In the design of a garment, and the creation of a first sample a sound clothing design studio house, the rules of the inspection below garments should be perfectly equipped to follow. The process is shown below to eliminate all the work and the problems that may arise in the manufacture of a garment with the assurance that the design patterns have accurate information, correct classification of data, professional sample cutting and sewing the highest quality to achieve 100% customer satisfaction.

Base sketches and samples if they are submitted to the house design studio will be hard on your pattern. After testing this pattern in your fabric, they can determine any problems with shrinkage and fit. All modifications are included in the fit is often a pattern to make a full price of the package.

After your approval of this standard will digitize the tracks on a standard computer system in preparation for grading and marking.

?1) Pattern card design

A pattern card sheet is a sheet containing all the necessary information for the making of your design. This pattern card is created once your pattern has been made and must have a complete list of all the pattern pieces the make up your design. Sewing details, trim details and thread detail information if any should be written down to insure proper garment construction.

2) mode, balance, accurate cutting

Once your template document has now become the time to identify whether the special dotted paper for proper alignment line grain before your plan is to cut cloth to avoid losing the balance of your clothes when the garment is hanging on a hanger and to insure proper fit.

3) Pattern classification specification sheet

Finally, Once your prototype sample has been made, fitted, corrected and approved for production, Grading specifications should be recorded on a grading specification sheet were your design will be graded into the many size range categories according to the type of figure your are working with. A Grading Specification Sheet is a Sheet containing all the measurements for all your pattern sizes including your base size example (M) or (10) from which the pattern will be graded up or down according to your own in house specifications submitted or according to your client specifications