Carl Linnaeus, The Lapland Journey, translated by Peter Graves (Edinburgh: Lockharton Press, 1995), p. 141.

The Mountains [2], 18/07/1732, ¶730:

In winter they wear Lapp boots that reach to the middle of the thigh, and they have no stockings, using shoe-grass around their feet instead. Next to the skin they wear a woollen tunic with a fur tunic on top with the hair inwards in winter and outwards in summer. Women’s boots do not go above the knee.