Cotton sounds simple. It is not. On store shelves, the phrase pure cotton often works more like marketing than chemistry, because textile standards draw sharper lines than the hangtag suggests. In fiber content regulation, only a fabric whose fibers are all natural cotton can be sold as 100 percent cotton, while the looser word cotton may cover blends and surface treatments that change how the cloth behaves on skin and in the wash.
The awkward truth is that pure cotton on packaging does not always mean every thread is untouched plant fiber. Short staple fibers can be mixed with regenerated cellulose or a small share of polyester to stabilize shrinkage, yet front labels still highlight cotton as the hero material. By contrast, the technical phrase 100 percent cotton on the legal tag must refer to the entire fiber matrix, excluding decorative coatings, buttons, or zippers, and this disclosure is governed by mandatory textile labeling rules rather than brand preference.
Smart buyers start with doubt. They treat hangtags as advertising and the sewn‑in label as the only binding statement, checking the fiber content line for 100 percent cotton and ignoring vague claims like natural or skin friendly. That short line of text, not the color or softness in the store light, separates a genuinely all‑cotton fabric from a cotton rich blend that may feel similar on day one but age very differently after repeated laundering.