best men's non iron dress shirts Charcoal Non-Iron Dress Shirt Custom Fit
SKU: 85620893941
best men's non iron dress shirts

best men's non iron dress shirts Charcoal Non-Iron Dress Shirt Custom Fit

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Discover sophisticated style with The Charcoal Sanders Non Iron Fine Twill Custom Shirt—a refined dress shirt that brings subtle color and timeless elegance to your wardrobe. This custom dress shirt is crafted from our Sanders non-iron fine twill fabric, delivering exceptional quality with zero-maintenance convenience.

Premium Non-Iron Fine Twill Fabric
The Sanders Non-Iron Fine Twill is engineered for the modern professional who demands both style and convenience. This charcoal dress shirt delivers exceptional wrinkle resistance, so you can skip the iron and still look impeccably polished. The mid-weight fine twill fabric has a smooth, refined texture that feels luxurious against your skin while maintaining a crisp appearance all day long.

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This charcoal dress shirt is a refined alternative to traditional blue or white shirts. The subtle charcoal shade adds personality to your wardrobe while remaining professional and versatile. It pairs beautifully with navy, gray, or charcoal suits, making it perfect for business meetings, formal occasions, or smart-casual events.

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The Sanders Non-Iron treatment dramatically reduces wrinkles and makes care incredibly easy. Simply wash, hang dry, and you're ready to go—minimal to no ironing required. While the fabric may occasionally need a light touch-up for a perfectly crisp look, it resists wrinkles far better than traditional dress shirts. This is the ultimate dress shirt for busy professionals, frequent travelers, and anyone who values their time.

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The mid-weight fine twill construction ensures breathability and comfort from morning meetings to evening events. The fabric feels luxurious against your skin while maintaining a crisp, professional appearance throughout the day. The resilient fabric retains its shape, ensuring you look as polished at 5 PM as you did at 9 AM.

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This fabric retains its shape incredibly well, wear after wear. Unlike ordinary dress shirts that lose their structure, the Sanders non-iron fine twill bounces back, ensuring you look polished and professional day after day. This is a dress shirt built to last for years.

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This charcoal dress shirt is incredibly versatile. Pair it with a charcoal suit for a coordinated, sophisticated look, wear it with navy or gray suits for classic business style, or dress it down with chinos for smart-casual elegance. The refined charcoal shade works for any occasion.

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Available in our custom fit options, this dress shirt is guaranteed to fit you perfectly. The non-iron fine twill construction ensures all-day comfort while maintaining a polished, professional silhouette.

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The wrinkle-resistant fabric makes this dress shirt ideal for business travel. Pack it in your suitcase, and it emerges looking fresh and ready to wear with minimal fuss. Perfect for the office, weddings, or traveling—this is your best option for when you need to look your best with easy care.

Styling Suggestions:

  • Pair with a charcoal suit for a coordinated, sophisticated look
  • Wear with navy or gray suits for classic business style
  • Perfect for business meetings and professional events
  • Dress down with chinos for smart-casual versatility
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  • Exceptional wrinkle resistance - minimal to no ironing required
  • Easy care for all-day polish
  • Mid-weight, smooth texture
  • Retains shape incredibly well
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Whether you're dressing for an important meeting or a weekend gathering, this charcoal dress shirt delivers timeless style with refined sophistication. It's guaranteed to be your go-to dress shirt for years to come.

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SKU: 85620893941

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4.3 ★★★★★
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Scooter Reviews
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
Like a freight train coming through...
Format: Paperback
I skimmed through a friend's paperback version and quickly realized that this book would require much more careful reading and study. I bought the Kindle version and spent 2 months carefully going through it. I honestly do not know how I missed this book when it came out and I'm embarrassed that it took me 7 years to find it. Like most LDS readers and reviewers here, this completely different approach to the Prophet's history throws you off while at the same time sucking you in. What's amazing to me is the way that Bushman tackles head-on the "problems" and "difficulties" with LDS history. As my title suggests, Bushman is like a freight train coming through Church history and it is a very welcome middle ground to both the Church version and the anti-Mormon version. As someone who has studied this stuff extensively, there was so much new for me in the book. For example, although I knew about the Zions Camp March, I never had actually learned that the whole expedition was an attempt to take back Jackson County lands by military means. Also present in the book are things that I've wondered but never been able to ask, such as all the different aspects of Joseph's practice of polygamy- including lying to Emma, sex with multiple wives, and marrying women who were already married. Bushman is unflinching and I feel this approach is vital for the internet age. As the "Joseph Smith Papers" continue to get published giving writers the good sources materials, I expect more of this open kind of historical inquiry to be written. Joseph's bad temper, his trusting of untrustworthy people, and his mismanagement of multiple situations need to be studied alongside his incredible accomplishments and daring. I agree with Bushman, who quotes Yale scholar Harold Bloom, that the King Follet discourse is one of the best sermons ever delivered in America. Bushman has a whole section dedicated to this one discourse, the climax of Joseph's theology and given at a time when so many things were going wrong for Joseph. I also agree with Bushman that it is a mystery why the King Follet discourse has not been canonized by the Church since it is equal to or superior to many of the revelations currently in the Doctrine & Covenants. Fantastic book and I would give it more stars if I could. The only drawback for me was that Bushman starts by describing Joseph's grandparents and parents before he gets to Joseph and this part bored me a little, but is important for putting Joseph in his historical context. Bushman's scholarly credentials are top-notch and LDS readers will be surprised at how the depth of Bushman's understanding of American history gives more meaning to early LDS church history. Although a patriarch and devout LDS member, Bushman is also one of the preeminent scholars of American history and it comes through in the book. I can see this being a huge benefit to non-Mormon readers who want to approach Joseph from a historical perspective than a believers' perspective. If you like this, I highly recommend you also read the author's "On the Road with Joseph Smith" which is a diary of Bushman's experiences with the book before and after it's release. Also, read Terryl Given's books starting with "By the Hand of Mormon".
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Reviewed in the United States on April 18, 2012
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Alex Thompson
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Very fair and academic
Format: Paperback
Very good book. I agree with the authors conclusion and felt the portrayal was both fair and academical.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2026
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C. Rohner
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
As Close As You Will Get To Objectivity
Format: Paperback
If you have read "No Man Knows My History," you have to read "Rough Stone Rolling." The former biography was written by Fawn Brodie, a scholar who grew up LDS but left the church disenchanted and not believing that Joseph Smith was what he claimed to be--a prophet. The latter written by Bushman, a practicing LDS scholar who believes that Joseph Smith was a prophet. In the preface of "Rough Stone Rolling," Bushman makes the legitimate point that there will never be consensus on Joseph Smith's character or achievements. Furthermore, he confesses that as a believing historian, pure objectivity is impossible. Nonetheless, I think he comes closer to pure objectivity in this history than any other I have read on Joseph Smith. This has to be one of the best biographies I have ever read. The book is well written, loaded with historical fact, and any assumptions that are made are within detailed, historical contexts. Unlike Brodie's biography, it is very difficult to ascertain Bushman's own opinion. If he had not confessed his belief in the preface, you would wonder. Nowhere does Bushman try to convince you that Smith was a prophet and he is not afraid to explore Joseph Smith's weaknesses and shortcomings as a man. I am a believer so I admit that I may just relate to Bushman better than Brodie. Still, I know many practicing Mormons that would not like this book simply because they have to have Joseph Smith on a pedestal, untouchable, and locked in a glass case. I also know many faithful non-Mormons who believe that a prophet is certainly not a god but is definitely something more than human. Such readers will probably not care for this book either. I believe Joseph Smith was a prophet but I also know he was a man with weaknesses, like every other prophet that came before him. In Bushman's own words, "flawless characters are neither attractive or useful." This is a history of a man; it is not scripture. After boldly claiming heavenly visions, Joseph Smith penned a few great books of scripture that are well worth reading if you really want to explore the faith. Fawn Brodie takes the title for her biography from Joseph Smith's own admission in 1844 that "No Man Knows My History" and paints, in her opinion, the delusion and deceit behind Smith's confession. Bushman takes the title for his biography from Joseph Smith's own admission in 1843 that he is a "Rough Stone Rolling" and gives you the most real, honest, and fair assessment of his life that I have ever read. He gives you the man Joseph Smith, with his strengths and weaknesses, and leaves the opinions to the reader.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 15, 2013
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J. A. White
Boise, US
★★★★★ 3
Comprehensive, but not convincing to this non-believer
Format: Paperback
Having previously read Fawn Brodie's , I read this one to get the believer's view. Bushman is at his best describing the evolution of Smith's thinking and revelations. Although the book is long, it is well written and authoritative. It gives a deeper understanding of Smith's religious philosophy than does Brodie's book. To his credit, Bushman confronts many of the crucial controversies surrounding Smith. From my non-believer's perspective, however, the defenses of Smith are not remotely convincing. Some examples: 1. DNA analysis shows without question that the American Indians came from east Asia. This fact is in direct contradiction of the traditional LDS view that Native Americans are lost Israelites. Bushman argues that Smith may have been writing about a small tribe somewhere in New York, or about people outside North America altogether. Within a few pages, Bushman has forgotten about this controversy altogether, and happily describes the Book of Mormon as a history of the American Indians. 2. Smith made the huge mistake of reproducing parts of the hieroglyphics he claims to have interpreted as the "Book of Abraham." These documents have been translated by scholars and have nothing to do with Abraham. Bushman (pp. 291-2) puts forth the argument that Smith's translation may not have been a true translation, but instead may have been a divine revelation simply inspired by the presence of the scrolls. Bushman suggests the same for the Book of Mormon. This is a truly shocking stance for an LDS believer to take: if Smith's "translations" weren't translations, why should anyone believe that his revelations were divinely inspired? Ironically, Bushman's view here sounds much like Brodie's: Not anticipating that scholars would use the Rosetta stone to translate hieroglyphics, Smith imagined that bogus translations would not be found out. 3. Smith repeatedly lied about whether he and the Saints were practicing polygamy. Bushman's defense of Smith in this context reminds me of Bill Clinton's statements regarding Monica Lewinsky: Smith held a secret definition of the term "polygamy," and thus felt free to mislead (or lie) with impunity. The facts, as reported by both Brodie and Bushman, support the conclusion that Smith coerced women into his bed by arguing that their eternal salvation was at stake. The stain of Smith's lustful "revelation" regarding polygamy continues to haunt the LDS, which claims to recoil from earthly polygamy but argues that men (not women) get to have harems in heaven. Despite these complaints, I recommend this book to non-believers who are patient enough to get through it. I feel that I have much greater insight into the LDS mindset than I did before.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2008
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Ian
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 5
The definitive paperback edition
Format: Paperback
I purchased the Oxford World's Classics edition of "Le Morte d'Arthur: The Winchester Manuscript" for a school reading assignment, and I can say with confidence that this is the version you want. The original Old English is present (it was virtually a new language), complete with very useful footnotes to assist with antiquated words and phrases. The story was intriguing, colorful, and poignant (it's a downer, but a well-written one), filled with memorable characters such as Sir Gareth and Sir Launcelot. If you have a taste for classic literature and are looking for a challenge, definitely give "Le Morte d'Arthur" a read, especially with this version.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2023

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