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Knowledge

Document Review & Planning for Textile Quality Inspection

BREAKDOWN OF EACH SPECIFICATION DOCUMENT

1. APPROVED LAB DIP/SWATCH CARDS

Purpose: Establishes the color standard for all materials.

What to Review & Verify:

  • Correct Dye Recipe: Ensure factory received and used the exact approved dye formula
  • Color Standards Under Correct Lighting:
    • D65 (Daylight 6500K): Primary standard for color evaluation
    • TL84 (Store Lighting): How color appears in retail environments
    • UV Light: Check for fluorescent whitening agents (FWAs)
    • Incandescent (A Light): Home lighting conditions
  • Metamerism Check: Does the color shift differently under different lights? This must be approved.
  • Physical Swatch Attachment: Actual fabric swatch must be attached, not just Pantone numbers
  • Approval Sign-off: Must have dated signatures from buyer’s technical/design team

Inspection Impact: Without this, color rejections become subjective arguments. With it, you can use a light box to objectively say “this doesn’t match the approved swatch.”

2. APPROVED STRIKE-OFF/PRINT STRIKE-OFF

Purpose: Defines print, embroidery, or appliqué standards.

Critical Elements to Confirm:

  • Color Separation & Registration: For prints – are colors aligned correctly?
  • Print Technique Verification: Screen print vs. digital vs. sublimation – each has different quality parameters
  • Embroidery Details:
    • Stitch density (SPI – stitches per inch)
    • Thread type and weight
    • Underlay stitching requirements
    • Backing material specification
  • Print Hand Feel: Some prints change fabric hand (crackling effect, rubbery feel) – this must be intentionally approved
  • Size & Placement: Exact measurement from specific points (e.g., “print center 5cm below neckline”)
  • Repeat Pattern Alignment: For all-over prints, verify pattern matches at seams

Inspection Impact: This document prevents “close enough” acceptance of prints. It provides millimeter-level precision requirements.

3. APPROVED TRIM CARDS

Purpose: Standardizes all non-fabric components.

Component-by-Component Verification:

A. Zippers:

  • Brand and style
  • Tape color and composition
  • Slider type (auto-lock, non-lock, reversible)
  • Teeth material (metal, plastic, coil)
  • Length tolerance (±0.5cm typically)
  • Puller design and attachment

B. Buttons/Snaps/Fasteners:

  • Material (plastic, metal, coconut, corozo)
  • Exact color matching to approved sample
  • Size in ligne (standard button measurement)
  • Shank vs. flat button specification
  • Snap brand and strength (pressure required)
  • Metal content compliance (nickel-free for allergies)

C. Threads:

  • Fiber content (polyester core thread most common)
  • Weight/thickness (Tex number)
  • Color matching to fabric or contrast specification
  • Special thread requirements (high-tenacity, fire-retardant)

D. Labels:

  • Woven vs. printed labels
  • Content accuracy (100% cotton, etc.)
  • Care symbol correctness per region (US, EU, Japan differ)
  • Size label font and color
  • Brand label placement tolerance

E. Elastics:

  • Width and recovery specifications
  • Rubber vs. spandex content
  • Color fastness requirements

Inspection Impact: Trims are where factories often substitute to cut costs. Approved cards eliminate “it looks similar” substitutions.

4. TECH PACK WITH DETAILED MEASUREMENTS (POM SHEET)

Purpose: The engineering blueprint of the garment.

Critical Analysis Areas:

A. Measurement Points of Measure (POM):

  • Tolerance Levels: Each measurement should have acceptable variance (±0.5cm, ±1cm, etc.)
  • Grade Rules: How measurements change across sizes (size 6 to 8 increases by 2cm in bust)
  • Key Dimensions: Identify which measurements are structural vs. stylistic
    • Structural: Bust/chest, waist, hip, across shoulder
    • Stylistic: Hem width, cuff opening, pocket placement

B. Construction Details:

  • Stitch types for each seam (401 chainstitch, 301 lockstitch, 504 overedge)
  • Seam allowances (缝份) for each seam
  • Interlining/fusing specifications
  • Hem depths and finishing methods

C. Pattern & Grain Alignment:

  • Pattern matching at side seams, sleeves, pockets
  • Straight grain indicators on technical flats
  • Bias cutting requirements

Inspection Impact: This document allows the inspector to measure objectively. Without it, a “small fit” complaint is subjective; with it, you can prove the garment is 2cm smaller than specified.

5. APPROVED FABRIC QUALITY STANDARD

Purpose: Defines the raw material quality parameters.

Must-Include Specifications:

A. Fabric Construction:

  • Yarn count (Ne 40/1, etc.)
  • Thread density (ends/inch x picks/inch)
  • Weave/knit structure (single jersey, twill, satin)

B. Physical Properties:

  • GSM (Grams per Square Meter): Weight tolerance (±5% typically)
  • Shrinkage Allowance: Maximum after 3 home washes (±3% typically)
  • Tear/Tensile Strength: Minimum requirements
  • Color Fastness Ratings: To washing, rubbing, light, perspiration
    • Rating scale: 1 (poor) to 5 (excellent), with minimums specified

C. Defect Allowance:

  • Acceptable defect types and frequency per linear yard
  • Defect placement restrictions (no critical defects in visible areas)

D. Test Reports Requirement:

  • Which third-party lab tests are required (SGS, Bureau Veritas, etc.)
  • Testing standards (AATCC, ISO, ASTM)
  • When tests must be conducted (before cutting, during production)

Inspection Impact: This is your defense against inferior fabric substitution. You can reject based on failed GSM or shrinkage tests, not just “it feels thin.”

6. PACKAGING SPECIFICATIONS

Purpose: Ensures product arrives in sellable condition.

Layer-by-Layer Verification:

A. Primary Packaging (direct contact):

  • Polybag thickness (0.025mm, 0.03mm, etc.)
  • Polybag printing requirements (size stickers, logos, warning labels)
  • Tissue paper quality and folding method
  • Hanger type (specific brand/model, color)

B. Secondary Packaging (cartoning):

  • Carton quality (3-ply, 5-ply, moisture resistance)
  • Packing method:
    • Flat pack vs. hanging pack
    • Size ratio assortment (S:M:L = 1:2:1)
    • Color assortment per carton
  • Folding template for garments

C. Shipping Marks:

  • Exact information required on carton
  • Barcode specification (type, placement, data)
  • Palletization requirements (cartons per pallet, stretch wrap)

Inspection Impact: Poor packaging causes warehouse damage and increases retail labor. This document ensures the product is protected and retail-ready.

7. PURCHASE ORDER WITH QUANTITY BREAKDOWN

Purpose: The commercial contract that ties everything together.

Critical Verification Points:

A. Quantity & Delivery:

  • Total quantity by style/color/size
  • Delivery schedule (multiple shipments?)
  • Percentage completion requirement for inspection (typically 80-100%)

B. Commercial Terms Linked to Quality:

  • Payment terms tied to inspection approval
  • Penalty clauses for quality failures
  • Retention policies for failed goods

C. Inspection Protocol Specifications:

  • AQL levels specified in PO (not assumed)
  • Who pays for inspection
  • Corrective action requirements for failures

Inspection Impact: The PO gives you the authority to inspect and reject. It’s the commercial backbone that makes quality requirements enforceable.


THE PLANNING PROCESS: TURNING DOCUMENTS INTO ACTION

Step 1: Document Gap Analysis

  1. Compare all documents for consistency
  2. Flag any contradictions (e.g., tech pack says 100% cotton but fabric standard mentions polyester blend)
  3. Resolve discrepancies with your design/technical team before inspection

Step 2: Create Inspection Checklist

Transform each specification into checkable items:

  • Lab Dip → Color check under 4 light sources
  • Tech Pack → 15 specific measurements with tolerances
  • Trim Cards → Physical comparison of 8 trim items

Step 3: Define AQL Sampling Plan

Based on PO quantity:

  • Determine sample size from AQL tables
  • Decide defect classification:
    • Critical: Safety, legal, functional failure (AQL 0.0)
    • Major: Affects saleability or use (AQL 2.5)
    • Minor: Minor appearance issues (AQL 4.0)

Step 4: Prepare Testing Equipment

  • Calibrate light box
  • Prepare GSM cutter and scale
  • Charge camera batteries
  • Print measurement charts

Step 5: Schedule with Factory

  • Confirm 80-100% production complete
  • Ensure all approved samples are available on-site
  • Arrange proper inspection area with tables and lighting

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