirts that make real sense in summer heat without conceding anything on how you look. The right voile shirt is not a compromise.

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