This is a classic white dress shirt from Brooks Brothers. The listing is a little short on details at the time of writing; what I received was described on the tag as a "regent fit" (regular) shirt in style 80752. It has a (very) small amount of stretch to its supima cotton fabric, and has design features like a modern non-button 'spread collar' (as opposed to a more classic button-down one), button sleeves (as opposed to french cuff), and a single front pocket. I found the fit to be exactly true to size - I measured my favorite shirt and ordered accordingly, and the shirt worked right out of the bag for me. To measure sleeve length, measure from the shoulder to the tip of the cuff of a favorite shirt, then add half the distance between the shoulders. To measure collar, wrap a dressmaker's tape measure around the lower part of your neck, then add a half inch (or just go with the size listed in the size chart that matches your usual S/M/L/XL sizing.) I didn't love the fabric. To be fair, I am not a crisp plain white shirt guy in general - while I have a lovely suit I had tailored on Nathan Road in Hong Kong that I love wearing, I tend to pair it with colored shirts to keep it fresh and interesting. But this shirt reminded me why I've made that stylistic choice: the white material shows through quite a bit to my skin underneath, giving it a kind of jaundiced yellow-brown color that I found unflattering. I wish they'd found a way to keep the shirt breathable while staying crisp and white while being worn. You can see the translucency of the material in one of my photos. The whole effect is very 80s-pocket-protector-wearing-engineer - exactly the opposite of what I want to convey when I dress up. Maybe it would work better if you have a body you're a little more confident in showing off? The packing of this shirt really bothered me. All dress shirts have some amount of this problem, but this thing exploded into a giant pile of unnecessary plastic, cardboard and wrapping: rigid plastic collar undersupports, cardboard inner panels, and several tension clips to hold the whole mess together, all in a plastic outer bag. I think Brooks Brothers should at a minimum explore paper alternatives, and maybe should acknowledge that all of the trappings of a retail shirt aren't as necessary when the shirt arrives from an online warehouse. I felt pretty bad carrying the pile of garbage to the trash as I hung my new shirt up in the closet - not the best feeling when I wanted to be proud of my new, fancy shirt instead. Speaking of packaging, the title claims 'non-iron', but that doesn't seem to be the case at all - the shirt had plenty of wrinkles present after unpacking it, and the first thing I had to do was iron it. Brooks Brothers has a certain mystique as America's oldest clothing brand, and for many it's the pinnacle of clothing luxury... but I think at the price point that's being charged here, this shirt is pushing the bounds of what's reasonable. I didn't find it to be a substantially nicer quality shirt than ones I've purchased from my local high-end department store; it's not a badly made product, by any means, but I'm just not seeing what justifies the price point here. Maybe that's a compliment to my other shirts, rather than a knock on this one, but I think you should shop around; there are a lot of alternatives for plain white dress shirts, and I think the cost of this one is at least half from the name on the tag rather than the tailoring and materials.