Zeddwork Studio | Clothing Manufacturers & Apparel Exporters India

French Terry vs Fleece: Which Fabric Should You Choose for Premium Hoodies?

A split-screen graphic comparing apparel manufacturing fabrics for premium hoodies. The left side features an ultra-realistic close-up of light green French Terry fabric showing its signature textured loop-back knit, overlaid with a white label reading "FRENCH TERRY". The right side features a close-up of dark grey fleece fabric showing its soft, brushed, and fuzzy texture, overlaid with a white label reading "FLEECE". In the center, a smaller square image shows a hoodie split down the middle—the left half is green French Terry and the right half is dark grey fleece. Text at the bottom center reads, "Which Fabric Should You Choose for Premium Hoodies?

Someone picks up your hoodie at a pop-up. They don’t read the hangtag. They don’t check the GSM. They just touch it — and in that half-second, they’ve already decided what it’s worth and whether your brand deserves their attention.

That moment isn’t decided at the point of sale. It’s decided six months earlier, in a sourcing conversation that most brands treat as an afterthought. French Terry or Fleece? It sounds like a technical footnote. It’s actually the founding decision of your entire product’s perceived value.

This guide is for sourcing agents and menswear founders who want a straight answer — no filler, no vague “it depends.” We’ll map both fabrics across GSM, structure, blend, climate, and brand positioning so you walk into your next factory conversation knowing exactly what to spec.

Understanding the Two Fabrics

Both French Terry and Fleece are knitted loop fabrics — but their loop construction, weight, and hand feel diverge significantly. Understanding the structure is non-negotiable for any sourcing brief.

An infographic poster titled "PREMIUM APPAREL MANUFACTURING: FABRIC COMPARISON - A GUIDE FOR FASHION BRANDS & APPAREL BUYERS" on a white background with a dark red border. The poster features a split-screen design comparing two types of sweatshirt fabrics.  The left side focuses on "FRENCH TERRY" for premium oversized hoodies, displaying a sage green pullover hoodie alongside a detailed texture swatch of its visibly loop-back knit interior. Bullet points note its features: Visibly Loop-Back Interior, Breathable & Cooling, Medium to Heavyweight (280-450 GSM), and Durable & Structured Hold, with usage listed for Activewear, Loungewear, and Streetwear. Star ratings show high breathability, moderate warmth, and moderate weight.  The right side focuses on "FLEECE" for premium, brushed fleece sweatshirts & pullovers, showcasing a dark charcoal grey hoodie next to a detailed swatch of its soft, fuzzy brushed interior. Bullet points note its features: Soft Brushed Interior, Maximum Warmth & Insulation, Lightweight to Heavyweight (200-400+ GSM), and Stretchy & Plush Feel, with usage listed for Cold Weather, Casual, and Performance. Star ratings show high warmth, lower breathability, and maximum weight/density
French TerryFleece (Brushed)
Smooth flat face, uncut loops on the reverseSmooth face, brushed/napped interior for softness
Knit structure: single-jersey base with looped backHeavier, more insulating, warmer hand feel
Loops left uncut — retains moisture-wicking propertiesClassic sweatshirt texture — skews more casual
Lighter, drapier, less bulkLoops are cut then brushed — creates a soft pile
Breathable — suited for layering and mild climatesIdeal for colder climates and heavyweight drops
Higher perceived refinement at equivalent GSMMore forgiving in lower-cost productions

Knit type breakdown

PropertyFrench Terry Fleece (Brushed)
Base KnitJersey (flat) + loop back Jersey + brushed loop pile
Interior SurfaceUncut loops — slightly textured Cut & brushed — velvety soft
BreathabilityHigh — open loop structure Medium — pile traps air
WarmthModerate (mild to warm climates) High (cool to cold climates)
DrapeFluid, structured Boxy, relaxed
Pilling RiskLower (loops intact) Higher (cut pile frays)
Print ClarityExcellent (smooth face) Good (slight texture)
Premium AppealHigher at same GSMRequires heavier GSM to signal premium

GSM guide — what weight for your product?

GSM (grams per square metre) is the single most misunderstood spec in knitwear sourcing. Brands chase high GSM numbers without understanding that the same weight in French Terry vs. Fleece delivers a completely different experience. Here’s how to read it correctly:

  • French Terry — Lightweight (180–220 GSM) – Spring/ Summer hoodies, resort, layering
  • French Terry — Mid-weight (240–280 GSM) – Year-round, premium everyday sweatshirts
  • French Terry — Heavyweight (300–360 GSM) – Premium streetwear, structured crewnecks
  • Fleece — Standard (260–320 GSM) – Mid-range hoodies, fast fashion tier
  • Fleece — Premium (340–400 GSM) – Heavyweight drops, winter hoodies
  • Fleece — Ultra-heavy (420–500 GSM) – Luxury loungewear, workwear-inspired drops

Key principle: a 280 GSM French Terry reads more refined than 280 GSM Fleece — the smooth outer face and intact loop structure signals intention. If you’re committed to Fleece at a premium positioning, go no lighter than 360 GSM. Anything below that reads as commodity, regardless of label.

The most popular fabric blends — and what they actually mean

The cotton-polyester ratio shapes everything from shrinkage to colour retention to the brand story you’re entitled to tell. Here are the blends that matter for hoodies and sweatshirts.

CLASSIC BLEND

80/20

Cotton / Polyester. The industry standard. Soft, breathable, good structure. Slight shrinkage risk. Ideal for most mid-market brands entering a new category.

PERFORMANCE EVERYDAY

60/40

Cotton / Polyester. More durable, better colour retention, minimal shrinkage. Slightly less natural hand feel. Strong choice for athletic-adjacent or activewear-crossover brands.

PREMIUM

100% Cotton

Ringspun or combed. Maximum breathability and storytelling legitimacy. Higher shrinkage risk — spec 10% oversized. Best reserved for brands with a clear natural-material narrative.

LUXURY PERFORMANCE

Cotton + Modal

Usually 70/30 or 60/40. Modal adds exceptional drape and silkiness. Ideal for slim-fit pullovers and elevated basics at the top end of the market.

Country, climate, and fabric logic

Climate isn’t just a weather question — it’s a wearability and seasonality question. A 420 GSM fleece hoodie is a commercial mistake in Singapore. A 200 GSM French Terry is dead stock in Oslo in November.

🌡

Tropical / Hot humid

India, SE Asia, UAE, Brazil

Lightweight French Terry
Light cotton or cotton-modal. AC-culture makes this viable year-round indoors.

🍂

Temperate / Four-season

UK, US, EU, Japan, Korea

Mid-weight French Terry or premium Fleece
Season-split drops work well. Fabric tier determines drop positioning.

❄️

Cold / Nordic

Scandinavia, Canada, Northern EU

Heavyweight Fleece
Bulk is expected. Fleece-lined or double-face constructions perform best.

🌤

Mediterranean / Mild

Spain, Italy, Australia, California

Mid-weight French Terry
Year-round viability. The elevated basics category thrives in this climate.

🏙

Urban / AC-dominant

Gulf, Singapore, NYC summers

Lightweight to mid French Terry
Indoor lifestyles make lighter weights commercially option.

🌏

Global / DTC export

Multi-market drops

Mid-weight French Terry
The safest universal weight. Positions as year-round for all.

What actually makes a hoodie premium?

Premium isn’t one thing — it’s the compounding of a dozen decisions your customer can’t name but absolutely feels. Here’s what moves the needle when you’re trying to price above the noise.

Fabric hand feel — weight, softness, and drape. The first touch sets the entire perception.

Garment wash — stone-wash, enzyme wash, or pigment dye. Removes that stiff “new fabric” feel.

Rib quality — cuffs and hem ribs should be 1×1 or 2×1 rib, not waffle or loose knit.

Seam construction — flatlock, chain stitch, or coverstitch at stress points. No raw surging on visible seams.

Hood structure — two-panel vs. one-panel shape. Two-panel sits and drapes better when worn down.

Kangaroo pocket weight — pocket should hang flush, not gap. Requires pocket lining or heavier base fabric.

Drawcord — flat woven cord with metal or resin tips. Round cord with plastic tips immediately reads cheap.

Labelling — woven label, not printed. Twill tape neck label. Heat-transfer labels undercut premium positioning.

The decision matrix

Your PositionGo French TerryGo Fleece
Brand positioningPremium, refined, elevated basicsStreetwear, athletic, heritage
ClimateMild, tropical, temperate spring/summerCold, four-season autumn/winter
Key garment typeCrewneck, pullover, slim hoodieHeavyweight hoodie, zip-up, coach jacket
Print or embroidery?Print: excellent. Embroidery: greatEmbroidery: excellent. Print: good
Customer expectationDrape, softness, breathabilityWarmth, bulk, cosy weight
MOQ sensitivityWorks at lower MOQ per colourwayNeeds higher MOQ for consistent brushing
Garment wash viabilityExcellent — washes beautifullyGood — but pilling risk increases
Market tierConsidered to luxuryEntry to considered

Ready to manufacture?

Work with Zeddwork Studio
We spec, source, and produce hoodies, sweatshirts, and pullovers for menswear brands globally — from first sample to full production run. GSM-verified. Blend-accurate. Wash-tested.

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