What GSM Means
GSM stands for grams per square metre…
Recommended GSM by Product
| Product | Recommended GSM | Why |
|---|---|---|
| T-Shirts | 180–220 g | 220 g is the sweet spot… |
| Hoodies & Sweatshirts | 320–400 g | Heavy enough to feel premium… |
| Sweatpants & Shorts | 280–350 g | Balances structure with comfort… |
How GSM Changes the Garment
- Hand-feel — higher GSM feels denser…
- Drape — lighter cloth drapes and flows…
- Warmth — more grams means more insulation…
- Cost — heavier cloth uses more yarn…
Two More Numbers Worth Knowing
Yarn count (S) is how fine the yarn is…
How We Help
Tell us the season and the look you want…
GSM Quick Reference
| Weight band | GSM | Feels like | Typical use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Light | 120–180 g | Airy, drapes, see-through risk | Summer tees, linings |
| Mid | 180–280 g | Balanced, all-season | Everyday tees, tops |
| Heavy | 280–400 g | Substantial, structured | Hoodies, sweatpants |
| Super-heavy | 400 g+ | Boxy, premium streetwear | Statement hoodies |
GSM vs Decoration
- DTG print — best on 180–220 g jersey; too light shows hand-feel, too heavy muffles detail.
- Embroidery — sits cleanest on 280 g+ terry/fleece; light jersey needs a backing.
- Silicone / puff print — needs 300 g+ to support the raised ink without cracking.
- Sublimation — polyester only, GSM matters less than fibre content.
FAQ
Is higher GSM always better?
No. A 400 g tee is hot and stiff; a 180 g hoodie feels flimsy. Match GSM to the garment, not to a bigger number.
Does GSM affect price much?
Yes, linearly — each extra 20 g means more yarn per metre. Moving a hoodie from 320 g to 400 g adds a visible but modest cost.
Can I request a custom GSM?
Within reason, yes. We knit custom weights for OEM runs; for POD we keep a standard set (180 / 220 / 320 / 360 g) ready to go.