Design brief and specification sheet
The process begins with style sketches, measurements, fit expectations, labeling details, and construction notes. A strong specification sheet reduces confusion once production starts.
This page explains how Muravastratas converts design intent into finished garments through controlled production stages, technical checks, and finishing standards.
The process begins with style sketches, measurements, fit expectations, labeling details, and construction notes. A strong specification sheet reduces confusion once production starts.
Fabric composition, GSM, drape, shrinkage behavior, and trim compatibility are reviewed before approval. This helps the final garment feel right in both appearance and performance.
Base patterns are prepared and trial garments are stitched for fit review. Pattern corrections at this stage prevent large-scale defects in bulk manufacturing.
Relaxing the fabric improves dimensional stability before cutting. Marker plans are arranged to balance fabric efficiency with grain alignment and panel accuracy.
Cut panels are checked, numbered, and bundled by size or style. Proper bundling supports smooth movement into sewing lines without mixing pieces or shade lots.
Operators perform assigned operations using lockstitch, overlock, flatlock, or specialty machines. Balanced line layout improves output without sacrificing seam quality.
Stitch density, alignment, seam strength, puckering, and measurement points are reviewed during production. Early detection reduces costly rework at finishing stage.
Loose threads are removed and garments are pressed for shape and presentation. Printing, embroidery, labels, and accessories are also verified before final packing.
Finished pieces are measured, counted, folded, tagged, packed, and carton-marked. The final audit confirms the shipment reflects the approved sample and order requirements.
Small defects such as skipped stitches, open seams, wrong labels, or poor pressing can damage customer trust even when the design looks good.
Clean folding, tagging, barcoding, and carton organization help garments reach retailers and buyers in a sale-ready condition.
Brands prefer factories that can clearly explain how a garment is planned, sewn, checked, finished, and packed before shipment.