Seersucker is one of those fabrics that feels either exactly right or slightly wrong depending on the man wearing it. The Short Sleeve Jack tries to split that difference, and mostly succeeds.
The Verdict
At $128, this is a well-priced warm-weather shirt with enough considered construction to justify the buy, though the Indonesian origin and a 6/10 make quality put a ceiling on what you should expect from it.
The Make
The fabric is 100% organic cotton seersucker, garment dyed and washed, which gives it an immediate softness rather than that stiff, just-out-of-the-bolt texture that makes new seersucker feel like a costume. The steel blue stripe reads calm without disappearing entirely. Double-needle felled seams are the right call here: they're flat against the body, don't fray, and hold up to repeated machine washing without turning into tissue. A single rounded chest pocket sits where it should, small enough not to dominate the front. The Jack collar is a button-down with a gentle roll, which is the correct amount of structure for this category of shirt. Construction is made in Indonesia, which is honest for this price tier, and the organic cotton is GOTS-certified if that matters to you.
What you don't get at $128 is shell buttons, a split yoke, or any meaningful handwork. The construction is clean and functional, not precious.
The Fit
Taylor Stitch cuts this slim, and the sizing runs true. For most men that means ordering your usual size. The 9-inch sleeve from shoulder is short, which is the point: this is a summer shirt, not a hybrid. On broader shoulders the sleeve will sit higher, closer to 8.5 inches. If you carry weight in the chest, go up one. The garment-washed fabric has very little shrink left in it, so what arrives is roughly what you keep.
The Context
At this price, the comparison set includes Billy Reid's seersucker offerings (more expensive, better buttons, made in the US), Onia (similar price, more resort-leaning), and the gap where J.Crew used to live before they started making things that fall apart in the dryer. The Taylor Stitch sits closer to that last slot: casual, durable, unpretentious. It scores an 8/10 for travel, which tracks. Seersucker doesn't wrinkle in any meaningful way, machine wash cold works in a hotel sink, and the fabric dries fast.
This shirt makes sense in rotation alongside chinos, worn open over a white crewneck, or packed for a long weekend. It doesn't make sense as a dress shirt or paired with a blazer unless the context is extremely relaxed.
The Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. Based on the research, it's the kind of shirt I'd buy for a summer trip and not think twice about. The Workshop pre-order at a discount would be the right way to do it. At full price, it's still fair, but not exceptional.



