A $375 short-sleeve shirt in khaki linen is a specific proposition, and Drake's knows it. This is the kind of thing that rewards the person who already has the basics covered and is looking for something considered rather than obvious.
The Verdict
This is a well-made summer shirt for someone who doesn't need it explained to them. At $375, the construction justifies the price, but the khaki colorway and military detailing do the narrowing for you — this is not for everybody, and Drake's isn't pretending it is.
The Make
The fabric is 100% Japanese linen, garment-washed before it reaches you. That matters in practice: it means less stiffness out of the box, less shrinkage risk after washing, and a texture that reads worn-in rather than starchy from day one. Linen at this weight breathes as you'd expect it to, which is why Drake's keeps coming back to Japanese mills for summer shirting.
Construction details are thorough without being showy. The camp collar is properly soft, laying flat at rest and opening cleanly at the chest without gaping. Chest pockets sit behind button flaps with a gusset, so they're functional rather than decorative. The yoke is cut from a single piece of cloth, the hem is straight, and the cuffs follow suit. Corozo buttons throughout, which hold their sheen and don't crack. Made in Portugal, not at Drake's own Somerset factory (that's reserved for their core dress shirting), but the execution is clean.
The Fit
Regular cut, and it runs true to size. This is not a boxy drop-shoulder situation, but it's not slim either. There's enough room through the chest and torso to wear untucked without it becoming a sail. The straight hem reinforces that intention. Knife pleats at the back yoke give a small amount of movement when you need it. XS through XXL available, which is a wider run than Drake's offers on some of their more limited pieces.
The Context
At $375, you're paying for fabric sourcing, construction detail, and the Drake's name doing its quiet work. The closest comparison at a lower price is probably the Corridor camp collar linen shirt, which sits closer to $200 and is worth considering if you're unsure about the commitment. At the higher end, you're looking at De Bonne Facture or Luca Faloni territory, where the price goes up without the construction necessarily following. Drake's sits in a reasonable middle: not a bargain, not a reach.
The military detailing — the pocket flaps, the khaki, the straight hem — keeps this out of pure resort territory. It reads more Tangier than Mykonos, if that distinction matters to you. It should.
The Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. Going on the construction notes and Drake's track record with their Japanese linen pieces, I'd size true and machine wash it cool without anxiety. The khaki is specific enough that you either see yourself in it or you don't. If the answer is yes, the shirt will do what you're imagining.



