Ochre is a commitment. This is not a shirt you wear to stay anonymous, which means it's worth knowing exactly what you're getting before the cart clears.
The Verdict
At $130, this is a well-made piece of European linen at a price that doesn't require justification. The ochre colorway is specific enough to narrow its audience, but if you're the right person, it's easy to reach for.
The Make
The fabric starts with Libeco linen, woven in Belgium from European flax. Libeco is one of the better-regarded linen mills on the continent, and you can feel why: the cloth has a satisfying weight and body without being stiff. The dyeing happens in Belgium before the panels are cut and sewn in Portugal. That's a supply chain with a coherent logic to it, which is rarer than it should be at this price.
Construction details are considered without being fussy. Mother-of-pearl buttons, a patched chest pocket, a hem gusset that sits properly when the shirt is worn untucked, and an adjustable cuff fastening that actually adjusts. The collar is classic, meaning it will hold its shape with a collar stay and lie flat without one. Nothing here is pretending to be more than it is.
The ochre dye holds well on linen, though linen at 100% will always soften and fade slightly over time. That's a feature, not a flaw, but worth knowing if you want the color to stay exactly as saturated as the product photo.
The Fit
The Charlie in linen runs with slightly more ease than other cuts in the Charlie family. On a regular frame it will wear relaxed without reading oversized. Sizing is true to size across XS through XXXL, which is a wider range than most brands bother with. If you're between sizes and prefer something with less drape, size down. If you like room through the chest and a cleaner tuck, stay put.
The hem gusset matters here. It means the shirt sits properly either way, tucked or out, without the hemline pulling oddly at the side seams.
The Context
Octobre Éditions sits in a crowded bracket that includes Sézane (its sister label, targeting women), De Bonne Facture, and the more accessible end of Portuguese linen makers. At $130, it undercuts De Bonne Facture by several hundred dollars and outperforms most fast-fashion linen on construction specifics. The closest direct competitor is probably Corridor's linen shirts, which run around the same price and similarly use considered natural fabrics, though Corridor skews more American casual while this reads more French in its proportions.
The ochre limits its range slightly. A white or navy Charlie works in more rooms. This one works in fewer, but in those rooms, it works better.
Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. The construction notes and fabric sourcing are solid enough that the $130 price sits comfortably, and the layering score of 8 out of 10 is higher than the travel score of 3 out of 10, which tells you something. Linen wrinkles. Ochre linen wrinkles visibly. Pack accordingly or don't pack it at all.



