Size Guide — How to Measure

Every Marque piece is printed to order, and different garments run different cuts — a fitted tee, an oversized heavyweight, and a raglan hoodie won't measure the same. Two minutes with a tape measure beats a reprint every time. Here's how to get it right.

The flat-lay method (most accurate)

Take the best-fitting shirt you already own and lay it flat.

A — WidthB — Length

A — Width: measure straight across the chest from one armpit seam to the other (pit to pit). Keep the tape flat and the fabric smooth.

B — Length: measure from the highest point of the shoulder (next to the collar) straight down to the bottom hem.

Now compare those two numbers against the size table in the Size guide & fit section on any product page. Match the width first — it matters more than length.

Measuring your body instead

No reference shirt handy? Wrap the tape around the fullest part of your chest, under your arms, keeping it level. Divide that number by two and compare it to the garment width — then add 2–4" of room depending on how relaxed you like the fit.

Fit notes from the paddock

Between sizes? Size up — a slightly relaxed tee beats a tight one, and printed-to-order means no exchanges for a coin-flip guess. Oversized cuts (marked in the product title or description) run intentionally big; check the table rather than your usual size. Hoodies and sweatshirts layer over other clothes, so when in doubt, go roomier. And every size table lists both inches and centimetres — measure in whichever you trust.

Still unsure between two sizes? Get in touch with your measurements and the product you're eyeing — we'll tell you straight which one to run.