Most people buy a hoodie based on the graphic and regret it after the first wash. The print cracks, the fit turns into a rectangle, the sleeves cover your hands. That is not bad luck. That is buying without knowing what to look for.
Six things determine whether a hoodie is worth the money. Everything else is packaging.
🛑 VEE'S #1 RULE: A hoodie that fits your shoulders and survives Indian washing is worth more than one that looks good in the product photo.
1. GSM — Why Hoodie Weight Is a Different Conversation From Tee Weight
You already know GSM for t-shirts. Hoodies work differently.
For a t-shirt, 180–220 GSM is the comfortable Indian-summer range. For a hoodie, that number starts at 280 and goes up depending on your city.
Here is the practical breakdown for India:
280–320 GSM — transitional weather hoodie. Works for Bangalore, Mumbai, Chennai. Their "winter" is a cooler evening, not actual cold. This weight is breathable enough to not make you sweat the moment you walk indoors.
320–380 GSM — the all-rounder. Most of India's tier 1–2 cities fall here. Heavy enough to feel like a proper hoodie. Light enough to survive AC offices and evening commutes without overheating.
380–450 GSM — Delhi and North India territory. Actual cold requires actual weight. Below this range in a Delhi December, you are just wearing a thick tee.
If a brand does not list the GSM, that is a signal. Brands that use quality fabric are usually happy to tell you.
2. Fabric — Terry vs Fleece vs French Terry
This is where most buyers get confused because all three look similar in a product photo.
French Terry has a smooth exterior and uncut loops on the inside. It sits in the 220–300 GSM range and breathes well. It is the right fabric for most Indian cities because it gives you warmth without trapping heat. It also holds its structure over repeated washes better than fleece.
Fleece has a brushed, napped interior. That brushing traps air, which creates insulation. This is why fleece is warmer — but also why it is not ideal for most Indian winters. It traps your body heat in a climate that rarely drops below 10°C. In Delhi or Chandigarh, fleece makes sense. In Bangalore or Mumbai, you will regret it by February.
Loopback Cotton (sometimes just called cotton fleece) is unbroken loops on the inside. Heavier, structured, most durable of the three. This is the fabric premium streetwear hoodies typically use. It breaks in over time without breaking down.
The comparison table below lays this out in full.
3. Shoulder Fit — The Spec Nobody Talks About
If the shoulder seam of a hoodie does not sit at your actual shoulder, the entire garment looks wrong. Too wide and it slides down your arm. Too narrow and it pulls the body up.
For oversized hoodies, the shoulder seam should sit at the edge of your shoulder or just past it — this is the drop shoulder fit. If it falls halfway down your upper arm, the hoodie is too large, not oversized.
Try this before buying: lift your arm to shoulder height. The sleeve should move with you without the hoodie body lifting. If the body rises, the shoulder is too narrow.
This is difficult to assess from a product photo. Which is why checking size charts specifically for shoulder width — not just chest or length — matters before you order.
4. Print Method — DTF vs Embroidery on Hoodies
Both print methods work on hoodies. They perform differently.
DTF gives you full-colour, detailed graphics. Flexible bond. Works well on jersey-knit hoodie fabric. The risk: direct heat from ironing or repeated high-heat drying will damage the print over time. Cold wash, inside-out, air dry — that is the maintenance requirement for any DTF hoodie.
Embroidery is stitched directly into the fabric. It does not peel, crack, or fade. It also cannot replicate fine detail, gradients, or multi-colour artwork. Embroidered hoodies work for logo-style or typographic graphics. Not for complex illustrative prints.
If you are buying for longevity and the graphic is a logo or simple text — embroidery. If the design is detailed artwork — DTF with proper care.
5. Drawstring and Pocket Quality
Minor until it is not.
A cheap drawstring frays or snaps after a few months. The tunnels that hold the drawstring wear out at the eyelets. Kangaroo pocket seams come apart under regular use.
What to check: is the drawstring a proper cord or a flat ribbon? Flat ribbons fray faster. Are the eyelets reinforced? Do the pocket seams feel doubled at the edges? These are ten-second checks in person that most people skip.
A hoodie with a broken drawstring looks unfinished every time you wear it.
6. Pre-Shrunk vs Non-Pre-Shrunk Cotton
Cotton shrinks. That is not a defect — that is the fibre responding to heat and moisture. The question is whether it has been pre-treated to minimise that shrinkage before it reaches you.
Pre-shrunk or bio-washed hoodies have already been through a controlled shrink cycle in production. The residual shrinkage after you wash them is minimal — typically under 3–5%.
Non-pre-shrunk hoodies will shrink. How much depends on the cotton count, wash temperature, and whether you use a dryer. If you buy a non-pre-shrunk hoodie and wash it on a warm cycle, expect it to come out shorter and tighter than it started.
The fix is simple: cold wash, air dry from day one. If the brand does not label it as pre-shrunk or bio-washed, treat it as non-pre-shrunk and wash accordingly.
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