Well, It's a new one on me :?:
But these are a few of the links I dredged up from the net.
Outdoor Suits
These suits were worn by hunters, loggers or other outdoorsmen. A three-piece suit of 34 oz. All wool frieze. (Coarse shaggy cloth with an uncut nap) in dark gray. Stage shirt, regular coat style, give button front and one breast patch pocket. Trousers were straight hanging with no cuffs. The breeches had laced bottoms.
Class acts fabric
FRIEZE, FREEZE, FREESE, FFREZE, FRISE, FRYCE: Medieval__ In Beck (3): (Old English: frise; Welsh: ffris- meaning nap of cloth); Edward III, 1376, enacted__no "aulnage duty should be paid on cloth called frize-ware, which be made in England or in Ireland of Irish wool"; 1530, the Privy Purse Expenses of Henry VIII lists "cots of ffreze and for....doubeletts of ffustyn...for Henry Elys, the fawconer.";1539 inventory: ane goone of freis claith of gold"; 1562 bequest: nightgown of frized cloth furred with lamb.: In Montgomery (19) there is a color plate showing a coarse napped fabric from 1770 labeled "one bale of broad cloth, frized" ; Munro (20): Listed as an inferior cloth or low-priced, mixed woolen-worsted in English customs accounts are panni bastardi, russets, "cottons", coverlets, friezes, streits, dozens, Welsh & Irish cloths. Walshe frices...an act of 1551 mentioned these as Welsh manufacture: a whole piece, fulled, was 36 yards length, 3/4 yard bredth, and every whole piece weighing 48 lbs. It was evidently made in different qualities: 1502...1 yd cost 6d.; 1618...4.5 yd of "indico fryce" cost 15s.; 1562...bequeathed, one nite gowne of frees, furred with whyte lambe ... 16d. (2)
hope they help? Seems to be a fabric more used in carpets nowadaysI
Martin