
FIELD NOTE
Why we obsess over the collar.
The difference between a good polo and a great one lives in two millimeters of interlining.
Started in a garage in Carolina because every polo we owned fell apart by the back nine. These ones don't.

02 — CRAFTED FOR THE COURSE
Our mill in Portugal has been doing this since 1984. They know pique like we know bogeys.
The shoulder moves with you. No more tucking your shirt back in after every drive.
UPF 50+ because sunburn on the 16th hole ruins the 19th.
Wash them, lose them in the dryer, find them, wear them. They survive.
05 — THE BEGINNING
In 2019, after yet another collar went floppy on the 14th hole, my brother and I decided we'd had enough of golf shirts that looked good in the pro shop and fell apart by the turn. We bought a sewing machine off Facebook Marketplace and started cutting patterns in our parents' garage in Chapel Hill.
The first thirty polos went to friends who we'd guilt into honest feedback. Most of it was brutal. But by version seven, people started asking where they could buy one. We found a family-run mill in Portugal that's been making pique knit since 1984, and we haven't looked back.
Dunmore is named after the course our grandfather played for fifty years — a muni in Scotland with more character than budget. We make clothes for people who care about how they play, not just how they look.
— CALUM & ROSS, FOUNDERS

WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING
"Bought the Navy for my club championship. Collar stayed crisp all weekend. Only wish the sleeve was a half-inch longer."
Mike T. — Charlotte, NC
"Got one for my husband, stole it for myself. The fabric actually breathes in August humidity."
Sarah K. — Savannah, GA
"Third one I've bought. The first two are still going strong after two years of weekly rounds."
James R. — Raleigh, NC
04 — JOURNAL

FIELD NOTE
The difference between a good polo and a great one lives in two millimeters of interlining.

COURSE GUIDE
From the Carolina Sandhills to a hidden track in Donegal — our staff's all-weather list.