Manufacturing Capabilities
Factory floor capability pages — frame assembly, sewing, printing, in-line inspection, final QC, packaging, export. Each page lists the capacity, the equipment, and the lead-time impact of the relevant step.
Capacity, Lines, and Quality Control
Manufacturing pages describe the workshops, lines, and inspection steps that turn a signed spec sheet into a shipped container. Each page covers one capability — frame assembly, sewing, printing, QC, packaging, export.
Capacity figures are stated per month at a standard SKU complexity. Multi-color print, photo-grade heat transfer, and custom handle tooling all add lead time and are noted on the relevant page.
In-line inspection happens during production at three checkpoints. Final QC is a sample inspection against the signed sample before the container is loaded.
Manufacturing Capabilities FAQ
Where is the factory located and how does that affect lead time?
Production is concentrated near a major export port, which keeps the trucking leg short. Most orders are ready for FOB loading within the bulk lead time stated on the relevant manufacturing page.
Is in-line inspection done by the factory or a third party?
In-line inspection is done in-house at three checkpoints during production. Buyers can also nominate a third-party inspection agency for an additional final pre-shipment inspection.
What happens if the final QC catches a defect rate above the AQL?
The flagged batch is reworked or replaced before loading. The bill of lading is only issued after the agreed AQL is met on the final inspection.
Can you scale a small first order to a much larger reorder?
Yes. A first order is typically used to confirm the spec. The reorder runs against the same signed spec without re-sampling, so the lead time is shorter and the unit price is set against the larger run.