Seersucker in January feels wrong. In May, in Lisbon, or on a porch somewhere warm, this shirt makes a reasonable argument for itself.
The Verdict
At $130, the Atlantico Stripe is a well-made, honest summer shirt from a brand that actually owns the mills. It is not a statement piece. It is the shirt you reach for when it's too hot to think about clothes.
The Make
Portuguese Flannel makes everything in and around Guimarães, the city that has anchored Portuguese textile production for generations. The family has been in the business since 1935, and the Atlantico is a reminder that long institutional memory shows up in the details. The fabric is 100% cotton seersucker, green and white stripe, with that characteristic puckered surface that comes from tension-differential weaving rather than a surface treatment. It breathes. The buttons are mother-of-pearl, which you don't always get at this price, and they sit flush without gapping. The button-down collar is stitched down cleanly, and a single chest patch pocket gives the shirt enough structure to look considered rather than casual.
There are no linen blends here, no synthetic stretch. Pure cotton seersucker, which means it wrinkles freely and doesn't apologize for it.
The Fit
Regular cut, true to size across the XS-XXL range. This is not a slim-cut shirt trying to be a regular cut. The chest and shoulders have room to move, the hem falls at the right length for a relaxed tuck, and the sleeves hit a standard length without the boxy excess you get from brands that treat "regular" as a euphemism for "large." If you're between sizes, stay with your usual. The cotton relaxes slightly after washing, but not enough to matter.
Care is straightforward: machine wash cold, hang or tumble dry low. Seersucker is one of the few fabrics that looks better slightly rumpled, so ironing is optional and arguably counterproductive.
The Context
The Atlantico sits in the lighter half of Portuguese Flannel's lineup, which leans heavily toward fall and winter weights. At $130, it competes with offerings from Drake's and Corridor, both of which produce summer shirts in a similar register. Drake's equivalent runs $40-60 more and is cut slightly slimmer. Corridor's seersucker shirts are comparable in price but made in the US from Japanese fabrics, a different provenance story. Neither is strictly better. The Portuguese Flannel version has a warmer, more relaxed point of view, closer to a weekend shirt than an office-adjacent one. The green stripe reads as a 4 on a 10-point scale of conspicuousness. Most people will register it as a striped shirt before they register it as a statement.
The Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. The rating data is enough to place it accurately: good construction, a shirt for warm weather and low-stakes situations, made by people who know what they're doing. The mother-of-pearl buttons on a $130 shirt are the kind of detail that usually disappears in the margin analysis. The fact that they're still here says something about where Portuguese Flannel puts its priorities.



