Long Sleeve Polos for Men
Longsleeve polos for men who understand what the collar communicates.
Not a shirt. Not a knit. The longsleeve polo occupies a more considered position than both. The open collar gives it structure without formality. No buttons to undo, no tie required. It is already exactly where it needs to be.
Most longsleeve polos fail at the fit. Too boxy and it reads as sportswear. Too slim and the open collar loses its authority. The Grey Moritz cut sits between those two failures. Clean through the chest. A hem that works tucked or not.
The fabrics follow the same logic. Structured cotton piqué that holds its shape after wash. Merino wool that moves the piece into cooler months without softening the silhouette. Each option built around the same principle: quiet precision over visible effort.
The buttonless placket keeps the front clean. No hardware, no distraction. The collar does the work. Pair with tailored trousers for a meeting that does not require a tie. Layer under a wool overcoat and the open collar reads sharper than a shirt. Wear with chinos on a Saturday and it looks deliberate, not casual.
Longsleeve polos in merino wool and structured cotton. Dark neutrals, slate, off-white. Available below.
FAQ
1) What makes an open collar longsleeve polo different from a shirt?
The open collar on a polo sits softer and lower than a shirt collar. There is no need to button it down or add a tie. It reads as intentional without the formality of shirting. For smart casual occasions, a longsleeve polo with an open collar carries the same weight as an open-collar shirt — with less effort.
2) Why choose merino wool for a longsleeve polo?
Merino wool regulates temperature better than cotton. It moves the longsleeve polo from a three-season piece into something that works year-round. The fabric sits closer to the body without feeling restrictive, and it holds its shape across wears without requiring a wash after every use.
3) What does buttonless mean on a polo shirt?
A buttonless polo has no button placket on the chest. The collar and neckline are finished cleanly without hardware. It gives the front of the garment a cleaner line and removes the visual interruption of buttons. The result is a more refined silhouette — closer to knitwear in feel, but with the structure of a collar.