At $125, this is the kind of shirt that earns its keep by being specific enough to be interesting without demanding that you explain it.
The Verdict
The Holt Textured Shirt is a considered bowling-collar shirt made in Portugal from 100% cotton, priced honestly for what it is. If you want a shirt that does something without shouting, this is a reasonable buy. If you need it to pull double duty across formal and casual occasions, it won't.
The Make
Made in Portugal from what the brand describes simply as textured 100% cotton, the Holt wears with a slightly nubbled hand that reads closer to a 1950s leisure shirt than to anything you'd find at a contemporary basics brand. The bowling collar is the defining detail: it lies flat, it doesn't gap, and it gives the shirt its character without requiring that you leave three buttons open to make it work.
The mother-of-pearl buttons are a genuine touch at this price point. They catch light differently than plastic, and the shank construction feels secure. The shirt length lands at approximately 74 cm from the shoulder in a medium, which sits comfortably between a casual untucked length and something you could loosely tuck into high-waisted trousers.
Worth noting: other Holt colorways in the lineup use cotton-acrylic blends with recycled content. The Beige Rust Stripes is listed as straight cotton. That distinction matters if you're buying on feel.
The Fit
The cut is regular, and it runs true to size. Octobre Éditions offers XS through XXXL, which is a wider range than most brands at this tier bother with. The regular cut leaves enough room through the chest for layering a lightweight crewneck underneath without distorting the collar, which accounts for the layering score. Care instructions specify hand wash in cold water, which is a minor inconvenience but not unusual for a shirt with mother-of-pearl buttons you'd prefer not to crack.
The Context
The Holt sits in interesting company. At $125, it undercuts comparable bowling-collar shirts from Corridor or Drake's Archive by a significant margin, though neither of those produces in Portugal at this price either. The Beige Rust Stripes colorway is specific enough that you can't mistake it for something off a supermarket rack, but restrained enough that it doesn't require a matching moment. The 5/10 travel score reflects the hand-wash-only care requirement, not the fabric itself.
Octobre Éditions operates with limited runs and twice-yearly archive releases, so availability on specific colorways comes and goes. If you're waiting for a sale, you're probably waiting too long.
The Personal Note
I haven't worn this one. The research is solid and the construction details check out, but I can't tell you how the cotton softens after twenty washes or whether the collar holds its shape after a humid afternoon. What I can say is that the price is fair for a Portugal-made, mother-of-pearl-buttoned shirt in a pattern with this much personality, and the bowling collar is executed better here than on most shirts twice the cost.



