The Maric is the kind of shirt that photographs well on a mood board and then sits in your closet waiting for the right occasion, which arrives less often than you'd expect.
The Verdict
At $145, the Maric Mesh Shirt is a narrow proposition: it works well as a layer over a white tee in autumn or as a lighter standalone piece in summer, but the mesh construction limits where it can actually go. Reasonable price, specific use case.
The Make
Octobre Éditions manufactures in Portugal, which is the right call for this price point, and the brand's direct-to-consumer model means you're not paying for wholesale margins. What we don't have is a confirmed fabric composition for the Maric, which is a gap that matters more for a mesh construction than it would for a plain twill. Mesh lives or dies on fibre content: cotton breathes, polyester doesn't, and the hand-feel difference is obvious by the third wear. Octobre's broader range leans on natural fibres, so the odds are reasonable, but the brand should be clearer on the label. Make quality rates a 4 out of 10 on the founder's scoring, which suggests the construction is serviceable without being noteworthy. At $145, you're paying for the cut and the aesthetic, not the fabric story.
The Fit
The Maric runs in a regular cut across a wide range, XS through XXXL, which is a real size run and worth noting. Regular here reads as a relaxed European cut rather than boxy American regular: it should sit with some room through the body without pulling across the shoulders. The mesh structure means there's no real give to speak of, so sizing up if you're between sizes is the sensible move. The layering score is 7 out of 10, which tracks: over a fitted long-sleeve in a contrasting colour, this reads considered. On its own, it reads more like a deliberate statement, which earns it a 4 on the loud-to-subtle scale.
The Context
Octobre Éditions sits comfortably between something like COS (slightly colder, more architectural) and A.P.C. (more classic, less playful). The Maric is one of the more adventurous pieces in a lineup that otherwise skews toward proper shirts and reliable basics. If you're already buying from Octobre for their Oxford shirts or their wool knitwear, the Maric is a reasonable extension. If this is your entry point, start with something that sees more than one kind of weather. Alternatives at this price in mesh or open-weave territory include Folk's more relaxed constructions or Sunflower out of Copenhagen, both of which carry their texture with slightly less effort.
The Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. The score sheet tells me it layers well and travels reasonably, but the make quality is middling and the use cases are narrower than the price implies. For $145, I'd probably reach for one of Octobre's safer bets first and come back to the Maric once I knew the brand. If you already know the brand and want something slightly unexpected, this is that.



