GUIDE · FINDING A MANUFACTURER

How to Find a Clothing Manufacturer

For first-time founders.

A clear, practical framework for sourcing your first manufacturer — what to look for, what to avoid, and how to vet before you commit.

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Finding a clothing manufacturer is the single most important decision in your supply chain. A great one saves you years; a bad one can sink your brand before it launches.

Most first-time founders find a manufacturer in one of three ways: Alibaba, Maker's Row, or a referral. All three have failure modes. Here's a better framework.

Step 1: Define what you need before you search

Before you contact a single factory, write down:

  • Product category (knit/woven/denim/swim/lingerie — different factories specialize)
  • Production volume (low MOQ <300 units vs commercial 500+ vs industrial 5000+)
  • Quality benchmark (compare to a known brand — "like Lululemon" or "like Reformation")
  • Geography preference (UK/EU = high cost, fast turnaround; Asia = lower cost, longer lead)
  • Compliance needs (Sedex/BSCI for retail, OEKO-TEX for sustainability claims)
  • Budget per unit (research what your category costs to manufacture)

Without these answers, every factory will pitch you something they can sell — not what you need.

Step 2: Source candidates from 4 channels

A. Industry directories

Maker's Row (US), Sewport (global), Common Objective. Each lists vetted factories. Useful starting point but doesn't replace direct vetting.

B. Trade shows

Texworld, Magic, Source by Coterie. Costly to attend but you get face time and can feel fabric. Worth it for serious second-style brands.

C. Referrals

Other brand founders are your best source. Most will share factory contacts if you ask thoughtfully (and don't target their direct competitors).

D. Specialist services

Companies like Fabrickly act as your factory + project manager + tech designer in one. Higher per-unit cost than going factory-direct, but eliminates the vetting step and bundles tech pack + sampling + production.

Step 3: Vet rigorously

For every shortlisted factory, ask for:

  • Audit certificates (Sedex SMETA, BSCI, OEKO-TEX, GOTS)
  • Sample of work in your category (not just any garment — same category)
  • References (3 active customer brands you can email)
  • MOQ in writing (verbal MOQs change)
  • Lead time in writing (verbal lead times slip)
  • Sample cost AND lead time (this previews their reliability)
  • Photos of the factory floor and team (not just product shots)
A factory that refuses to share audit certificates is hiding something. A factory that won't give you references is hiding more.

Step 4: Red flags that disqualify a factory

  • Cannot produce a recent audit certificate (Sedex/BSCI dated within 2 years)
  • MOQ keeps changing in conversation
  • Sample is delivered late (predicts bulk lateness)
  • Sample quality differs from reference brand they claim to produce for
  • Communication is slow or in broken English/your-language (predicts production issues)
  • They want full payment upfront before any sample

Step 5: Start small

Never commit to bulk on Day 1. Pattern: tech pack → fit sample → PP sample → small first run (50-200 units) → evaluate → bigger reorder.

Each step is a vetting opportunity. A factory that performs well at 50 units will scale to 500. One that fails at 50 won't magically improve at 5,000.

Why founders end up with Fabrickly

After 6-12 months of trying to vet factories direct, most first-time founders come to us. We provide the same factory access at a slightly higher per-unit cost — but with: pre-vetted Tier-1 facilities, audited (Sedex SMETA + BSCI + OEKO-TEX), 50-piece MOQs, tech pack included, dedicated PM, sample iteration support, EU/UK/US compliance handled.

Skip the 6-month vetting cycle.

Get a quote from our pre-vetted Tier-1 facilities. 50-piece MOQ.

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