Department

Men's Clothing

Clothing & Accessories, sorted. Browse free print catalogs by mail or shop the digital pages.

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Catalogs
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Men's clothing catalogs remain one of the simplest ways to refresh a wardrobe without spending an afternoon at the mall. A single mailing can put dress shirts, jeans, work boots, outerwear, and weekend casuals in front of you side by side — with the fit notes, fabric details, and sizing charts that crowded store racks rarely give you time to read. The catalogs on this page cover the full range of how American men actually dress: office attire, jobsite gear, outdoor and athletic kit, and roomier sizing for tall and big-build customers.

Men's Clothing Catalog Categories at a Glance

The catalogs collected here fall into a handful of clear lanes. Knowing which lane you're shopping in is the fastest way to land on the right brochure.

  • Casual everyday wear — polos, henleys, chinos, jeans, sweaters, and weekend layers. Lands' End, Orvis, Vineyard Vines, Lee Jeans, and Territory Ahead anchor this category with proven wardrobe staples.
  • Dress and business attire — suits, dress shirts, ties, blazers, and dress trousers. Jos. A. Bank, Charles Tyrwhitt, and Lands' End Business handle this end of the closet, with full size runs in neck and sleeve combinations stores rarely stock.
  • Workwear and trades — Carhartt-style canvas, flame-resistant gear, hi-vis, and steel-toe footwear. Dungarees.com, Working Person's Store, Work 'n Gear, and 5.11 Tactical serve the jobsite, EMS, and first-responder crowd.
  • Outdoor and rugged apparel — flannels, performance fleece, sheepskin, waxed cotton, and field jackets. Overland Sheepskin, Filson, Schnee's, RailRiders, Sierra Traditions, and Royal Robbins live here.
  • Big and tall — extended sizing built around taller torsos, longer sleeves, and roomier rises rather than a scaled-up regular pattern. King Size, DestinationXL, Casual Male, Kaufman's, Westport Big & Tall, and Rochester specialize here.
  • Athletic and team apparel — moisture-wicking fabrics, training gear, swim, and licensed pro-sports apparel. Champion, Hanes, Body Glove, NASCAR, and the MLB/NFL/NHL/NBA catalogs cover this segment.

What to Look For in a Men's Clothing Catalog

Not every catalog deserves a permanent spot on your kitchen counter. The best ones share a few traits worth screening for before you request a brochure or place a first order:

  • Detailed sizing charts. Look for catalogs that publish actual chest, waist, sleeve, inseam, and neck measurements in inches — not just S/M/L letters. The brands that take fit seriously (Lands' End, Jos. A. Bank, Charles Tyrwhitt) include garment measurements and body measurements side by side.
  • Honest fabric content and weight. A 6 oz t-shirt wears completely differently than a 10 oz heavyweight. Catalogs that list fabric ounces, denim weight, fleece grams, and material blends let you compare across brands without surprises when the box arrives.
  • Clear return and exchange policies. The catalogs with the longest customer tenure — Lands' End, Orvis, L.L. Bean — all back orders with extended returns and free exchanges by mail. That matters most when you're trying a new brand or buying as a gift.
  • Multiple fits per silhouette. A dress shirt that comes in slim, traditional, and big-and-tall cuts is more useful than the same shirt in just one fit. Same with jeans: athletic, straight, and relaxed cuts cover most body types.
  • Edition cadence. Catalogs that publish two or three times a year stay current with seasons. A brochure that arrived two years ago is likely showing discontinued SKUs.

Choosing Sizes, Fits & Fabrics

Catalog shopping rewards a quick five-minute measurement session before your first order. Grab a soft tape measure and record the essentials: chest at the widest point, natural waist, inseam from crotch to the floor in stocking feet, neck circumference for dress shirts, and sleeve length from center-back to wrist with arm slightly bent. Keep those numbers in your phone — every catalog in this list will reference them.

For fits, the rule of thumb is simple: structured fabrics (oxford cotton, wool, denim) hold their shape and tolerate a closer cut, while softer fabrics (jersey, brushed flannel, fleece) need a bit more room or they cling. Big and tall sizing isn't just larger numbers — true B&T catalogs cut longer rises, longer torsos, and longer sleeves so proportions stay right on taller frames. If you've ever had a regular-sized 2XL shirt run too short at the hem, a dedicated big and tall catalog (King Size, DestinationXL, Westport) will solve that.

Fabric-wise, casual catalogs lean on cotton, cotton-poly blends, and performance synthetics. Workwear catalogs feature heavyweight duck canvas, ripstop, FR-rated cotton, and Cordura. Outdoor catalogs mix sheepskin, waxed cotton, technical shells, and merino wool base layers. Reading the fabric callouts before ordering avoids the classic mistake of buying a 'jacket' that turns out to be a lightweight windbreaker when you needed a winter coat.

Free Men's Clothing Catalogs by Mail

Every catalog on this page is free to request. Most brands mail a printed brochure within one to two weeks, and many also offer a digital edition you can flip through immediately in your browser. Requesting catalogs by mail is still the easiest way to see a full season's lineup laid out — color stories, complete size runs, and the kind of styling photography that helps you picture how a jacket or sport coat will actually look on you.

Catalogs.com is one of the original free-catalog-request services online. We don't sell anything ourselves — we just connect you with the brands. Pick the men's clothing catalogs that match how you dress, hit request, and the brochures show up in your mailbox. If you'd rather not wait for the mail, every catalog on this list also links to its digital edition so you can start browsing right now.