Polos
Refined polos in cashmere, cotton and knit — an easy anchor for smart-casual dressing.
Refined polos in cashmere, cotton and knit — an easy anchor for smart-casual dressing.
23 items
A polo is the quiet workhorse of a considered wardrobe — smarter than a tee, easier than a shirt. Our edit spans three foundations: the fine-knit polo in cashmere and merino for cool-weather refinement; the classic pique in long-staple cotton for structure and breathability; and the long-sleeve knit polo for the shoulder seasons. Each is cut clean and close, without excess — pieces built to layer, and to last.
Start with neutrals. Navy, stone, charcoal and off-white do the heavy lifting: they pair with everything and read effortlessly refined. Tonal dressing — a stone polo with cream trousers, or charcoal on charcoal — looks intentional and expensive. Keep a single deeper tone, such as bottle green or burgundy, for quiet contrast. If you own one polo, make it navy; if you own three, add stone and charcoal.
A knit polo carries from desk to dinner: under a blazer it reads smart-casual; on its own with tailored trousers it holds an evening. Pique polos suit warm days and relaxed offices, while long-sleeve knits bridge spring and autumn. The rule is simple — if the moment sits a notch above a t-shirt but below a shirt and tie, a polo is almost always right.
Directly here at TM Limited. Every polo in this collection is available to order and ships worldwide.
Measure your chest at the fullest point, keeping the tape level and relaxed, and your natural waist. Compare against the size guide on each product page. Between sizes? Size up for a relaxed drape or down for a closer cut.
Our polos are cut close but not tight. For a trim, modern line take your usual size; for room to layer, go one up. Knit polos have a little give, while pique holds its shape.
Look at the yarn and finish: a dense, even knit; a collar that holds its roll; clean, flat seams; and buttons sewn to sit flush. Natural fibres — cashmere, merino and long-staple cotton — feel better and last longer than synthetic blends.
The shoulder seam should sit at the edge of your shoulder, the chest should skim without pulling, and the hem should land mid-fly — long enough to tuck, short enough to wear out.
Always follow the care label. As a rule: cashmere and merino knits are best hand-washed cool or dry-cleaned and dried flat; cotton pique can be machine-washed cold and reshaped while damp. Fold heavy knits rather than hanging them.
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