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Artículo: Sullen vs. Dixxon Flannel: How are they different?

Sullen vs. Dixxon Flannel: How are they different?

Sullen vs. Dixxon Flannel: How are they different?

Sullen Tattoo Insights

Dixxon owns the flannel space. That's not a knock — it's just accurate. They built a category, grew a massive following, and turned a work shirt into a collector's item. If you want a technical flannel with utility features and a performance-oriented construction, Dixxon delivers.

But if you want a flannel built from natural fiber — heavy, breathable, yarn-dyed cotton that ages the way good denim ages — you're looking for something else. That's where Sullen flannels live.

Same price point. Completely different shirt. Here's how to know which one is right for you.


The fabric is where everything starts

This is the core difference and it runs through every other decision both brands make.

Dixxon builds their flannel from a proprietary microfiber poly-blend. It's engineered for consistency, durability under machine washing, and a softer-than-expected hand feel for a synthetic fabric. The construction is technical. It works.

Sullen uses 100% cotton, woven at 8.5 oz. That's heavyweight for a flannel — dense enough to have real structure in hand, light enough that natural cotton breathability keeps it from running hot. There's no polyester in the weave. No synthetic fibers anywhere in the construction.

Why does that matter? Because natural fiber and synthetic fiber age completely differently.

A poly-blend flannel is stable. It holds its shape, resists pilling reasonably well in a machine wash, and stays consistent over time. What it doesn't do is develop. The shirt you buy is the shirt you'll always have.

A 100% cotton flannel breaks in. The fiber softens with wear, the hand feel deepens, becomes even softer, the colors develop a lived-in patina. Given proper care, it doesn't just last — it gets better.


Why we recommend dry cleaning

This is the part most brands bury. We lead with it because it's a signal, not a caveat.

We recommend dry cleaning our flannels.

Not because they're fragile. Because the fabric is 100% cotton. A yarn-dyed flannel run through a standard wash cycle — hot water, agitation, machine dry — will gradually lose structure, bleed color, and break down the weave faster than the garment deserves. Dry cleaning preserves the fiber integrity, keeps the colors true, and extends the life of the shirt by years.

A flannel you dry clean is a flannel built to outlast its decade. That's not maintenance — that's the care that matches the construction.

Dixxon's poly construction is built for the washing machine. That's a genuine utility advantage if you need it. With 100% cotton, dry cleaning isn't a workaround — it's the right way to care for a natural fiber garment.


Yarn-dyed patterns, designed from scratch

Every Sullen flannel pattern is original — designed in-house, not sourced from a fabric library or adapted from an existing plaid. The patterns are woven from individually dyed yarn, which means the color is in the fiber itself, not printed or coated on top.

Yarn-dyed construction is how traditional flannel has always been made. The color goes all the way through the weave. When the shirt fades with wear, it fades evenly and honestly — the pattern stays readable because the dye is structural, not surface-level.

The result is a pattern catalog that doesn't exist anywhere else. Every colorway, every plaid configuration, every stripe weight was developed specifically for that shirt.


Fit: relaxed, not technical

Dixxon's flannel fits slightly closer to the body — relaxed, with a more tailored silhouette designed to work tucked or untucked. They include collar stays and a built-in microfiber cloth on the interior tail, which is a solid plus. Utility features for a shirt that crosses into workwear and dress-casual territory.

Sullen flannels are cut relaxed. The fit has room through the chest and shoulders, drops cleanly, and wears the way a flannel is supposed to wear — over a tee, open over a hoodie, or buttoned up with nothing underneath. No collar stays. No interior cloth. The construction is focused entirely on the fabric and the pattern.

Neither fit is wrong. They're designed for different contexts. If you're wearing your flannel to a client meeting, Dixxon's utility features make sense. If you're wearing it because it's a great flannel, the relaxed cut and natural fiber construction is the move.


Side by side

Sullen Flannel Dixxon Flannel
Fabric 100% cotton, 8.5 oz Proprietary microfiber poly-blend
Breathability Natural cotton breathability Synthetic, less breathable
Care Dry clean recommended Machine washable
Patterns Original, yarn-dyed Original, poly-woven
Fit Relaxed Tailored/semi-fitted
Utility features None Collar stays, microfiber cloth
Ages over time Breaks in, develops patina Stays consistent
Price $56–60 $40-60+
Best for Natural fiber collector, long-term wear Performance utility, machine-wash convenience

The bottom line

Dixxon built something real. Their flannel has a following for a reason and the utility construction is genuinely useful for a specific customer.

Sullen flannels aren't competing with that. They're the alternative for someone who wants natural fibers, real weight you can feel, original patterns woven from dyed yarn, and a shirt that gets better the longer you own it. Truly "Built to Last" flannels, small batch, timeless. 

Same price. Different philosophy. Different shirt.

Shop Sullen Flannels →


FAQ

Are Sullen flannels true to size? Yes. The relaxed fit is built into the pattern, so take your normal size. The room is by design.

Why dry clean instead of machine wash? 100% cotton yarn-dyed flannel holds up better without the agitation and heat of a standard wash cycle. Dry cleaning preserves the fiber integrity and keeps the colors true over years of wear. If you need to hand wash, cold water and hang dry — never machine dry.

Do Sullen flannel patterns repeat season to season? Patterns are designed from scratch each season. Some colorways return in updated form, but the catalog is built on original designs, not reissues from a stock library.

Is 8.5 oz too heavy for warmer climates? Cotton at any weight breathes. The 8.5 oz construction is substantial in hand but natural fiber moves air in a way synthetic blends don't. Worn open over a tee it works through most of the year in mild climates — SoCal included.

What's the difference between yarn-dyed and printed flannel? Yarn-dyed means the individual threads are dyed before weaving — the color is structural, all the way through the fiber. Printed flannel applies color to the surface of already-woven fabric. Yarn-dyed patterns stay readable as the shirt ages; printed patterns fade from the surface.

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