A camp-collar shirt with ecru doodles blanket-stitched across the chest is either exactly what you're looking for or a hard no. Wax London is banking on the former, and at $117, they're not asking you to take much of a risk finding out.
The Verdict
This is a characterful warm-weather shirt that earns its visual interest through actual construction detail rather than a digital print. The price is right for what you get. The question is whether you have anywhere to wear it.
The Make
The fabric is an 86% cotton, 14% linen blend, made in India. That linen ratio is low enough that you won't get much of the natural drape and texture that makes a linen shirt worth buying, but it keeps the weight light and the hand soft without the wrinkle penalty. The result is somewhere between a casual cotton and a linen-adjacent summer fabric: decent, unpretentious, honest about what it is.
The detail work is the point here. The ecru abstract appliqué shapes are outlined in blanket stitching, which means someone ran thread around each cutout by hand or by a guided machine, and the finish holds up to scrutiny at close range. Camp collar sits flat, as it should. The straight hem with side splits is cut to wear untucked, which is the only way this shirt makes sense. None of this is complex construction, but it is considered, and at this price, considered is enough.
Care instructions are machine wash cold, inside out, no tumble dry. Follow them and the appliqué should stay intact. Ignore them and you'll find out what blanket stitching looks like after a hot cycle.
The Fit
Relaxed cut, true to size across XS to XXL. This is not a shirt that's trying to show your shoulders. It falls straight from the chest, with enough room through the body that it reads as deliberate ease rather than oversized. If you're between sizes, go down. If you're broad across the chest and narrow everywhere else, it'll wear well regardless.
The Context
Wax London built its name on fabric-forward basics: the Didcot is their core shirt silhouette, and this version is one of the louder entries in an otherwise restrained lineup. Comparable territory would be something from Portuguese Flannel's summer range or a Corridor short-sleeve, though neither leans into appliqué the way this does. At $117, you're paying for the visual detail, not the fabric weight or the country of origin. That's a fair trade if the print speaks to you. If it doesn't, the Didcot in a solid or subtle stripe is a better starting point with this brand.
The versatility here is genuinely limited. This is a shirt for a specific occasion: somewhere warm, somewhere relaxed, somewhere the doodles don't need explaining. Beach town, yes. Sunday market, yes. Monday morning, no.
The Personal Note
I haven't worn this one. My read from the product page and the brand's track record is that the construction is tidier than the price implies, and the appliqué is the kind of thing that either grows on you or never does. A 7 out of 10 on the loud scale is about right: noticeable without being aggressive. If you already own a plain camp collar for summer, this is a reasonable second shirt. If you don't, buy that one first.



