Most men write off satin shirts because they’ve seen them done badly. Too shiny, too loose, worn with the wrong trousers to the wrong occasion, and suddenly the whole category gets a reputation it doesn’t deserve. We think that’s a shame, because a well-cut satin shirt is one of the sharpest things you can wear when the occasion calls for something more considered than cotton.

The fabric does something no other shirt material does. It catches light without announcing itself, adds a quiet formality that works for evenings out, and sits flat against the body in a way that rewards a good fit. The key is weight and finish. A heavier satin drapes properly. A lighter one just looks cheap under real lighting.

The shirts in here have the structure to back up the sheen. Worn open over a white tee or tucked into tailored trousers, they pull their weight. The fuss, it turns out, is worth it.