Taylor Stitch enjoys a strong reputation in the r/BuyItForLife community for producing well-constructed, natural-fiber menswear with a durable workwear aesthetic. Most community members praise the brand's shirts, heavier tees, and canvas pants as genuinely long-lasting, though there are consistent caveats around waxed canvas durability, inconsistent sizing, and the shift away from USA manufacturing. The brand is widely seen as a premium step above fast fashion, though opinions range from enthusiastic endorsement to occasional disillusionment about value and quality consistency.
Taylor Stitch earns strong community trust for specific product lines like the Heavy Bag Tees, Chore Pants, and Jack Shirts, but inconsistent sizing, waxed canvas durability issues, overseas production shifts, and variable quality control across categories make a blanket endorsement unwarranted.
Community members consistently highlight Taylor Stitch's material quality, attention to detail, and durable construction across shirts, pants, and outerwear. Specific product lines like the Heavy Bag Tees, Chore Pants, and Jack Shirts receive particularly strong praise for longevity.
The most recurring criticisms are inconsistent sizing, quality control issues on select items, and waxed canvas jackets developing holes at stress points. Some longtime fans also note a perceived quality decline since production shifted overseas.
One user who wore Taylor Stitch Chore Pants for nearly ten years — including a stint working in Antarctica — said one knee finally wore through the top layer, but called that an impressive result given the extreme conditions.
A long-term fan noted they love the brand's shirts, sweaters, and jackets without issue, but have had recurring problems with pants wearing out prematurely in the crotch area, suggesting quality varies significantly by product category.
A commenter who switched to Taylor Stitch after cheaper brands degraded quickly said the twill on their pants remained as stiff and sturdy as the day they bought them, crediting the brand's use of natural fibers.
One skeptic described Taylor Stitch as a romanticized brand with a cultish following, pointing to wildly inconsistent sizing between similar items purchased years apart as evidence it is overpriced for what it delivers.