At $48, this is one of the more honest entries in Reigning Champ's lineup: a plain cotton t-shirt that doesn't oversell itself, made by a brand that usually gets the small things right.
The Verdict
A well-constructed, lightweight t-shirt that earns its place as a layering piece or a standalone summer shirt. Not the most exciting thing Reigning Champ makes, but probably the most useful.
The Make
The fabric is 100% cotton jersey, described by the brand as "premium cotton with a fine handfeel." Reigning Champ doesn't publish a GSM on the product page, which is a minor frustration. Based on the hand, it sits in lighter territory, somewhere you'd expect for a warm-weather piece, though you're taking their word on the specific weight. Construction notes are more concrete: rib-bound collar, set-in sleeves, flatlock seams. Flatlock is a meaningful detail at this price, the kind of seaming that lies flat against the skin and holds its shape over repeated washes without bulk at the shoulder. The shirt is made in Vietnam, which is worth noting given that Reigning Champ's better-known pieces come out of their Vancouver facility. That's not a disqualifier at $48, but it is context.
The Fit
Regular cut, true to size across the XS-XXL range. This is not a slim fit trying to pass as regular. There's enough room through the chest and sleeve to layer something over it without pinching, which may explain why the founder scores it a 9 out of 10 for layering. It's not cut for someone who wants a fitted silhouette, but it's not boxy either. Think: a t-shirt that gets out of the way.
The Context
$48 puts this in direct conversation with Buck Mason, Sunspel's lighter jerseys at the lower end, and the better offerings from Everlane's uniform line. The Sunspel comparison is the useful one: Sunspel publishes its GSM, Reigning Champ doesn't, and Sunspel's construction is rooted in a longer tradition of jersey making. That said, Reigning Champ wins on price if you're cross-shopping against Sunspel's $90 entry point. Where this t-shirt makes the most sense is as a piece that disappears under a shirt jacket, overshirt, or light layer. The 2 out of 10 on the loud-to-subtle scale is about as quiet as a garment gets.
The Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. The numbers suggest it's a reliable piece: well-priced, well-scored on layering and travel, light enough not to add bulk under anything. The missing GSM is annoying but not disqualifying. If you want Reigning Champ's ethos at the brand's lowest price point, this is where to start. If you want their best work, buy the fleece.



