Drake's makes the kind of clothes that are easy to dismiss in a product photo and difficult to put down in person. The Red Stripe Cotton Fatigue Jacket is a reasonable test of that proposition.
The Verdict
At $895, this is a confident, specific garment for a confident, specific person. The candy stripe reads loud in isolation and somehow softens in practice, which is either the point or a gamble depending on your wardrobe and your nerve.
The Make
The jacket is made in Portugal from 100% stone-washed striped cotton, a red and white candy stripe with a dry, slightly rough hand that the brand intends to soften and fade with wear. That's not a disclaimer; it's the design logic. This is a jacket that's supposed to get better as it gets worse, the way good denim does.
Construction follows the fatigue silhouette closely: five outer pockets, including a double chest pocket and Drake's signature peeking ticket pocket, which appears across much of their outerwear and serves as a quiet signal for people who notice that sort of thing. Two internal pockets. Adjustable cuffs. Nothing superfluous, nothing missing. Made in Portugal is consistent with where Drake's routes a portion of their outerwear production, and the build reflects that: tidy but not precious.
What you are not getting at this price is a complex technical shell or any real weather resistance. This is cotton. It will breathe, wrinkle, and eventually develop the kind of patina that looks intentional. Whether that justifies $895 over a similarly cut jacket at half the price depends almost entirely on how much the stripe, the pocket architecture, and the Drake's label matter to you.
The Fit
The cut is relaxed, sizing runs true. Drake's sizes this 36 through 46, so the range is reasonable for most builds. Relaxed here means there is room through the chest and shoulder for a midlayer, though not a heavy one; a thin merino or a shirt in linen is about right. The fatigue silhouette sits at the hip, so it layers cleanly over trousers without bunching. Tall wearers may find the sleeve length on the shorter side; worth checking before ordering.
The Context
The fatigue jacket as a category sits between a shirt jacket and proper outerwear, which makes it genuinely transitional and genuinely limited. This one, with its bold stripe, narrows the use case further. It works in summer and early autumn, with chinos, worn-in denim, or linen trousers in muted colors. It does not work as background noise. Alternatives at this price include Monitaly's fatigue silhouettes in Japanese cotton and Engineered Garments' Bedford jacket, both of which are quieter and arguably more wearable across more situations. Neither has Drake's particular combination of tailoring DNA and casualwear shape.
The Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. Based on the data alone, I'd say it's a piece worth handling in person before committing. The stripe is a 7 out of 10 on the loud scale, which means it will anchor an outfit rather than disappear into one. That's fine, even good, if you build around it. At $895, you're paying for a jacket with a clear point of view. The question is whether that point of view is yours.



