Wax London's Whiting overshirt has been one of the quiet workhorses of the brand's lineup for several seasons. This iteration, in a bespoke oran check woven from blue and ecru yarns at a family-run French mill, is the version that earns the most attention.
The Verdict
At $235, this is a well-made overshirt in a genuinely distinctive fabric. The check is bold enough to be the point of the outfit, which is either a selling point or a dealbreaker depending on who you are.
The Make
The fabric is the story here. Wax London had the oran check woven specifically for this piece, using recycled cotton yarns at a French mill they work with directly. The result is lighter than the brand's heavier Whiting offerings, which makes it more useful for three-season wear without crossing into shirting territory. At 100% cotton, it breathes well and should hold its structure through a cold gentle wash.
Construction details are modest but considered: patch chest pockets, a full button placket, and corozo nut buttons throughout. Corozo is a natural material cut from tagua palm, harder and denser than standard plastic buttons, with a slight sheen that ages better. It's the kind of detail that doesn't announce itself but reads correctly up close. Interior construction details are not published by the brand, which is typical for this price point. Nothing in the external construction suggests corners were cut.
The Fit
Regular cut, true to size across XS through XXL. This is a relaxed regular rather than a boxy one, which means it layers cleanly over a t-shirt or a lightweight knit without reading oversized on a standard frame. Shoulders sit where they should. The hem length is long enough to leave untucked without looking unfinished. If you're between sizes, stay at your usual.
The Context
The Whiting sits in the middle of Wax London's lineup, below their heavier outerwear pieces and above their shirting. At $235, it competes with overshirts from Portuguese Flannel and Corridor, both of whom work in similar check territory. Where Wax London differs is in the print and weave specificity: the oran check has a more graphic, Mediterranean quality than the flannel-heavy heritage checks most competitors default to. That's a real distinction, and whether it works for you depends entirely on your tolerance for pattern. The founder scores this a 7 out of 10 on the loud-to-subtle scale. That's an honest 7.
The Personal Note
I own three of these. Not three of this exact print, but three Whitings. The fit is consistent enough across colorways that once you know your size, you don't need to think about it again. What keeps me coming back is the pattern work. Wax London sources fabric with more intentionality than most brands at this price, and it shows in the finished piece. The oran check, specifically, is good. Not "interesting," not "unique." Good.



