Wax London built its reputation on fabric sourcing, and the Didcot shirt is a reasonable demonstration of what that looks like in practice: a 100% linen camp-collar shirt with tonal floral embroidery across the body and sleeves, made in India, priced at $220.
The Verdict
This is a considered warm-weather shirt for someone who wants a little visual interest without committing to a full print. At $220, it sits in a crowded middle: above fast fashion, below proper luxury, and competing with several labels doing similar things.
The Make
The fabric is lightweight 100% linen, which behaves the way linen should in heat: breathes well, wrinkles predictably, softens after washing. The embroidery is tonal, meaning the floral motifs read brown-on-brown rather than announcing themselves across a room. Up close, the stitching is reasonably clean. It is not the kind of embroidery that will hold up under serious scrutiny, but it also isn't pretending to be. The camp collar is a notch style, the buttons are natural-tone, and the hem has side splits for ease of movement, which matters in a relaxed-cut linen shirt. Made in India, where Wax London has long-standing production relationships.
The fabric weight is on the lighter end of linen, which reads well in summer but makes this a genuinely seasonal piece. Laid flat, the embroidery has a slightly raised hand. It catches light differently depending on angle, which is part of the appeal.
The Fit
The cut is relaxed without being oversized. On most bodies, a standard size will work: Wax London runs true to size on the Didcot, and the silhouette is forgiving enough that you won't be splitting hairs between a medium and a large. It drapes rather than skims, so if you're wearing it tucked, add a half-size. The side splits help with movement but also let the hem hang cleanly untucked.
The Context
At $220, you're looking at a specific kind of buyer: someone who wants a shirt that reads as considered without being loud. The Didcot sits mid-range in Wax London's own lineup. Alternatives at this price include Corridor's linen shirts (stronger construction, less personality) and Drake's seasonal runs (more expensive, more pedigree). If the embroidery detail is what draws you here, there isn't a direct competitor at the same price. If you just want solid linen at this weight, there are cheaper options.
Wax London scores a 5 out of 10 on versatility. This shirt works for summer evenings, warm-weather travel in theory, and casual occasions where a plain shirt would feel underdressed. It does not work in an office, does not layer well under anything, and is not built for a trip where you're packing light and need a shirt to survive a week of wear and a hotel iron.
The Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. Based on the construction notes and fabric spec, it reads as a fair price for what it is: a lightweight linen shirt with a decorative detail that earns its keep without demanding attention. I'd want to see the embroidery in person before buying, specifically how it holds after a few machine washes on delicate. That's where this category tends to disappoint.



