A $75 t-shirt from a London label that built its reputation on fabric before everything else. The Dean earns its place in the lineup.
The Verdict
This is the kind of t-shirt that looks better in person than in photos, which is a rarer quality than it sounds. At $75, the slub texture does enough work that you could skip the overshirt.
The Make
The Dean is cut from 100% organic slub cotton, and the slub is the whole point. The yarn is spun with deliberate irregularity, producing a surface that catches light inconsistently and reads as a little more considered than a plain jersey. It is not dramatic. On the loud-to-subtle scale, this sits at a 3. You have to be looking for it, which is the correct amount.
Construction details beyond the basics are not published by Wax London, which is worth noting. What you can verify: crew neck, single chest patch pocket, regular fit. The pocket is small, sits high, and serves mostly as a visual anchor. The organic certification adds something to the sourcing story without changing how the shirt wears.
Country of origin is not disclosed, though Wax London's general manufacturing philosophy leans on vetted South Asian production partners as part of their stated fabric-first sourcing process. That context is useful, even if the specific garment label isn't.
The Fit
Regular fit, true to size across a range of XS to XXL. This is not a boxy drop-shoulder cut and not a slim fit with armholes that restrict movement. It sits in the middle, which makes it genuinely useful for layering. The proportions work open under a camp-collar shirt or closed under a light overshirt without bunching at the shoulder seam. The layering score here is a 9, and that tracks: the slub texture provides just enough surface interest that the base layer isn't invisible, and just enough drape that it doesn't fight whatever's on top.
The Context
Wax London positions this in the same category as Corridor's slub tees and Sunspel's plain jerseys, though it splits the difference in register. Sunspel is cleaner and more expensive. Corridor leans American workwear. The Dean is neither, which is fine. At $75 it is not the cheapest slub cotton t-shirt you can find, but organic certification and a fabric-first brand philosophy move the price into reasonable territory. The patch pocket differentiates it from blanker options at the same price, for better or worse depending on how you feel about pocket tees.
The Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. The score sheet puts make quality at a 6, which feels right for what's published: honest construction, no verifiable standout details, a fabric choice that does the heavy lifting. If you want a t-shirt that repays slightly closer attention without announcing itself, this is a reasonable place to spend $75. If you need to know every construction detail before buying, Wax London isn't going to give you that satisfaction.



