When C.C. Hudson accepted an offer to work in an overall factory in 1897—where he sewed on buttons for $0.25 per day—he couldn’t have ever imagined what would transpire down the road. Seven years ...
While manual labor isn’t an everyday reality for most of us today, there’s still a strong case to be made for the role of work shirts in the modern man’s wardrobe. Primarily, that they are utilitarian ...
The story of the work shirt begins in 1900 with Sears, which was then called Sears Roebuck & Co. The store sold a number of durable top layers called Working Shirts, a staple of the workwear category.