In the workwear world, chambray is a bit of a unicorn. While many of the fabrics utilized in workwear—speaking both historically, and to its status as an aesthetic trend today—happen to be heavy and stiff, chambray is soft and lightweight with a distinct character of its own.

Its name is derived from Cambrai, the Northern French city where it was first produced. The simply woven fabric is essentially a broadcloth—hence its softness and weight—but made with colored (usually blue) warp threads and white weft threads. The outcome is a pleasingly mottled appearance that earns comparisons to denim, which is similarly woven with a colored warp and a white weft but is milled as a more dense and substantial twill.

As a breathable, inexpensive fabric, chambray became a workwear staple in the 19th and 20th centuries, and modern examples often call back to its blue-collar roots with prole details like flapped front pockets and reinforced stitching. But increasingly, designers and brands are tapping into its appeal as a warm-weather fabric and fashioning it into more modern applications as a sport shirt, a guayabera, and even a pleated dinner shirt.

In that spirit, we’ve helpfully composed a survey of the more desirable chambray models on the market below, no matter what your employ.