French Terry is a knit fabric with a smooth outer surface and short, dense loops on the inside. Terry knit — sometimes called loop-back terry — has the same loop structure but longer, more prominent interior loops that trap more air and provide more warmth. They are related constructions. They are not interchangeable. Most brands that sell hoodies without stating which one they use are hoping you assume the better option.
🛑 VEE'S RULE: IF THE BRAND DOES NOT STATE THE FABRIC CONSTRUCTION, ASK
Terry, French Terry, fleece — these are different materials with different performance profiles. A brand that cares about their product tells you what it is. A brand that does not care calls it "premium quality fabric" and moves on.
The Visual Difference
Turn a hoodie inside out. What you see tells you everything.
Terry knit: You will see clearly visible loops — longer, rounder, more pronounced. The interior looks textured and structured. This loop construction is what gives terry knit its density and warmth. The loops trap air. The trapped air insulates.
French Terry: The interior looks flatter — shorter, more subtle loops that lie close to the surface. It does not look fluffy or loopy. It looks clean and slightly textured. The result is a fabric that is lighter and more breathable than full terry, but still structured and premium to the touch.
Fleece: Fleece starts as a terry knit, then the loops are brushed and shredded into the characteristic fuzzy surface. That fuzzy surface is warm and immediately soft, but it is also why fleece pills. You are wearing the degraded form of a loop structure.
Warmth and Weight
Terry knit at 260GSM is warmer than French Terry at the same GSM. The longer loops trap more air — insulation increases.
For Indian winter in Delhi, this matters. Nights in January can drop to 5°C. A 260GSM terry knit hoodie is appropriate for that environment. For Bangalore at 14°C, French Terry at 240GSM is more than adequate — and more comfortable across the wider temperature range of a Bangalore winter, where the evening is cold but the afternoon is not.
The weight also determines how the hoodie holds its shape. Both terry and French Terry are significantly better than fleece for structural retention over time. The loop construction stays intact through repeated washing when the hoodie is cared for correctly.
Which Is Better for India?
Depends on the city and the use case.
French Terry is the right answer for most of India. It handles the range — warm enough for cool evenings, breathable enough to not be oppressive in AC environments during the day. The structure is excellent. It looks intentional, holds shape, and ages well.
Terry knit is correct for North India and the handful of cities that get genuine winter. Delhi, Chandigarh, Jaipur in January — the denser construction justifies itself.
Fleece is for warmth above all else. If you are in the mountains or tolerating a genuinely cold environment, fleece delivers. For streetwear that has to look sharp across a season, it is the wrong call — it pills and softens in ways that read as worn-out, not aged.
What VAVVY Uses and Why
VAVVY's CASE FILES collection uses 260GSM Terry knit. The collection is built for professionals — structured pieces with a specific cultural reference baked into each design. The terry knit construction at 260GSM delivers the weight and structure that a premium hoodie needs to hold its silhouette across a full winter season of wear.
The spec is stated on the product page. Because the fabric is part of the product.
If you are buying a hoodie and the brand cannot tell you whether it is French Terry or fleece, you are buying fabric they are not confident about.
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