These are pretty darn good shirts--excellent for the money. I added 5 to my summer wardrobe with this order and now own 25+ Gildan T-shirts. I used to wear Hanes but these are put together better with double stitching, fit nicely (X-Lg as expected), Gildan has a great selection of colors (many, many more choices than other brands) and are a perfect weight--not too heavy, not too light--as baby bear said, just right. They don't shrink much (pre-shrunk says Gildan) --I wash in warm water. Will buy more when needed. Note: they do show a lot wrinkles if you don't pull them from the dryer promptly. 100% cotton might cause that--but I like that they are 100% cotton. No biggie. FYI: Gildan makes pretty good products, like Gold-Toe socks which are one of my Favs--they wear forever. I didn't get anything to write this review--I'm not on Vine's radar. Also, just so you can put my review in perspective--I'm cheap! So, no doubt, there are better shirts--but at much higher prices. You can't beat these for the money. If you ruin one of these shirts with paint, grease, etc... Oh well. No big loss cause they're so affordable.UPDATE (many months later): I have found that these shirts do tend to fade and are susceptible to stains. Probably a result of having so many colors to choose from. Other manufacturers offer only a few colors, and they are probably the ones where the color holds up best and stains don't show as much. So it is hard to compare the colorfastness of these with Haynes, for instance. I've never had Haynes colors other than black, gray or tan, so I can't really say if theirs are more colorfast. I still like these shirts for the money--they're great! And, I keep buying them. I did have one with a seam that started to fail in the armpit. That's where I find Hanes will eventually fail, as well. They aren't perfect. They will wear out. The colors will fade and they'll pick up stains. Oh, and they have old-school sewn-in tags, which bother some people. They don't seem to shrink. Go ahead and try them--really! They are worth the money, IMO.