The Dots shirt is the kind of piece that makes you wonder why camp collars ever fell out of fashion, then remember they didn't really, you just stopped noticing them.
The Verdict
At $269, this is one of the more honestly priced shirts in the camp collar category, made by a family that has been running mills in northern Portugal since 1935. The all-over dot pattern reads as a statement at arm's length and softens to texture up close. Worth it, with some caveats about how you plan to wear it.
The Make
The fabric is a 90/10 cotton-polyamide dobby weave, which gives the dot pattern its raised, almost tactile quality. The polyamide content is low enough that this doesn't feel synthetic, but high enough to add a bit of wrinkle resistance that a pure cotton camp shirt often lacks — a considered tradeoff for something you'd want to wear on a warm evening without ironing first. The construction follows what Portuguese Flannel does throughout its lineup: an open camp collar with a loop-close top button, a five-button placket with a sixth loop button at the bottom, mother of pearl shell buttons throughout, and a single chest patch pocket. The straight hem means this wears untucked cleanly. All of it comes out of Guimarães, using fabrics the Magalhães family mills themselves.
A 9 out of 10 on make quality is warranted here. The button quality alone is better than you'll find on shirts twice the price from brands that manufacture in countries with lower labor costs and call it a premium product.
The Fit
Regular fit, true to size across the XS to XXL range. This is not a relaxed boxy cut, but it isn't tailored either. There's enough room through the chest and shoulders to move comfortably, and the straight hem sits at a reasonable length for wearing untucked over lightweight trousers or shorts. If you're between sizes, stay at your usual; there's no documented reason to size up or down.
The Context
At $269, you're competing with the better end of the camp shirt market: Gitman Vintage, Drake's seasonal offerings, and a handful of Japanese labels that hit similar prices for similar construction. What Portuguese Flannel has that most of those don't is genuine vertical integration. These aren't fabrics sourced from a third-party mill and assembled in Portugal for the label. The family owns the textile heritage all the way back. That matters to some buyers; it should matter more than it does.
The dot pattern scores a 7 out of 10 on the loud-to-subtle scale, which is accurate. Navy grounds it, but this is not a background shirt. It will read as the main event in any outfit, which is fine if that's what you want from a camp collar. Layering potential is limited, rated 5 out of 10, which makes sense: this is a warm-weather shirt, worn open or closed, not under anything.
The Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. The data here is from the product page, the Vestis and Merchant Menswear listings, and the broader Portuguese Flannel research file. What I can say is that the brand's shirts hold up in person, and the Dots in navy is the most wearable print in their camp collar rotation this season. If the pattern is one notch too loud for your context, the solid camp collars they make in the same construction are worth a look as a starting point with the brand.



