There is a particular kind of man who walks into a room and lets his shirt do the introductions. In America, for two decades, that man often wore Robert Graham — the California label that turned embroidered cuffs, riotous paisleys and contrast linings into a $200-a-shirt empire. In Britain, he has a problem: Robert Graham barely exists here. No UK store, thin online distribution, transatlantic shipping and customs on top of a price tag that starts around £150. So the question we hear constantly: who makes shirts like Robert Graham — on this side of the Atlantic?
It's a better question than it sounds, because the answer isn't one brand. It's a short, very specific list — and depending on whether you want wearable art, heritage quirk or designer polish, the right door is different. Here is the honest map.
First — what makes a Robert Graham shirt a Robert Graham shirt
Strip away the branding and four things define the formula: prints with a story (not just patterns — narratives, scenes, jokes); obsessive trim details (contrast inner cuffs and collars, embroidery, coloured button threads); a tailored, structured cut; and the sense of limited-run exclusivity. Any true alternative has to score on all four — most British shirtmakers score on none, because the mainstream UK shirt trade (Charles Tyrwhitt, Hawes & Curtis, T.M. Lewin) optimises for the boardroom, not the bar.
“The mainstream British shirt is designed to disappear politely into a suit. This list is for men who want the opposite.”
The Journal01 Claudio Lugli — the wearable-art house
Claudio Lugli
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.
The verdict: the closest thing Britain has to a wearable-art house — bolder than the high street, half the price of the designers, rated “Excellent” by 3,000+ reviewers.
Where the comparison gets interesting: Robert Graham's classic-fit shirts run US-generous; Claudio Lugli cuts a tailored regular fit (between sizes? size up) across nine sizes from S to 6XL — a range Robert Graham doesn't match. Both brands treat the inside of the shirt as seriously as the outside. Only one of them delivers to Manchester tomorrow morning.
02 The rest of the field — honestly rated
Duchamp London
Born in 1989 as the loudest tie-maker in Britain, Duchamp still makes handsome shirts — but the wild-print energy has drifted toward refined formalwear. Beautiful herringbones; fewer fireworks.
Choose it for: bold-adjacent formal shirts. Not for: the full statement print.
Simon Carter
The accessories designer's shirt line has genuine wit — fish, stamps, curiosities. Charming, well-priced, but a smaller range and a website that feels a decade behind.
Choose it for: conversation-starter casual. Not for: luxury fabric feel or occasion drama.
Paul Smith
The grandmaster of British colour. Paul Smith's printed shirts are superb — and priced like the designer label they are. If budget is no object and you want a fashion-week name, this is the room.
Choose it for: designer cachet. Not for: value, size range, or limited-edition scarcity.
Percival
The menswear-blog favourite. Percival's prints are tasteful, Instagram-native, and cut relaxed — closer to Riviera holiday than Vegas ballroom. A different animal to Robert Graham's maximalism, but a good one.
Choose it for: low-key printed casual. Not for: the look-at-me statement or a 6XL.
03 The side-by-side
| Brand | Typical shirt price | Sizes | Print intensity | Limited editions | UK delivery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Robert Graham | ~£150–£320 + import | S–3XL (US cut) | Maximal | Some | Slow / customs |
| Claudio Lugli | £55–£95 | 9 sizes, S–6XL | Maximal | Always — never repeated | Next-day, DPD tracked |
| Duchamp London | ~£70–£120 | Collar sizes | Medium | No | Standard |
| Simon Carter | ~£60–£80 | S–2XL | Medium | No | Standard |
| Paul Smith | ~£150–£300 | S–2XL | Medium–high | Seasonal | Standard |
| Percival | ~£90–£125 | XS–2XL | Low–medium | Seasonal | Standard |
If what drew you to Robert Graham was the philosophy — a shirt as a signed, limited piece of art with obsessive details — the nearest UK equivalent is Claudio Lugli, at a fraction of the landed cost and in twice the size range.
If you want quieter prints, Percival; heritage formality, Duchamp; a designer label, Paul Smith. There is no wrong answer here — only wrong rooms to wear them in.
Questions, answered
Is Robert Graham available in the UK?
Robert Graham has no UK stores and limited UK online distribution. Most UK buyers order from the US, paying international shipping and import duties on top of shirts that typically cost $200–$400 (roughly £150–£320).
What is the closest UK alternative to Robert Graham?
Claudio Lugli is the closest UK equivalent in philosophy and detail: bold limited-edition prints designed in London, contrast cuffs and trims, Egyptian satin cotton, £55–£95, in 9 sizes from S to 6XL with next-day UK delivery.
Are Claudio Lugli shirts good quality?
Claudio Lugli holds a 4.7 “Excellent” rating on Trustpilot and 4.8/5 from about 2,800 reviews on Reviews.io (94% recommend). Shirts are designed in London, made in Europe, and cut from premium fabrics including Egyptian satin cotton.
How do Claudio Lugli shirts fit compared to Robert Graham?
Claudio Lugli shirts are cut with a tailored regular fit, shaped through the chest and shoulders. If you're between sizes or broad-shouldered, size up. Robert Graham's classic fit runs more generous, US-style.
What should I pay for a bold printed shirt?
Meaningful quality starts around £50–£60. The £55–£95 bracket (Claudio Lugli, Simon Carter, Duchamp) buys premium fabric and finishing; £150+ (Paul Smith, Robert Graham) is mostly designer label rather than a jump in cloth quality.
