A $425 camp collar shirt built around a Tokyo artist's print is either a very good idea or a very expensive way to find out you don't like camp collars. Drake's makes the case for the former, mostly.
The Verdict
This shirt earns its price if you know what you're buying: a considered artist collaboration in printed cotton poplin, made in Portugal, with mother of pearl buttons and a cut generous enough to wear untucked without looking like you forgot your belt. It is not for everyone. Versatility is not the point.
The Make
The fabric is 100% cotton poplin printed with a motif by Mayumi Yamase, a Tokyo-based artist whose work leans toward the kind of graphic pattern that reads as print-forward without tipping into novelty. Poplin sits lighter and crisper than Oxford cloth, which means this shirt is better suited to warmer months than a year-round rotation. Mother of pearl buttons rather than standard resin ones, which is a small detail that matters at this price. There's a single chest patch pocket visible in product photography. Construction is Portuguese, not Drake's own Somerset factory in Chard, which handles much of their core shirting. That's worth noting but not necessarily a problem. Portugal has produced clean garment work for European labels for decades, and the finishing here looks consistent with the price.
The Fit
The cut is relaxed, and the straight hem means it works worn open over a t-shirt or tucked loosely into wide-leg trousers. Sizing runs true. The XS-XL range is standard. Camp collar shirts tend to reward a slightly broader shoulder and a chest that fills the upper body without pulling; if you're between sizes, go true. The short sleeve length is fixed, so check the product measurements if you have longer arms.
The Context
At $425, this sits at the upper end of what printed cotton shirts typically fetch anywhere. The print and the artist collaboration are carrying real weight in that number. Comparable options exist from Engineered Garments or Gitman Vintage at roughly half the price, with their own print programs. What Drake's offers over those is the specific Yamase motif and the brand's design coherence, which is real. The layering score here is higher than it might seem: a camp collar shirt worn open over a plain white crew in heavier cotton can carry into early autumn without much effort.
The Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. Based on the spec and Drake's track record on their printed shirting, this is the kind of shirt that photographs well and wears slightly harder to style than it looks in the lookbook. The print is doing significant work. If you already own a camp collar shirt you reach for regularly, this one is worth considering. If you don't, start there first.



