Twillory vs Charles Tyrwhitt: which button-up wins?
Both land in the mid tier — the Twillory Performance Untucked Shirt at $95, the Charles Tyrwhitt Non-Iron Twill Dress Shirt at $99, just $4 apart. Here's how they stack up, head to head.
| Twillory | Charles Tyrwhitt | |
|---|---|---|
| Price | $95 | $99 |
| Material | Non-iron cotton, four-way stretch and moisture-wicking blends, mid-weight. | Two-fold cotton twill, poplin or Oxford weave with non-iron finish. |
| Fit | Tailored and athletic fits in tucked or untucked lengths, true to size. | Extensive fit and collar range (slim to classic), true to size. |
| Quality | Mid-tier — easy-care and comfortable, tidy construction; performance cloth over natural hand. | Solid mid-tier — durable two-fold cotton, effective non-iron finish; slightly stiffer hand from the treatment. |
| Best for | Low-maintenance office wear, travel, and anyone who wants stretch and no ironing. | Office and formal dress shirts, non-iron convenience, and a wide collar selection. |
| Care | Cold wash and tumble low; non-iron finish lets you skip pressing. | Cold wash and hang straight; the non-iron finish dries smooth with little or no pressing. |
Two non-iron office shirts four dollars apart: Twillory's $95 Performance Untucked with four-way stretch and moisture-wicking blends, against Charles Tyrwhitt's $99 two-fold cotton twill. Both promise you never touch an iron; the split is modern performance cloth versus traditional natural cotton, and Tyrwhitt's four-for deals versus Twillory's list price.
- The case for Twillory
- The Twillory adds four-way stretch, moisture-wicking, tailored and athletic fits, and both tucked and untucked lengths — the more comfortable shirt for travel and long corporate-casual days at $95.
- The case for Charles Tyrwhitt
- The Tyrwhitt is the more traditional shirt: durable two-fold cotton in twill, poplin, or Oxford, an extensive slim-to-classic fit and collar range for formal wear, and an effective price well below $99 on the brand's regular four-for deals.
The bottom lineWhich should you buy?
Buy the Twillory if comfort and convenience run your dress code: the stretch and wicking are real functional advantages for travel and all-day wear, and the untucked lengths cover offices where shirttails stay out. Buy the Tyrwhitt if the shirt needs to read formal — the two-fold cotton and wide collar range are the dressier package, and its four-for pricing makes it the cheaper shirt in practice despite the higher list. The honest trade: Twillory's performance cloth sacrifices natural hand for function; Tyrwhitt's non-iron treatment leaves the cotton slightly stiff. Neither is a flaw — match the cloth to your office.
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