Every brand in India uses the word "premium" in their product description. Almost none of them define what it means.
The result is that you buy online, the t-shirt arrives, and three washes later it is see-through, pilled, and shapeless. You wasted money on marketing copy, not fabric.
Here is what actual premium cotton feels like in your hands — and how to test it in three seconds, whether you are in a store or evaluating fabric swatches.
🛑 VEE'S RULE: IF IT FEELS LIKE TISSUE PAPER, IT IS TISSUE PAPER
A quality cotton tee should have noticeable weight when you hold it up. Not heavy like a blanket — but present. It should feel like it has substance. If you can crumple it in one hand without resistance, it is too thin to last a season.
1. The Weight Test
Pickup the t-shirt and hold it in one hand at the shoulder seam. Let it hang.
What You Are Checking
A 200GSM+ cotton tee will pull slightly downward. You can feel a small amount of gentle weight. A cheap 140GSM tee feels like holding a piece of tissue paper. There is no resistance.
Why It Matters
GSM (grams per square metre) is the density of the fabric. Higher GSM means more cotton per centimetre. More cotton means the fabric holds its shape, does not go see-through when stretched, and does not shrink aggressively in the wash.
2. The Surface Test
Run the fabric slowly across the inside of your forearm.
Good Cotton
It should feel soft but with a slight, almost imperceptible texture — like very fine suede. This slight grip is caused by the natural fibre structure of combed cotton. It does not cling or slip.
Bad Blend
Polyester-blend fabric feels smooth in a slippery way — more like plastic or nylon than cotton. It slides across skin without gripping. In summer, this is the fabric that sticks to your body when you sweat.
3. The Light Test
Hold the t-shirt up toward a light source — a window or a bright ceiling lamp.
The Density Check
In a quality cotton tee (180GSM and above), the fabric should block most of the light. You will see a slight glow, but not the shape of your hand behind it. In a cheap thin tee, you will see your hand clearly through the fabric.
The Real World Consequence
A tee that is see-through under a light source is see-through under the Indian sun. A white tee that you can see through will show your chest, bra, and undershirt the second you step outside.
Left: cheap 140GSM blend — hand clearly visible. Right: 220GSM combed cotton — fabric is dense and opaque.
4. The Scrunch Test
Scrunch the fabric tightly in your fist, hold for three seconds, then open your hand.
100% Cotton Behaviour
Pure cotton holds the crease for a second or two before slowly relaxing back. It is not perfectly crease-resistant. That slight crease retention is cotton behaving correctly.
Polyester Behaviour
A poly-blend bounces back instantly with no crease at all. This seems like a positive, but it means the fabric has plastic memory — it will not drape naturally on your body and will feel stiff and synthetic.
/// Index