130 Spread Collar Shirt

€150

Lightest, most popular shirting fabric. Similar in weight to a classic dress shirt. 100% merino wool. 130 gsm.
Color Light Gray Oxford
Fit
size
Size guide
Free shipping, free exchanges
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The shirts that made us famous—featured in over 150 publications around the world. The 130gsm is our signature fabric weight, light enough to wear year around.

Wearing merino comes with its advantages

Odor
Resistant
Temperature
Regulating
Highly
Durable
Machine Washable
Naturally
Soft
Quick
Drying

Customer Reviews

Based on 9 reviews
56%
(5)
44%
(4)
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B
Balthasar
A bit on the short side

I really like this shirt. However ...
It has the same issue I have encounteres many times: it is simply too short. Its torso is so short that when I button it up, the lowest hanging button is barely covering the waistband of my trousers. If I tug the shirt in my trousers it will be coming out of them through casual everyday movement. After about half an hour in the office, just ... Working, the shirt will have left my trousers completely, leading to me basically re-tugging the shirt constantly. I have this issue constantly, maybe it is a tall man's problem, I dont know. I wosh there was an option to get this shirt in a longer variation, as Hawes and Curtis offers for example. Especially for a shirt of that quality and with that price tag I would say this would be a great option. (A tall option was not available when I ordered the shirt. There is a button right now to chose it as part of the review, but there was none when I ordered)
Finally, the customer support was great!
All in all I was very happy and pleased with my order in its entirety.

R
Ryan O.
Prince, but not yet King

I have supported the company for over 4 years, and continue to advocate on their behalf, and for merino wool clothing more broadly, from sunny Brighton & Hove in England. I own about a dozen of their shirts, a mix of dress shirts, the discontinued twill utility shirts, and now some button-downs, in addition to the fantastic, market-leading boxers and socks.

I'm a subtly overweight, thin-framed man, and sized-up to a medium/regular (from previous small/regular purchases) so that the sleeves are the correct length even with a fully extended arm, and for a more forgiving casual fit over an optional base layer, at the expense of a slightly looser-than-needed collar (not so much an issue with button-downs worn open sans tie).

I have no complaints with regards to processing/delivery, customer service, product description etc., and the quality control has always been good, save for the occasional biteable runaway excess of button thread.

As a van-dwelling professional, I will never go back to cotton directly under my armpits, "downstairs", or around my toes (save for formal occasions which may prescribe it). However, we need to move beyond merino wool shirts PRETENDING to be cotton shirts in their colourway, namely using any off-white, simply in response to these being well established in the prevailing cotton shirt market. It's for good reason with cotton, and (with blues especially) for aesthetic congruence with many skin/hair/eye palettes; but wool is not cotton, and does not age in the same way.

Wool beiges/yellows over time due to exposure to sunlight, and as such in a variegated manner, depending on jacket/tie wearing, rolled up sleeves, under the placket and collar etc.. One can protect wool from moths, store/dry away from sunlight, protect from mould etc., but if the shirt is to be worn in daylight hours, then it will "turn" over time, and the affectation of it being a cotton shirt (with hidden benefits) is lost to it looking like a dirty shirt. This "turning" from off-white is inevitable, but can (and must) be factored in at the design stage.

Due to the "turning", I have hand-dyed a few of my older W&P dress shirts with dark brown dye to achieve a beige overdye effect with the retained blue checks/stripes, but due to the sun-inflicted variegation (pre-dying) these are no longer presentable beyond casual wear, even though the wool has plenty of life left in it (for example, abrasion-wise at the armpits). The synthetic white stitching remains, unfortunately and incongruently, even if one were to swap out the functional-but-meh white plastic buttons. Beige/grey/dark synthetic stitching (depending on the colourway) could help mitigate against this, and extend the unfurling life of the wool product (or linen/cotton thread, cost-dependent, but this would dye differently to the wool anyway).

The semi-spread collar is too stingy to work well with a suit/sports jacket and tie, at least for those with a discerning eye. Button-downs are less of a thing in England outside of casual-wear, and whilst one can appreciate the cost implications of additional material, if a shirt is to be "dress" (or in England, a normal shirt to be wearable with a tie and jacket), then "make it so" as Picard would say, or another company will step into the gap.

White cotton is practical (as cotton goes) because it can be bleach-washed, and sun-dried; merino wool of any colour cannot, for all it's other advantages. Beige-based, and/or darker colours more generally, are the way forward for a long-life product, both due to the "turning" factor, and to help mask the visually apparent build up of grime which the material can otherwise handle between (and after) infrequent hand-washing. It's notable for example that the founder's 100 day challenges have been with dark-brown (never available for retail) and darkish-red shirts, respectively.

Merino wool shirting has yet to come into its own from a functional aesthetic perspective. There is a space in-between Pendleton-esque hardcore overshirts/shackets, affectations of button-down cotton shirts (with benefits, but also under-recognised disadvantages/challenges), and perhaps Smedley-esque long-sleeved polo shirts. The advantage of a proper spread-collared shirt is that it can be worn with or without: a tie; additional knitwear (under or over); a tailored jacket/waistcoat; sleeves rolled up. The button up design is also more forgiving in terms of airflow/temperature regulation. A button-down design on a collar that is too stingy to ever flap about in the wind, and with nothing-to-shout-about plastic buttons permanently on display, is a suboptimal design, regardless of what Brooks Brothers would have Americans believe.

Wool & Prince is a wonderful, rightly respected brand, that has put in a lot of the ground-work for everyday merino clothing, but these blind spots may catch up with them as their following transition from being new customers to experienced return custom...

C
Camillo S.
Excellent office shirt

I worried a bit that the white stripes would be off-white, but they really look excellent. You really cannot tell that this is a merino shirt just by looking at it, but it has the same luxuriously warm yet soft touch that I have come to expect from Wool & Prince dress shirts. The size runs a slight bit on the "baggy" size, even in slim fit, presumably because that's how US shirts are fitted, but still fits me pretty well. Sizing down wasn't really an option because the collar fit is just right, and the sleeve length, too.

I would really love to have some other color alternatives than blues.

B
Benjamin C.
My first Merino shirt

The most expensive shirt I've bought, but worth every penny. Really love this shirt and a new, massive fan of Wool & Prince.

R
Robert S.
My first week long shirt!

Received my one shirt and have used it 5 days in a row, without almost any wrinkle. Just had to wash it after that, not because it was dirty or smelly, just psychological issues. It is slighty itchy though, I am sensitive to wool, but mostly when just putting it on, after some minutes I forget this.
Biggest issue for us in Sweden is that it comes delivered by DHL service to a big Company pickup Warehouse site outside central cities, instead of a convenient local tobacco shop, which is normal in Sweden. Guess that DHL sold the wrong delivery package to these guys?

Hi Robert, terrific to hear that you're getting a lot of wear out of your shirt. We love hearing that. That's interesting to note about how you received your package, thanks for letting us know.

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