The Money Mustache Community
Learning, Sharing, and Teaching => Ask a Mustachian => Topic started by: tvan on June 20, 2015, 07:37:31 PM
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$125 dollars a shirt. But how do they hold up over time? I find Costco shirts for $12 occasionally and they seem to be holding up. Mizzen provides these advantages though:
A little about the Mizzen+Main dress shirt:
It wicks away moisture and won’t show sweat like a regular dress shirt
Redefining comfort: it breathes better + keeps men cooler
Stay wrinkle free all day long
With standard collars, cuffs and buttons, it looks like a traditional dress shirt
Say goodbye to ironing and dry cleaning
Throw it in the washing machine and hang it up to dry – it’s ready to wear in 16 minutes with no ironing.
Proudly made in the United States and a percentage of every shirt supports wounded veterans and their families
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Did you hear about them from the Ferris podcast?
I too am curious.
I could see myself owning a few henley's and a few dress shirts and that being my entire wardrobe, provided they last forever.
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Did you hear about them from the Ferris podcast?
I too am curious.
I could see myself owning a few henley's and a few dress shirts and that being my entire wardrobe, provided they last forever.
Yes that's where I first heard of them. They look nice and I have an athletic build and often dress shirts are made for fat guys with waists wider than their chests.
$125 is an investment though.
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Did you hear about them from the Ferris podcast?
Didn't everyone? (That podcast is the best, amirite?)
Someone else shell out the buck-twenty-five and report back. I will say I have a pair of patagonia undies on year 13 and still going strong, so the $20 pay-to-play on those has been rewarded. I'm happy to pay a high upfront if the longevity warrants. But how much of Mizzen & Main is "it's warranted" and how much is just hype? I dunno, but I'd sure like to know.
In the meantime, my man wears those Costco shirts too. Here's his assessment of the M&M claims from the OP, stated in context:
It wicks away moisture and won’t show sweat like a regular dress shirt - "No moisture wicking, but these [Costco shirts] hide wrinkles like a muthaf%&ker and I can slosh coffee all over myself and the stain comes out."
Redefining comfort: it breathes better + keeps men cooler - "Uh...it's not underwear, it's a work shirt"
Stay wrinkle free all day long - "Yeah, my Costco shirt does that."
With standard collars, cuffs and buttons, it looks like a traditional dress shirt. - "This is a traditional dress shirt. Or at least, it's close enough."
Say goodbye to ironing and dry cleaning - "I have no idea where our iron is, nor know when I last went to dry cleaner."
Throw it in the washing machine and hang it up to dry – it’s ready to wear in 16 minutes with no ironing. - "That's a lie. I do not believe that marketing claim. This makes me question all their claims."
Proudly made in the United States and a percentage of every shirt supports wounded veterans and their families. - "That's nice, but if you say stuff like "a percentage" it doesn't mean much to me. I assume it's the smallest possible percentage, which I find worse morally than never making the claim in the first place. I guess I'm a cynical f*&ker."
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I have some socks that are 27 years old and still being worn every second week. They were not top of the range. And I have a few t-shirts that are also that old. But something that dries in 16 minutes - WOW!
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Someone else shell out the buck-twenty-five and report back.
Um, how about no?
I've bought cars for less than that.
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Did you hear about them from the Ferris podcast?
Didn't everyone? (That podcast is the best, amirite?)
Someone else shell out the buck-twenty-five and report back. I will say I have a pair of patagonia undies on year 13 and still going strong, so the $20 pay-to-play on those has been rewarded. I'm happy to pay a high upfront if the longevity warrants. But how much of Mizzen & Main is "it's warranted" and how much is just hype? I dunno, but I'd sure like to know.
In the meantime, my man wears those Costco shirts too. Here's his assessment of the M&M claims from the OP, stated in context:
It wicks away moisture and won’t show sweat like a regular dress shirt - "No moisture wicking, but these [Costco shirts] hide wrinkles like a muthaf%&ker and I can slosh coffee all over myself and the stain comes out."
Redefining comfort: it breathes better + keeps men cooler - "Uh...it's not underwear, it's a work shirt"
Stay wrinkle free all day long - "Yeah, my Costco shirt does that."
With standard collars, cuffs and buttons, it looks like a traditional dress shirt. - "This is a traditional dress shirt. Or at least, it's close enough."
Say goodbye to ironing and dry cleaning - "I have no idea where our iron is, nor know when I last went to dry cleaner."
Throw it in the washing machine and hang it up to dry – it’s ready to wear in 16 minutes with no ironing. - "That's a lie. I do not believe that marketing claim. This makes me question all their claims."
Proudly made in the United States and a percentage of every shirt supports wounded veterans and their families. - "That's nice, but if you say stuff like "a percentage" it doesn't mean much to me. I assume it's the smallest possible percentage, which I find worse morally than never making the claim in the first place. I guess I'm a cynical f*&ker."
Ha. I tend to agree with him on most of those. Costco shirts are advertised as wrinkle free.
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Did you hear about them from the Ferris podcast?
I too am curious.
I could see myself owning a few henley's and a few dress shirts and that being my entire wardrobe, provided they last forever.
Yes that's where I first heard of them. They look nice and I have an athletic build and often dress shirts are made for fat guys with waists wider than their chests.
$125 is an investment though.
You can take in your regular costco shirts to a tailor and get them professionally fitted to look like they were fancy-schmancy expensive shirts. Custom tailoring shouldn't be hella expensive unless they're having to reset collars or sleeves; basic tapering to fit an athletic build should be less than $10 a shirt, and might get a discount if you get several shirts done at once (wouldn't hurt to ask anyway). Which is waaaaay cheaper than the M*M shirts y'all are discussing.