Wax London has built most of its reputation on prints and texture. The Keats in blue seersucker is where those two instincts converge into something genuinely useful for summer.
The Verdict
At $155, this is a considered warm-weather shirt that earns its price without asking you to think too hard about it. It is not the most technically impressive thing at this price point, but the fabric choice is honest and the silhouette is right.
The Make
The shirt is 100% cotton seersucker, made in Tunisia. Seersucker works through a weaving tension difference that creates the characteristic puckered, crinkled surface. That pucker is structural, not a finish, so it holds through repeated washing as long as you keep it out of the tumble dryer. The result is a fabric that sits off the skin, breathes well in heat, and looks intentionally rumpled rather than neglected.
Construction notes are straightforward. There are no unusual details here: the Keats is a clean short-sleeve shirt without patch pockets or extraneous hardware. What you are paying for is the fabric and the cut, not the buttons or the collar construction. At a make quality score of 6 out of 10, it sits comfortably in the mid-tier, better than fast fashion, short of anything with hand-finishing or notable collar structure.
The Fit
The cut is boxy and relaxed, which suits seersucker well. A structured fit would fight the fabric; this one works with it. Sizing runs true, and the XS-XXL range covers most bodies. If you are between sizes and prefer a slightly cropped look, size down. If you want it to billow slightly over trousers, stay true. The boxy silhouette reads modern without being oversized to the point of shapelessness.
The Context
This shirt sits in a category with Corridor, Drake's lighter summer pieces, and Gitman Vintage's seersucker offerings. Gitman's construction is a step above at a similar or slightly higher price. Drake's will cost you significantly more. For a buyer who wants the seersucker texture and the relaxed summer silhouette without climbing to $250 or above, the Keats makes a reasonable argument.
Wax London's fabric-first approach is most visible here. Blue seersucker is not a risky choice, but it is the right one: the pattern reads as subtle at a glance (a 3 out of 10 on visual loudness) while the texture gives it enough character that it does not disappear into the background. It travels well, resists wrinkles by design, and layers over a plain tee in cooler evenings without looking forced.
The Personal Note
I have not worn this one personally. Based on the specs and Wax London's track record with fabric sourcing, the Keats looks like a reliable summer shirt rather than a remarkable one. If you are already in the Wax London ecosystem, it fits logically. If you are coming in fresh and debating between this and Gitman's seersucker offerings, spend the extra $40 and notice the collar construction. If $155 is already the ceiling, the Keats will not disappoint you.



