| THE COMPARISON EDIT | No. 03 — 2026 |
Ted Baker Shirt Alternatives: Where to Go Now
You built a wardrobe on a brand that isn't quite there any more. Here is where the prints went — and who is doing the florals, the quirk and the party shirt now.
There is a particular kind of small, real annoyance in losing a brand you liked. Not grief — nobody is mourning a shirt shop. But you had a solved problem: a wedding, a birthday, a Friday, and a rail you trusted to have something with a bit of personality on it. That rail changed, and now the problem is unsolved again. This piece is for that reader. It is not a victory lap; it is a set of directions.
| 01 | There were always two Teds |
For thirty years, Ted Baker was the default answer to a very British question: where does a man buy a shirt with some personality that still works at the office party? Then came 2024 — administration, every UK store closed, the brand relaunched online-only under an American licensee. The shirts still exist; the institution doesn't. And a generation of men who built wardrobes on Ted's printed shirts and “no ordinary” details are quietly asking where to go now.
The honest answer depends on which Ted Baker you miss. There were always two: the bold-print party Ted, and the polished smart-casual Ted. Different heirs have claimed each half of the estate — and the mistake most people make is shopping for the wrong half. Before you replace anything, work out which one you were actually buying.
A quick test. Pull out your favourite Ted shirt. If the first thing you notice is the pattern — the florals, the birds, the something-going-on across the whole body — you were buying print Ted. If the first thing you notice is the cut, or a bit of contrast tucked inside the cuff where only you could see it, you were buying polish Ted. The two need entirely different addresses.
| 02 | If you miss the prints — start with the florals |
Begin with florals, because that is where the itch actually is. The Ted shirt people remember most fondly was almost always a flower on a dark ground — the thing you wore to a summer wedding and got asked about twice before the speeches. It is the most specifically British instinct in menswear: something quite loud, worn completely straight-faced, with no explanation offered.
For twenty years, Hoss Salimian's London studio has been making the case that a shirt can be a piece of art. Every print — from Victorian floral chandeliers to vintage race cars — is designed in-house, cut in Europe from Egyptian satin cotton, and released once. Contrast cuffs, statement plackets, multicoloured buttons: the details Robert Graham built its name on, at roughly a third of the price and with next-day UK delivery.
This is the direct succession, and the price is the reason it works. Claudio Lugli's limited editions go further than Ted ever did (WWE and Tyson Fury collaborations included), the trims are more elaborate, the size range vastly wider, and at £55–£95 the price sits exactly where Ted's used to before the discounts started. Of every brand in this piece, it is the closest price-adjacency to the shirts you were already buying — you are not being asked to trade up or trade down. You are being asked to walk across the street.
Five shirts follow. They are not a greatest-hits list; they are the five that most directly answer the question a former Ted customer is asking. Three florals, one piece of pure quirk, and one for the woman who kept borrowing yours.
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Plate I · Floral
Plum Blossom Print Shirt
Satin cotton · £95
The wedding-guest shirt, properly done. Blossom scattered with a painter's hand rather than a repeat-tile logic — it reads as artwork at three feet and as texture across a room.
Order →
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Plate II · Floral
Wild Bloom Print Shirt
Satin cotton · £95
Denser, wilder, less well-behaved. If your favourite Ted shirt was the one your wife raised an eyebrow at and you wore anyway, this is the replacement.
Order →
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Plate III · Floral
Butterfly Bloom Print Shirt
Satin cotton · £85
Flowers with something moving through them. The closest thing here to the old “no ordinary” instinct — a print that rewards the second look more than the first.
Order →
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Plate IV · Quirk
Campervan Stripe Print Shirt
Satin cotton · £85
Not everything needs a flower on it. This is the conversational print — the shirt that does the small talk for you at an event where you know three people.
Order →
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Plate V · Womenswear
Multicolour Small Polkadot Womens Print Shirt
Satin cotton · £65
The other half of the Ted habit nobody talks about: the shirt that quietly left your wardrobe and joined hers. This one is cut for her from the start.
Order →
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Editor's Note
On buying a print you have never seen before
A print house works differently from a high-street brand, and it is worth knowing before you order. Each design is released once and not repeated. There is no “same shirt, next season” — if it is on the rail, it is on the rail now. That cuts both ways, and we would rather say so. It means you will genuinely not meet yourself at a party. It also means the shirt you bookmark in March may not be there in June. If you liked the reliability of walking into the same shop and finding the same thing, this is the one adjustment the move asks of you. The upside is the reason the category exists at all. Nine sizes, S–6XL, means the print you want is not rationed to the middle of the bell curve — which, if you ever stood in front of a rail that stopped at XL, you will recognise as the whole point. Shop all men's shirts → |
The men who wore Ted to be noticed and the men who wore Ted to be appropriate were never the same customer. They just happened to shop in the same building.
| 03 | The specification |
Six things worth knowing before you commit, set out plainly. No brand in this piece will tell you these in a shop, because there is no longer a shop to tell you in.
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Fabric
Egyptian satin cotton. It holds a print the way paper holds ink — the reason these designs read as artwork rather than as a pattern printed onto a shirt.
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Fit
Cut in Europe. A print shirt has to sit calmly — pull a bold pattern too tight and it stops being a shirt and starts being a costume.
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Sizing
Nine sizes, S to 6XL. The single most practical difference in this whole piece, and the one most likely to decide it for you.
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Price
£55–£95 — sitting exactly where Ted's used to before the discounts started. Roughly a third of Robert Graham's price for comparable detailing.
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Provenance
Designed in-house in London — Hoss Salimian's studio, twenty years in — and cut in Europe. Next-day UK delivery, which matters more than it should when the wedding is Saturday.
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Print
Limited editions, never repeated — Victorian floral chandeliers through to vintage race cars. Contrast cuffs, statement plackets, multicoloured buttons.
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| 04 | If you miss the smart-casual polish |
If that was your half of Ted, a print house is the wrong shop and we will not pretend otherwise. Three names, honestly assessed.
For the wedding-guest and office-drinks end of Ted's territory, Moss has quietly become the high street's most reliable operator — good fabrics, sharp cuts, proper occasionwear range.
Choose it for: polished basics. Not for: anyone trying to be noticed.
If your Ted Baker shirts were the plainer ones with a twist in the trim, Tyrwhitt's casual line delivers better fabric for the money than Ted ever did — just with the personality dial turned to two.
Choose it for: quality-per-pound. Not for: prints with a pulse.
Percival owns the space Ted's younger customers migrated toward: relaxed cuts, tasteful prints, heavy editorial presence. More expensive than Ted was; cooler than Ted ever managed.
Choose it for: the modern smart-casual uniform. Not for: statement occasions or larger sizes.
Further out, the map continues: Paul Smith serves the designer end around £150–£300, and Simon Carter the quirky-casual end. Both are good. Both cost more than the shirt you are trying to replace.
| 05 | The scorecard |
Read it by the left-hand column. Find the shirt you actually wore, and follow the row.
| What you wore Ted for | Where to go now | Typical price | What you gain |
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| The bold printed party shirt | Claudio Lugli | £55–£95 | Limited editions, 9 sizes S–6XL, louder details, next-day UK |
| The wedding-guest shirt | Moss / Claudio Lugli tuxedo line | £40–£95 | Occasion range, dependable fit |
| The office-with-personality shirt | Charles Tyrwhitt casual | £50–£90 | Better fabric per pound |
| The weekend smart-casual | Percival | £90–£125 | Contemporary cut, editorial cool |
Give Ted Baker its due. For thirty years it did something genuinely difficult.
It took the bold print — a thing British men are, by temperament, slightly embarrassed to want — and made it ordinary to own. It put a floral shirt on a rail in a shopping centre next to a suit and told a generation that this was a normal thing to buy. Every brand in this piece, ours included, is working in a market Ted helped build. Nobody here gets to be smug about that.
So the honest verdict is not that Ted was wrong. It is that the two customers it served under one roof now have to shop at two addresses. The men who wore Ted to be noticed should go to the specialist who only does noticed — the wearable-art end, which in Britain is Claudio Lugli, at the same money you were already spending. The men who wore Ted to be appropriate have Moss and Tyrwhitt waiting, and will be well looked after.
And if you are not sure which you were — buy the floral. You already know the answer, or you would not have read this far.
| 06 | Questions, answered |
What happened to Ted Baker?
Ted Baker's UK retail business entered administration in 2024 and all UK stores closed. The brand was relaunched online under licence to United Legwear & Apparel, with reports in 2025 of a possible return to physical retail. The current range is narrower than before.
What's the best alternative to Ted Baker shirts?
For Ted Baker's bold printed shirts, Claudio Lugli is the most direct UK alternative — London-designed limited-edition prints, £55–£95, 9 sizes S–6XL. For plainer smart-casual, Moss and Charles Tyrwhitt cover the polished end; Percival covers modern indie casual.
Is Ted Baker still worth buying?
The relaunched online range still carries the branding, but the store experience, tailoring services and breadth that built the brand are gone. Many former customers now shop specialists instead — print houses for statement shirts, formalwear brands for occasions.
Who makes bold printed shirts in the UK now?
Claudio Lugli leads the dedicated bold-print category (limited editions, never repeated). Paul Smith serves the designer end around £150–£300, Simon Carter the quirky-casual end, and Percival the relaxed printed casual space.
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No. 01
Claudio Lugli vs Robert Graham: The Honest Head-to-Head
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No. 02
The Best Printed Shirt Brands, Compared (2026)
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No. 04
Shirts Like Robert Graham: The Best UK Alternatives (2026)
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Limited editions, released once, never repeated. Satin cotton, S–6XL, next-day UK delivery.
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