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What Information Should Brands Send Before Asking for a Dress Quote?

Asking for a dress quote sounds simple. A brand sends a photo, asks for a unit price, and waits for a number. In real production, that number is only useful when the factory understands the dress clearly enough to estimate fabric consumption, sewing time, trims, lining, pattern work, sampling effort, quality risk, packing needs, and delivery expectations. A satin slip dress, a mesh bodycon dress, a corset mini dress, and a sequin evening dress may all be called “dresses,” but they do not carry the same cost logic.

Brands should send a clear dress type, reference images, tech pack if available, size chart, fabric direction, color plan, trims, quantity, target price, sample needs, launch date, private label requirements, packaging details, shipping destination, and any testing or compliance expectations before asking for a dress quote. The more complete the information, the more accurate and stable the quotation becomes.

The problem is not that brands ask too early. The problem is that many ask with the wrong information. One image can show the mood, but it cannot show fabric weight, lining, stretch direction, stitching method, grading rules, or carton packing. A serious quote is not only a price. It is the first test of whether a factory understands the product, the brand, and the production risk behind the design.

What Does a Dress Factory Need First?

A dress factory first needs enough product information to judge whether the style can be quoted, sampled, or sent back for clarification. The most useful first files are dress type, front and back references, fabric direction, size range, quantity per color, sample purpose, target delivery date, and any known trims or packing needs. When these points are clear, the quote is closer to real production cost rather than a rough guess.

A dress quote should not begin with only one question: “How much is this?”
For most custom dress projects, that question is too early unless the factory knows what “this” means in production terms.

A photo can show style direction, but it does not show fabric weight, lining structure, zipper type, stitch method, inside finishing, size grading, color split, order volume, or packing method. These details decide whether a dress is simple, moderate, or high-risk to produce.

For example, two black mini dresses may look similar in a product image. One may be a single-layer stretch knit dress with basic overlock seams. The other may be a lined corset mini dress with boning, cups, invisible zipper, structured panels, and topstitching. The first one may be suitable for faster sampling and higher production efficiency. The second one may need pattern review, fit testing, trim confirmation, support structure testing, and stricter QC before bulk production.

Before asking for a quote, a brand should prepare enough information for the factory to answer five practical questions:

  • Can the factory make this dress well?
  • What fabric and trims are needed?
  • How much work is involved in sampling and bulk production?
  • Does the quantity match the production model and material MOQ?
  • Can the required delivery date be achieved without increasing quality risk?

These questions are not paperwork. They protect cost accuracy, sample direction, launch timing, and future bulk consistency.

For a custom dress manufacturer, the first review usually separates inquiries into three levels.

Inquiry LevelWhat the Brand SendsWhat the Factory Can Provide
Early idea1–3 reference images, dress category, rough quantity, target marketFeasibility opinion and broad cost direction
Development readyReference images, fabric direction, size range, quantity per color, sample purpose, target dateMore realistic quote range and sampling suggestions
Quote readyTech pack, size chart, BOM, fabric swatch, trim details, color plan, packing needsDetailed quotation, sample cost, MOQ review, and production timeline

The stronger the first inquiry, the fewer assumptions appear inside the quotation. A quote built on assumptions often changes later. A quote built on real product information is easier to trust, compare, and move into sampling.

What Is the Dress Type?

The dress type is the first piece of information a factory needs because it sets the production logic. A mini dress, midi dress, maxi dress, bodycon dress, corset dress, satin slip dress, resort dress, party dress, and evening dress do not use the same pattern rules, sewing time, fabric consumption, or QC focus.

A clear dress type helps the factory understand the basic product path before reviewing details. For example, a bodycon dress usually needs attention to fabric stretch, recovery, chest-waist-hip measurement, side seam balance, and size stability after wear or wash. A satin slip dress usually needs control over fabric slipping, seam puckering, neckline shape, strap length, and pressing marks. A corset dress often needs support structure, boning placement, cup position, lining, panel shaping, and stronger fit review.

A useful inquiry should name the dress type in a production-friendly way.

  • Instead of writing “black dress,” write “lined black satin midi dress with side slit.”
  • Instead of writing “party dress,” write “stretch mesh ruched mini dress with lining and adjustable straps.”
  • Instead of writing “long dress,” write “printed chiffon maxi dress with full lining and back zipper.”

This small change helps the factory review the style faster. It also reduces the risk of receiving a price based on the wrong construction level.

If the style belongs to a collection, the category should be stated as well. Occasionwear, resortwear, clubwear, wedding guest, office dress, or premium ecommerce launch all have different expectations. A dress for a partywear drop may focus on visual impact and body fit. A dress for resortwear may focus on lightness, drape, print direction, comfort, and packing recovery. A dress for a retail-ready program may need stronger label, barcode, carton, and size-ratio control.

The factory does not only need to know what the dress looks like. It needs to know where the dress will be sold, how it will be worn, and what level of finish the brand expects.

Which Reference Files Help?

Reference files help a factory see the intended shape, proportion, detail, and finish. The most useful references are front view, back view, side view, close-up detail photos, inside construction photos, fabric photos, original sample photos, sketches, line sheets, or a short note explaining what should be kept and what should be changed.

One model photo is rarely enough for a serious quote. A model photo may hide the zipper, lining, back opening, inner support, hem finish, seam position, fabric thickness, and actual dress length. A factory may understand the mood but still need to guess the construction.

A stronger reference package usually includes:

Reference FileWhat It Helps Confirm
Front imageNeckline, waistline, length, silhouette, main design
Back imageClosure, back coverage, strap structure, zipper position
Side imageFit, slit height, drape, body shape, skirt balance
Close-up imageseams, trims, lace, buttons, ruching, hardware
Inside imagelining, cups, boning, seam finish, support structure
Fabric phototexture, shine, transparency, stretch direction
Original sample photoreal construction and fit reference
Sketch or line sheetcollection plan, style code, colorway, range logic

When sending reference files, the brand should explain the role of each file. A reference image may be used for silhouette only, neckline only, fabric mood only, or construction direction. Without a note, the factory may not know which part is important.

For example:

  • “Please follow the neckline and waist shape from image 1, but use the back strap from image 2.”
  • “The fabric should feel close to matte satin, not shiny bridal satin.”
  • “We like the ruching direction, but the final dress should be less tight at the hip.”
  • “This image is only for mood. We will adjust the design for our own brand.”

These short notes prevent confusion and protect the brand from receiving a quote based on the wrong interpretation. They also help the factory avoid copying another style too literally and instead build a custom version suitable for production.

What Is the Quote Purpose?

A factory needs to know why the quote is being requested. The same dress can be reviewed differently depending on whether the brand needs an early cost estimate, a sample quotation, a supplier comparison, or a confirmed bulk production price.

If the quote is for early planning, the factory can work with reference images, estimated quantity, and fabric direction. The result may be a price range, not a locked unit price. This is useful when the brand is building a collection budget or deciding whether a style is commercially realistic.

If the quote is for supplier comparison, the information must be more controlled. Every factory should receive the same files: same reference, same fabric direction, same quantity, same size range, same packing requirement, and same delivery destination. Otherwise, the quotes will not be comparable. One factory may quote without lining, another may include lining. One may quote basic packaging, another may include private label packing. The lower number may simply exclude important costs.

If the quote is for sampling, the factory needs to know the sample purpose. A first sample is used to test style and construction. A fit sample is used to test measurement and wearing effect. A photo sample must look strong enough for content, campaign, or sales presentation. A PP sample becomes the production standard before bulk. These samples do not carry the same requirements.

If the quote is for bulk production, the factory needs stronger files. The brand should send tech pack, size chart, BOM, trim details, approved sample comments, color plan, quantity breakdown, packing instructions, and delivery date. A bulk quote without these details can only be provisional.

A practical way to state quote purpose is:

  • “We need an early cost range before deciding whether to sample.”
  • “We are comparing factories for a 500 pcs first order.”
  • “We need sample cost and estimated bulk price before tech pack finalization.”
  • “We have an approved sample and need final bulk quotation.”

This helps the factory respond at the right level. It also makes the communication more efficient because the factory can avoid asking unnecessary questions or giving a price that does not match the decision stage.

Is the Style Ready for Sampling?

A style is ready for sampling when the factory can understand the target look, basic measurements, fabric direction, construction details, trim needs, and sample goal. It does not need to be perfect, but it must be clear enough to make a sample without too much guessing.

A dress is usually not ready for sampling if the brand only sends a mood image and says “make something similar.” That may work for a very early design discussion, but it is not enough for a controlled sample. Sampling needs decisions.

Before sampling, the brand should confirm at least:

  • Dress type and length
  • Front and back reference
  • Fabric direction or fabric swatch
  • Size range and base sample size
  • Key measurements or target fit
  • Lining requirement
  • Closure method
  • Major trims
  • Quantity plan
  • Sample purpose
  • Target launch or delivery date

If these details are missing, the factory can still help, but the first stage may need to become product development rather than direct sampling. That means the factory may first review structure, suggest fabric, clarify trims, check MOQ, and recommend construction before making the sample.

For dress products, the base sample size is especially important. A sample made in XS will not show the same fit balance as a sample made in M or L. A bodycon dress needs stretch and recovery checked around bust, waist, and hip. A corset dress needs support and cup position checked carefully. A maxi dress needs length and hem balance checked on the expected wearer height.

Sampling should also consider production repeatability. A beautiful one-piece sample is not enough if the design cannot be made consistently in bulk. The factory should review whether the fabric can be sourced again, whether the trims are stable, whether the sewing process can be repeated, and whether the dress can pass inspection after production.

A simple readiness table can help brands judge their own files before sending an inquiry.

Sampling Readiness ItemReadyNeeds Work
Dress type is clearly namedFactory can classify production routeOnly says “dress” or “similar style”
Front and back views are availableConstruction can be reviewedOnly one model image
Fabric direction is knownMaterial cost and risk can be estimatedNo fabric type or hand feel
Base sample size is confirmedPattern can begin correctlyNo size standard
Quantity plan is realisticMOQ and cost can be reviewedNo order plan
Sample purpose is statedRight sample standard can be usedNo clear sample goal
Timeline is visibleDevelopment route can be plannedOnly says “urgent”

A style does not need to be fully finished before contacting a factory. But the first inquiry should make clear which parts are confirmed and which parts need factory support. That honesty helps both sides work faster. It also prevents the common problem where a brand expects a firm quote while the factory is still guessing half of the product.

Which Product Details Affect Price?

Dress price is shaped by fabric, lining, trims, construction, decoration, size range, color count, quantity, sample work, packing, QC, testing, and delivery timing. A clear photo may show the look, but the final quote depends on what the factory must buy, cut, sew, press, inspect, pack, and repeat in bulk.

A dress quote is not built from the word “dress.” It is built from production details.

Two dresses may look close in a website image but sit in completely different cost levels. A single-layer jersey bodycon dress may be fast to cut, sew, press, and pack. A satin corset mini dress may need multiple panels, lining, cups, boning, invisible zipper, fit adjustment, pressing control, and slower sewing. A sequin dress may use a simple silhouette but still cost more because cutting is slower, seams are thicker, needle breakage is more common, and packing must protect the surface.

The most common quoting mistake is sending only a front image and expecting a stable unit price. The front image may hide the back zipper, inner lining, bust support, elastic, hem finish, fabric thickness, or decoration method. When these details are missing, a factory can only quote from assumptions. Assumptions often change after sampling.

A useful quote request should make price drivers visible before the first number is given. For dress production, the main price drivers usually fall into five groups: material cost, labor cost, development cost, risk cost, and delivery cost.

Cost AreaWhat Affects ItWhat to Send Before Quote
Fabric costFabric type, weight, width, stretch, consumption, color, MOQFabric swatch, fabric name, GSM, composition, target hand feel
Trim costZipper, lining, cups, boning, buttons, labels, hangtags, packagingTrim list, photos, color, quality level, placement
Labor costPanels, layers, ruching, pleats, corset structure, decorationFront/back views, inside photos, construction notes
Development costPattern work, first sample, fit sample, revision, PP sampleTech pack, size chart, fit notes, sample purpose
Risk costSatin marks, mesh tearing, lace matching, sequin damage, shrinkageFabric details, quality standard, testing needs
Delivery costUrgent timeline, split shipment, packing, carton method, destinationLaunch date, warehouse date, shipping method, packing guide

A lower quote is not always a cleaner quote. Sometimes it only means several costs have not been included yet. A reliable dress quote should show what has been assumed and what still needs confirmation.

For example, if a quote does not mention lining, it may not include lining. If packaging is not discussed, the price may only include basic folding. If the sample purpose is not clear, the sample fee may not cover fit correction or PP standard development. If the size range is missing, grading and fabric consumption may be underestimated.

A better way to read a dress quote is to ask: “What exactly has been included in this number?”

Question to CheckWhy It Matters
Is the quoted fabric confirmed or assumed?Different fabrics can change both cost and production risk.
Does the quote include lining?Full lining, partial lining, and no lining create different material and labor costs.
Are trims included?Zippers, cups, boning, labels, and packing materials add real cost.
Is the quantity per color clear?MOQ and fabric buying are usually calculated by style and color.
Is the sample cost separate?Sample work often includes pattern, fabric preparation, sewing, checking, and communication.
Are private-label items included?Labels, hangtags, barcode stickers, polybags, and cartons affect the final garment cost.
Is the lead time realistic?Rush production may limit fabric choices or increase operational pressure.

The goal is not to make every dress cheaper. The goal is to control cost without weakening the final appearance, fit, comfort, or delivery reliability.

What Is the Fabric Direction?

An antique sewing machine in a cozy fabric workshop.

Fabric direction is often the largest visible cost driver, but the name alone is not enough. “Satin,” “mesh,” “lace,” “jersey,” and “chiffon” are broad words. Each one can include many grades, weights, stretch levels, surface finishes, and supplier MOQ rules.

For a useful quote, the factory needs more than the fabric category. It needs to know composition, approximate weight, width, stretch direction, transparency, hand feel, surface shine, drape, shrinkage risk, color requirement, and whether the fabric is stock, dyed, printed, certified, or specially developed.

A satin slip dress can use lightweight shiny satin, matte satin, stretch satin, thick satin, acetate satin, recycled polyester satin, or silk-like satin. The garment name may stay the same, but fabric consumption, sewing difficulty, pressing risk, color stability, and cost can change sharply.

Fabric DetailWhy It Affects Price
CompositionPolyester, viscose, cotton, nylon, elastane, recycled fibers, and blends carry different costs.
WeightHeavier fabric usually costs more per meter and may affect shipping weight.
WidthNarrower width can increase fabric consumption and cutting waste.
StretchStretch fabric needs recovery testing and fit control.
TransparencySheer fabric may require lining or double-layer construction.
ColorCustom dyeing may increase MOQ and lead time.
SurfaceSatin, velvet, sequin, and lace need slower handling and stronger QC.
CertificationOEKO-TEX, recycled, organic, or other fabric requirements may affect sourcing and price.

A strong inquiry can say:

  • “Matte stretch satin, medium weight, soft drape, not too shiny, suitable for a lined midi dress.”
  • “Power mesh with good recovery, semi-sheer, for ruched bodycon styles.”
  • “Lightweight printed chiffon, soft hand feel, full lining required, suitable for resort maxi dresses.”

These details allow the factory to suggest realistic fabric options instead of guessing from a photo. If fabric has not been finalized, sending a target hand feel, fabric swatch, or competitor fabric reference helps the factory match a practical production route.

Which Trims Are Needed?

Trims look small on a product page, but they can change price, sample timing, comfort, and bulk quality. A dress may need invisible zipper, metal zipper, buttons, hook and eye, adjustable strap sliders, elastic, bra cups, boning, underwire, anti-slip tape, lining, lace trim, rhinestones, sequin trim, woven labels, care labels, size labels, hangtags, barcode stickers, polybags, and cartons.

Every trim has a specification. A zipper has length, color, tape quality, puller style, and smoothness. A bra cup has size, thickness, shape, softness, and placement. Boning has width, flexibility, end finish, and comfort risk. A woven label has size, yarn quality, edge finish, color accuracy, and skin feel.

A quote request should not simply say “with zipper” or “with label.” It should explain what kind of zipper or label is needed.

Trim TypeCost and Risk Point
Invisible zipperLength, smoothness, color matching, side or back placement
Metal zipperHigher trim cost, weight, visual finish, skin contact
Bra cupsCup size, softness, support level, sewing position
BoningStructure, comfort, end protection, panel alignment
Adjustable strapsSlider quality, color match, strap width
Lace trimWidth, pattern, edge quality, placement, matching
Rhinestones or beadsApplication method, density, handwork, loss risk
Labels and hangtagsArtwork, material, MOQ, approval time
Polybags and cartonsThickness, size, barcode, carton mark, warehouse rule

A structured dress with cups and boning cannot be quoted like a simple cami dress. A private-label order with woven labels, care labels, hangtags, barcode stickers, and carton marks cannot be quoted like an unbranded sample.

The safest approach is to send a trim sheet or simple trim table. Even if some trims are not final, mark them as “to be confirmed.” That helps the factory separate confirmed cost from pending cost.

How Complex Is the Construction?

Construction decides labor time. Labor time decides much of the unit price. A clean dress with few panels and a simple seam path is faster to produce. A dress with ruching, pleats, corset panels, cut-outs, lace placement, layered mesh, boning, lining, or hand decoration needs more development and slower sewing.

A factory will usually review construction through three questions: How many steps are needed? How hard is each step to repeat? How much checking is needed before packing?

A bodycon dress may look simple, but if the fabric has high stretch and strong recovery requirements, the sewing team must control tension, side seam balance, neckline stretch, hem waviness, and measurement after wear or wash. A satin dress may have fewer seams, but every stitch mark and pressing mark becomes more visible. A lace dress may need edge placement, pattern matching, lining color review, and careful trimming. A corset dress may need panel control, bust support, boning channel, cup positioning, zipper stability, and fit testing.

Construction DetailTypical Cost Impact
Full liningMore fabric, cutting, sewing, pressing, and inspection
Double-layer meshMore cutting and alignment control
RuchingMore sewing time and symmetry checking
Corset structureMore pattern work, support trims, fitting, and QC
PleatsMore preparation, pressing, and position control
Cut-outsMore edge control and fit risk
Lace placementMore matching, cutting, and seam planning
SlitMore reinforcement and length control
Strapless necklineMore support structure and fit testing
Low backMore balance control and coverage review

A strong quote request should show front, back, side, and detail views. Inside construction photos are especially valuable. If the dress has lining, cups, boning, zipper, inner elastic, facing, binding, or special seam finish, include close-up images or short notes.

When construction details are not shown, a factory may quote the simplest version. That price may look attractive, but it may not match the product the brand expects.

Are Special Processes Required?

Hands stitching lace trim onto white fabric with sewing machine.

Special processes often create the biggest gap between a quick quote and a real quote. Printing, embroidery, pleating, garment dyeing, washing, hand beading, rhinestone application, sequin placement, lace appliqué, bonding, laser cutting, and special finishing may require extra suppliers, artwork approval, testing, sampling, and production sequencing.

A special process is not only a visual detail. It changes the order of production.

Placement print may need artwork size, fabric test, color strike-off, panel positioning, and cutting alignment. Embroidery may need stitch count, thread color, backing choice, and placement confirmation. Pleating may need fabric testing before cutting. Beading and rhinestones may need attachment method, density, weight review, skin comfort review, and inspection after packing.

Special ProcessInformation Needed Before Quote
PrintArtwork file, size, color, placement, repeat, fabric base
EmbroideryArtwork, stitch area, thread color, backing, density
PleatingPleat type, width, direction, fabric suitability
RhinestonesSize, density, placement, heat-set or hand-applied method
BeadingBead type, weight, spacing, handwork level
SequinsFabric type, sequin size, seam method, lining need
Garment dyeingFabric composition, shrinkage tolerance, color target
WashingWash effect, shrinkage control, hand feel, color change
Lace appliquéPlacement, edge finish, sewing method, repeatability

A photo of a beaded dress does not show bead size, weight, density, stitch method, or whether the beadwork can survive bulk packing. A print mood image does not show whether artwork is ready, whether colors are Pantone-matched, or whether the print must align across seams.

If special processes are involved, the quote request should include artwork files, placement drawings, size specs, process notes, and expected durability level. If files are not ready, ask for an estimated process range rather than a final cost.

Special processes can be valuable, but they should be controlled early. Otherwise, the sample may look exciting while the bulk price, lead time, or QC risk becomes difficult later.

What Technical Files Should Brands Send?

Brands should send a tech pack, size chart, BOM, reference images, fabric swatch, trim card, label artwork, packaging requirements, target price, and launch date before asking for a dress quote. When these files are complete, a factory can review structure, fabric, trims, pattern work, sample cost, bulk price, MOQ, and timeline with far fewer assumptions.

Technical files turn a dress idea into production language. A product image may show the mood, but a factory still needs measurable information: garment length, bust, waist, hip, neckline depth, strap width, lining length, zipper position, fabric composition, trim placement, stitching method, colorway, packing method, and tolerance.

For custom dress production, technical files do three jobs.

  • They reduce guessing before quotation.
  • They protect the intended fit and construction during sampling.
  • They create a clear production standard before bulk work begins.

A strong file set does not need to be over-designed. It needs to be clear enough for a pattern maker, fabric team, sampling room, quotation team, QC team, and packing team to understand the same garment in the same way.

A dress quote based on incomplete files often becomes a temporary estimate. A quote based on complete files is easier to compare, approve, and move into sampling. The difference is important because many dress costs are hidden inside small technical choices: lining, cups, boning, zipper, hem finish, seam allowance, fabric width, stretch direction, decoration placement, carton packing, and size grading.

Technical FileMain PurposeImpact on Quote Accuracy
Tech packShows design, measurements, BOM, construction, labels, packing notesVery high
Size chartDefines garment measurements, base size, grading, toleranceVery high
BOMLists fabric, lining, trims, labels, packaging materialsVery high
Reference imagesShows visual direction, proportion, detail, and stylingMedium to high
Original sampleProvides real garment structure, fit, measurements, and finishingHigh
Fabric swatchConfirms hand feel, weight, stretch, color, transparencyHigh
Trim cardConfirms zipper, buttons, cups, boning, elastic, labelsHigh
Label artworkConfirms private-label requirementsRequired for private label
Packaging guideConfirms polybag, carton, barcode, SKU, folding, warehouse rulesRequired for retail or ecommerce
Target priceHelps match fabric, trim, and construction choices to budgetHigh
Launch dateSupports sample, PP sample, bulk, packing, and shipping planningHigh

A factory can begin with different levels of information, but each level leads to a different type of response.

File CompletenessFactory Review PathExpected Result
Complete tech pack + size chart + BOMStructure review, material review, quotation, pattern developmentDetailed quote and sample plan
Incomplete tech packMissing measurements, fabric, trims, construction, labels, and packing notes are clarified firstQuote range or partial quote
Reference image onlyStyle structure analysis, fabric direction, measurement clarificationEarly feasibility review
Original sample availableSample measurement, construction breakdown, pattern conversionStrong development path
Sketch onlyProduct direction is converted into technical detailsDevelopment support before quote
Line sheet availableStyles are grouped by fabric, category, priority, and launch planCollection-level quote planning
Fabric swatch availableFabric behavior is reviewed before pattern and construction decisionsBetter material and fit judgment
Very little informationOnly broad review is possibleNo precise quote or formal sample plan

Technical documents do not slow the process. Poor files slow the process. Missing measurements, unclear fabric, vague trims, and no packing requirements can add days of back-and-forth before the first sample even starts. A clean file set often saves more time than rushing a quote.

Do You Have a Tech Pack?

Descriptive information map in the technology package

A tech pack is the main production file for a custom dress quote. It should show the design clearly enough for a factory to understand the garment before cutting fabric or making a pattern.

For dress production, a useful tech pack usually includes style name, style code, flat sketch, front view, back view, detail views, colorways, base size, size chart, points of measure, tolerance, fabric information, trims, construction notes, stitching notes, lining details, label placement, packing notes, and revision history.

A dress tech pack should not only show the outside. Many important costs sit inside the garment. If a mini dress has a built-in bra cup, boning, power mesh lining, invisible zipper, or anti-slip tape, those details must appear in the file. If a satin slip dress has French seams, narrow straps, side slit, bias cut, or partial lining, those notes affect sewing time and risk.

Tech Pack SectionWhat to IncludeWhy It Matters
Style informationStyle name, code, category, season, collectionKeeps project files organized
Flat sketchFront and back technical sketchShows shape without model distortion
Detail viewsNeckline, zipper, strap, slit, ruching, liningReduces missing construction details
Fabric notesComposition, weight, stretch, width, color, finishSupports material quotation
Construction notesSeam type, hem finish, lining method, support structureSupports labor and risk review
MeasurementsPOM, base size, grading, toleranceSupports pattern and fit planning
TrimsZipper, cups, boning, buttons, labels, hangtagsSupports material and MOQ review
Packing notesPolybag, barcode, carton mark, foldingSupports final delivery cost

A weak tech pack often looks polished but lacks factory-useful detail. Beautiful presentation pages are not enough if the file does not show measurements, material specs, inner structure, or trim placement. A clean Excel or PDF tech pack with accurate information is more useful than a visually impressive file with missing production data.

For early-stage designs, a draft tech pack is still valuable. Mark unknown items clearly with “to be confirmed.” A factory can then separate confirmed cost from pending cost. For example, fabric may be open, but size range and construction may already be confirmed. That distinction helps the quote stay practical.

Is There a Size Chart?

A size chart is one of the most important files for dress development because fit errors usually cost more than document preparation. A dress can look correct on a hanger and still fail on the body if bust, waist, hip, length, neckline, strap, slit, or hem measurements are unclear.

A good size chart should include base size, full size range, points of measure, garment measurements, tolerance, and grading rules. For stretch dresses, the chart should also consider fabric recovery, negative ease, and fit intention. For woven dresses, ease, lining length, zipper placement, and movement allowance become more important.

Dress MeasurementWhy It Should Be Confirmed
BustControls chest fit, support, and wearing security
UnderbustImportant for corset, bustier, and structured dresses
WaistControls body proportion and sample balance
HipCritical for bodycon, midi, sheath, and fitted styles
Front lengthControls visual length and size balance
Back lengthHelps avoid uneven hem and poor back fit
Strap lengthAffects neckline, bust coverage, and comfort
Neckline depthControls coverage and brand fit standard
ArmholeAffects comfort and body movement
Slit heightAffects appearance, walking comfort, and risk
Hem sweepControls movement, drape, and fabric consumption
Lining lengthPrevents lining exposure and transparency issues

Many dress sampling problems come from unclear size standards. US, UK, EU, AU, alpha sizes, plus sizes, petite, and tall ranges can follow different expectations. A factory should not be asked to guess the target fit from a reference photo alone.

If a brand already has a proven fit block, send it. If a prior dress sold well, share its measurement chart or physical sample. If returns often happen around bust, waist, hip, length, or strap fit, mention those points before sampling. Fit history helps avoid repeating the same problem in a new style.

Tolerance should also be included. A realistic tolerance tells QC how much variation can be accepted in bulk. A common mistake is setting every measurement too tight without considering fabric stretch, sewing method, and pressing. Overly narrow tolerance may create unnecessary rejection risk. Overly loose tolerance may lead to inconsistent fit. The size chart should balance brand standard with production reality.

What Should the BOM Include?

A BOM, or bill of materials, lists every material needed to make, finish, label, pack, and ship the dress. It is one of the clearest ways to prevent hidden costs.

A dress BOM should include shell fabric, lining, interlining, zipper, buttons, hooks, elastic, cups, boning, wire, lace trim, mesh panels, thread, labels, hangtags, hang strings, barcode stickers, polybags, tissue paper, carton, and any special packaging item. Each item should have material, color, size, placement, supplier code if available, and status.

BOM ItemInformation to AddCommon Risk if Missing
Shell fabricComposition, weight, width, color, supplierWrong hand feel or price change
LiningFabric type, color, length, stretchTransparency or comfort issue
ZipperType, length, color, placementBulging, poor match, wrong closure
CupsSize, shape, thickness, positionPoor bust support
BoningType, length, channel placementDiscomfort or weak structure
ElasticWidth, stretch, placementTightness or loose recovery
Lace trimWidth, pattern, color, placementPoor matching or uneven edge
LabelsArtwork, size, material, placementSkin irritation or brand error
HangtagsArtwork, paper, string, hole positionRetail presentation issue
BarcodeSKU, barcode file, sticker positionWarehouse receiving error
PolybagSize, thickness, warning textWrinkle, poor packing, compliance issue
Carton markMarking rule, PO, SKU, color, sizeShipment sorting problem

For a simple dress, the BOM may be short. For an occasion dress, private-label program, or retail-ready order, the BOM can become a key control document.

The BOM also helps cost control. If a target price is tight, the factory can review which materials create the most cost pressure. Maybe the shell fabric can be substituted while the trim quality stays strong. Maybe full lining can become partial lining if transparency and comfort allow. Maybe a custom metal trim can be replaced with an available version to reduce MOQ and lead time.

A BOM should be updated after every sample revision. If fabric changes, lining changes, zipper changes, cup changes, or packing changes, the BOM must change as well. Otherwise, the bulk order may follow old information and create avoidable mistakes.

Are Fit Notes Available?

Fit notes are often more useful than a long explanation because they show what has already been tested. A fit note tells the factory what needs to change after a sample, fitting session, or internal review.

Useful fit notes include measurement changes, body feedback, comfort comments, visual balance, fabric reaction, construction concerns, and final approval status. For example: raise neckline 1 cm, reduce waist 2 cm, increase hip ease 1.5 cm, shorten strap 1 cm, lower slit 3 cm, change lining length, reduce bust cup thickness, adjust back opening, smooth side seam, or improve zipper flatness.

Fit Note TypeExampleProduction Value
Measurement changeReduce waist by 2 cmUpdates pattern and size chart
Visual balanceWaistline sits too lowAdjusts body proportion
Comfort issueArmhole feels tightImproves wearing function
Fabric reactionSatin puckers at side seamChanges sewing method or fabric handling
Support issueBust area feels unstableReviews cups, lining, boning, strap
Movement issueSlit too high when walkingAdjusts slit height and reinforcement
Bulk concernRuching not symmetricalAdds QC and sewing control point
Approval noteFit approved with strap changeUpdates PP sample requirement

Fit notes should be specific. “Make it better” is not useful. “Raise front neckline by 1 cm and reduce strap length by 0.8 cm” is useful. The factory can update the pattern, sample, measurement chart, and later QC standard.

For dress products, fit notes should focus on body zones where problems often appear: bust, waist, hip, strap, neckline, armhole, back opening, slit, lining, zipper, hem, and overall length. For stretch dresses, include comments after wearing or movement. For satin, chiffon, lace, mesh, and sequin styles, include comments about surface, transparency, seam tension, and comfort.

Fit notes should also record what must not change. If the body length is approved, say so. If the neckline shape is approved but strap length must change, separate the two points. Clear approval language prevents the next sample from fixing one issue while damaging another.

A practical sample comment table can look like this:

AreaCurrent IssueRequired ChangeFile to Update
Front necklineToo lowRaise 1 cmPattern, measurement chart
StrapToo longShorten 0.8 cmPattern, trim spec
WaistLoose at side seamReduce 1.5 cm totalPattern, size chart
LiningShows below shellShorten lining 2 cmBOM, construction note
ZipperSlight bulgingAdjust seam allowance and pressingSewing instruction, QC checklist
SlitToo highLower 3 cmPattern, measurement chart

Fit notes are not only for sampling. They become part of the production record. When the approved sample becomes the PP standard, fit comments should be transferred into updated pattern files, measurement charts, BOM, sewing instructions, QC checklists, and packing requirements. Without that transfer, a corrected sample may not become corrected bulk production.

A strong technical file set gives the factory more than information. It creates alignment. The design team sees the same dress as the pattern maker. The sourcing team sees the same cost basis as the quotation team. The production team sees the same standard as QC. That is how a quote becomes a sample, and how a sample becomes repeatable bulk production.

How Do Quantity and Timeline Affect Cost?

Quantity and timeline affect dress cost through fabric purchasing, trim MOQ, cutting efficiency, sewing-line planning, sample rounds, QC workload, packing method, and shipping route. A larger, well-organized order usually gives the factory more room to control cost. A rushed, fragmented, multi-color order usually increases unit price, lead-time pressure, and quality risk.

Business meeting in modern textile showroom with fabric samples on display.

A dress quote is not only a calculation of fabric and sewing. It is also a planning decision.

A factory needs to know whether the order is 200 pcs in one color, 400 pcs across two colors, 1,200 pcs across six colors, or a 20-style seasonal collection with several delivery windows. These structures do not use the same fabric buying method, cutting plan, sewing-line setup, inspection route, or packing schedule.

A common misunderstanding is thinking that total quantity alone decides price. In custom dress manufacturing, quantity is usually reviewed by style and color, not only by total units. For example, 200 pcs in one style and one color is very different from 200 pcs split across four styles and five colors. The total number may look the same, but the production reality is completely different.

A higher quantity can improve cost in several areas. Fabric can be purchased more efficiently. Cutting markers can be optimized. Sewing teams can stay on the same style longer. Trim buying can meet supplier MOQ more easily. Packing materials can be prepared with less waste. QC standards can be repeated across a larger batch.

A lower or fragmented quantity usually creates the opposite effect. More setup time is spread over fewer garments. More colors create more fabric lots. More sizes create more measurement checking. More style changes create more production-line adjustment. More urgent timing increases pressure on sampling, material sourcing, QC, and shipping.

Timeline has the same impact. A planned calendar gives room for fabric confirmation, sample revision, PP sample approval, bulk material purchase, production, inspection, packing, and shipping. A compressed calendar may require stock fabric, simplified trims, fewer revisions, air freight, or split shipment. These decisions can protect launch timing, but they may also change cost.

The most useful quote request does not only ask for price. It gives the factory enough planning information to estimate the real cost path.

Planning FactorWhat the Factory NeedsCost Impact
Quantity per styleUnits for each style codeAffects pattern setup, cutting, sewing efficiency
Quantity per colorUnits for each colorwayAffects fabric MOQ, dye lot control, cutting plan
Size ratioXS–XL or numeric size breakdownAffects grading, measurement checks, packing ratio
Fabric statusStock, custom dyed, custom printed, certified, importedAffects MOQ, cost, lead time
Sample stageFirst sample, fit sample, revised sample, photo sample, PP sampleAffects development cost and calendar
Bulk dateLatest production completion dateAffects production-line allocation
Warehouse dateLatest arrival date at warehouse or forwarderAffects shipping method and packing schedule
Delivery methodExpress, air, sea, FOB, DAP, DDP by projectAffects final landed cost
Packing methodFolded, hanger, retail-ready, ecommerce-readyAffects labor, materials, carton volume

A clean order plan allows the factory to separate product cost from time pressure. Without that separation, the quote can look simple but still hide later changes.

What Is the Order Quantity?

Order quantity should be shown by style, color, and total units. A single total number is not enough for a serious dress quote.

A useful format looks like this:

Style CodeDress TypeColorQuantitySize Range
DR-101Satin midi dressBlack300 pcsXS–XL
DR-101Satin midi dressChampagne300 pcsXS–XL
DR-102Mesh bodycon miniWine250 pcsXS–XL
DR-103Chiffon maxi dressFloral print400 pcsXS–XL

This format helps the factory review fabric consumption, production allocation, cutting efficiency, trim buying, label preparation, and QC workload. It also prevents a common mistake: assuming that one total order quantity applies equally to every color or style.

For many custom dress projects, MOQ is calculated by style and color. If one dress has two colors, each color may need to meet the minimum production requirement. If several styles are grouped into one collection, each style still needs its own review because each style may use different fabric, trims, patterns, and sewing time.

Quantity affects unit cost in practical ways.

Quantity StructureProduction EffectCost Direction
200 pcs, 1 style, 1 colorMinimum efficient custom production routeStandard starting point
400 pcs, 1 style, 2 colorsSeparate color control and fabric planningCost depends on color split
1,000 pcs, 1 style, 1 colorBetter cutting and sewing efficiencyMore room for cost control
1,000 pcs, 5 stylesMore pattern and line setupLess efficient than one style
1,000 pcs, 10 colorsMore fabric lots and color managementHigher coordination cost
2,000+ pcs, repeated styleStronger material planning and line efficiencyBetter bulk cost potential

The factory also reviews whether the quantity supports the requested fabric. Stock fabric may work for smaller planned orders. Custom-dyed satin, exclusive print, special lace, certified fabric, sequin fabric, or custom packaging may require higher supplier MOQ. A quote may change if the fabric supplier requires a minimum that exceeds the garment order plan.

A practical inquiry should therefore avoid saying only “around 500 pcs.” It should say “500 pcs total, 250 pcs black and 250 pcs ivory, sizes XS–XL, same fabric and same trim.” That one sentence gives the factory a much stronger basis for pricing.

Which Colors and Sizes?

Colors and sizes affect cost because they change fabric purchasing, dye-lot control, cutting separation, measurement checking, packing ratio, and warehouse labeling.

A style with 600 pcs in one color can often be planned more efficiently than the same 600 pcs divided into six colors. Six colors may require six fabric lots, six cutting groups, six packing labels, six SKU sets, and stronger color control. If the fabric is custom dyed, each color may also need separate lab dip, approval, dyeing MOQ, and lead time.

Size range has a different but equally important effect. A simple XS–XL range inside one order is easier to plan than a wide range including petite, tall, plus size, or multiple regional size systems. More sizes mean more grading work, more measurement points, more size labels, more packing sorting, and more QC measurement records.

A clear color and size plan should include:

  • Color name
  • Color code or Pantone, if available
  • Quantity per color
  • Size range
  • Size ratio
  • Main label and size label requirement
  • SKU or barcode plan, if available
  • Packing ratio by color and size

A practical size ratio table can look like this:

SizeRatioQuantity for 600 pcs
XS10%60 pcs
S25%150 pcs
M30%180 pcs
L25%150 pcs
XL10%60 pcs

If no sales data exists yet, an estimated ratio is still better than leaving the factory to guess. For repeat orders, past sell-through data should guide size planning. If M and L sold faster in the previous drop, the next order should not blindly repeat the first ratio.

For dress categories, size planning also connects directly to fit risk. Bodycon dresses need more control around bust, waist, hip, and recovery. Corset dresses need support and cup placement across sizes. Maxi dresses need length grading and hem balance. Mini dresses need safe length control across size range. A wider size range may require more pattern checking before bulk production.

Color and size planning should not be treated as a spreadsheet formality. It affects cost, fit, stock risk, warehouse accuracy, and final sell-through.

When Is the Launch Date?

The launch date tells the factory how much room exists for product development, sampling, production, inspection, packing, and shipment. It should be shared before quotation, not after sample approval.

A strong timeline includes at least two dates:

  • Planned launch date
  • Latest warehouse arrival date

These dates are different. The launch date is when the dress goes live, reaches store floors, or enters campaign release. The warehouse arrival date is when goods must arrive early enough for receiving, scanning, allocation, photography, steaming, relabeling, or distribution.

A factory works backward from the required arrival date.

StageWhy It Needs Time
File reviewChecks style, fabric, trims, size chart, quote scope
Fabric sourcingConfirms available fabric, color, MOQ, lead time
First sampleTests structure, fabric, sewing method, initial fit
Fit revisionAdjusts pattern, measurements, neckline, length, support
PP sampleConfirms final pre-production standard
Material purchaseOrders fabric, lining, trims, labels, packaging
Bulk cuttingRequires fabric inspection, relaxing, marker, cutting
SewingDepends on style complexity and line availability
Inline QCCatches issues before all pieces are finished
Final QCChecks measurement, appearance, workmanship, packing
PackingApplies labels, tags, barcodes, polybags, cartons
ShippingDepends on route, destination, customs, freight method

If the schedule is tight, the factory may need to adjust the product path. Stock fabric may be safer than custom-dyed fabric. Available trims may be safer than custom hardware. A simpler lining method may be safer than a complicated internal structure. Air freight may be needed instead of sea freight.

A rushed order does not always mean impossible. It means trade-offs must be made openly. The worst situation is a late timeline combined with unclear files, custom fabric, many colors, wide size range, and strict packing rules. Each unclear point adds delay risk.

A useful timeline message looks like this:

“We plan to launch in early September. Goods should arrive at our warehouse by August 15. We need one fit sample and one PP sample before bulk. Please review whether this schedule works with stock satin and private-label packing.”

This gives the factory enough context to discuss a realistic route instead of promising an unsafe date.

How Should Samples Be Planned?

Samples affect both cost and timeline because each sample has a different purpose. A first sample, fit sample, revised sample, photo sample, salesman sample, PP sample, and golden sample should not be treated as the same thing.

A first sample checks whether the style can be built. A fit sample checks whether the dress works on the body. A revised sample confirms changes after feedback. A photo sample needs strong appearance for content, sales, or campaign use. A PP sample confirms the final standard before bulk production. A golden sample becomes the sealed reference for production and QC.

Sample TypeMain PurposeCost and Timeline Impact
First sampleTests style structure and basic constructionRequires pattern, fabric, trims, sewing
Fit sampleTests body fit and measurementsMay require pattern correction
Revised sampleConfirms changes after feedbackAdds time but reduces bulk risk
Photo sampleSupports product photos or sales presentationNeeds cleaner finish and correct visual effect
Salesman sampleSupports wholesale or showroom sellingMay need stronger presentation standard
PP sampleConfirms pre-production standardRequired before controlled bulk production
Golden sampleSealed reference for production and QCProtects bulk consistency

Sample cost is not the same as bulk unit cost. A sample carries pattern work, material preparation, trim preparation, cutting, sewing, measurement checking, communication, and sometimes revision planning. The factory may make only one or a few pieces, so the cost per sample is naturally higher than bulk production.

Sample planning should be connected to order quantity and launch timing. If the planned order is 200 pcs per style/color, the sample route should be focused and efficient. If the order is part of a larger seasonal collection, sample review may need to group styles by fabric, structure, or launch priority.

For example:

  • Satin dresses should test seam smoothness, pressing marks, lining, and zipper flatness.
  • Mesh bodycon dresses should test stretch recovery, transparency, lining coverage, and side seam balance.
  • Corset dresses should test cup position, boning comfort, bust support, and zipper tension.
  • Sequin dresses should test skin comfort, seam thickness, needle risk, and packing protection.

A clear sample plan avoids wasting money on the wrong sample. A photo sample should not be treated as final bulk approval if fit, fabric, trims, and construction are not confirmed. A PP sample should not be changed freely after approval, because the purpose of PP approval is to lock the production standard.

A practical sample plan should answer:

  • Which sample is needed first?
  • Which size should be sampled?
  • Which fabric will be used?
  • Are trims final or substitute?
  • Who will review fit?
  • How many revision rounds are expected?
  • When must PP sample be approved?
  • When must bulk production start?

A clean sample plan protects the launch calendar. It gives enough room to fix the dress before production, not after hundreds of pieces have already been cut.

For custom dress quotes, quantity and timeline should be sent together. Quantity shows production scale. Timeline shows production pressure. When both are clear, the factory can give a more serious answer: whether the order can be accepted, how the price should be structured, what risks need review, and which production route protects both cost and quality.

What Brand and Delivery Details Matter?

Brand and delivery details matter because a dress is not finished when sewing is finished. Labels, hangtags, care content, barcode files, SKU stickers, polybags, carton marks, packing ratio, warehouse rules, shipping destination, delivery window, and confidentiality terms all affect the quote, the timeline, and the final handover. If these details are missing before quotation, the unit price may look lower but fail to include the real cost of branded delivery.

A worker unloading boxes from a van on a busy city street.

A custom dress order usually has two layers of work.

The first layer is the garment itself: fabric, pattern, fit, trims, sewing, pressing, and QC.

The second layer is brand delivery: label placement, care label content, hangtag, barcode, SKU label, polybag, carton mark, warehouse label, packing list, shipment documents, and launch timing.

Many production delays happen in the second layer. The dress may be approved, but the care label file is missing. The barcode may not scan. The carton mark may not match warehouse requirements. The polybag may be too small for a satin maxi dress. The hangtag may arrive late. The carton ratio may not match the receiving plan. These problems do not always look dramatic, but they can delay shipping, create warehouse rejection, increase repacking cost, or damage brand presentation.

Before asking for a dress quote, brand and delivery details should be shared as early as possible. These details help the factory quote more accurately, prepare materials earlier, and avoid last-minute changes after bulk production has already started.

Detail AreaWhat to SendWhy It Affects Quote or Delivery
Main labelArtwork, size, material, color, placementAffects label cost, MOQ, sewing position, brand appearance
Size labelSize system, size range, placementPrevents size mix-up during packing
Care labelFiber content, wash symbols, origin, languageNeeded for compliance and customer use
HangtagArtwork, paper type, finish, string, placementAffects retail presentation and material lead time
BarcodeBarcode file, SKU table, sticker size, scan ruleNeeded for ecommerce and warehouse receiving
PolybagBag size, thickness, warning text, sticker positionAffects packing cost and garment recovery
Carton markPO, style, color, size, carton number, destinationPrevents shipment and warehouse sorting errors
Packing ratioColor-size ratio per cartonAffects picking, receiving, allocation, and inventory
Warehouse guideLabel position, carton format, barcode rulePrevents rejected or delayed delivery
Shipping routeDestination, port, warehouse, forwarder, incotermAffects documents, timeline, carton planning
NDA needsDesign files, sample photos, label files, launch plansProtects unpublished product and brand information

A dress quote without brand delivery details is often incomplete. It may only include a basic sewn garment. For a private-label dress order, the quote should reflect the garment as it will actually leave the factory: labeled, tagged, packed, sorted, boxed, and ready for the next step.

Do You Need Private Label?

Private label requirements should be included before quotation if the dress will be sold under the brand’s own name. These details are not small decoration items. They are part of the finished product and affect cost, material lead time, approval steps, QC checks, and packing workflow.

Private label can include main label, size label, care label, logo label, hangtag, hang string, barcode sticker, SKU label, size sticker, color sticker, branded polybag, thank-you card, brand sticker, carton mark, and warehouse label.

A simple private label checklist can look like this:

Private Label ItemInformation Needed Before QuoteCommon Problem if Missing
Main labelLogo file, size, material, color, placementWrong label size, wrong placement, poor skin comfort
Size labelSize system, label size, placementSize confusion during packing
Care labelFabric content, care symbols, language, originReprint needed after fabric changes
HangtagArtwork, paper weight, finish, string typeDelayed tag approval or wrong brand feel
Barcode stickerBarcode file, SKU table, sticker sizeBarcode cannot scan or SKU mismatch
Polybag stickerStyle, color, size, barcode, warning textWarehouse receiving issue
Carton markPO, style, color, size, carton countShipment sorting error
Warehouse labelWarehouse format and label positionRepacking before delivery

For a quote, the factory needs to know whether these items are supplied by the brand or developed through the factory. Supplied materials still need checking, counting, storage, and sewing or packing labor. Factory-developed materials need artwork review, supplier MOQ confirmation, sample approval, production time, and QC.

Care labels need special attention. The final fiber content depends on confirmed shell fabric, lining, and trim composition. If fabric changes after sampling, care label content may need to change too. A care label printed too early may become unusable after material adjustment.

Label placement should also be confirmed. A woven label at the back neck, side seam care label, hem label, heat-transfer logo, or external brand patch all use different sewing or application methods. Some placements may not work well on mesh, lace, satin, or bodycon styles because of transparency, stretch, or skin contact.

A clear private label request can say:

“We need woven main labels, size labels, care labels, hangtags, barcode stickers, individual polybags, and carton marks. We will provide logo artwork, barcode file, SKU table, care content, and warehouse guide before sample approval.”

That sentence gives the factory enough information to include the right packing and label route in the quote.

Which Packing Method?

Packing cartons

Packing method affects cost, product condition, carton volume, freight cost, warehouse efficiency, and first impression after unpacking. A basic folded polybag is not always suitable for every dress. Satin, chiffon, mesh, lace, sequin, velvet, corset, and long occasion dresses may need different packing care.

A folded mini dress in jersey can usually recover well after packing. A satin maxi dress may crease easily if folded too tightly. A sequin dress may scratch other garments if packing is too dense. A corset dress may lose shape if compressed. A lace dress may snag if the polybag is too narrow. These risks should be reviewed before bulk packing begins.

Common packing options include:

Packing MethodSuitable ForKey Details to Confirm
Individual folded polybagEcommerce, DTC, standard dress ordersFold method, bag size, barcode position
Hanger packingBoutique, showroom, selected retail programsHanger type, garment cover, carton height
Tissue-assisted foldingSatin, chiffon, lace, delicate surfacesTissue size, fold line, crease protection
Shape-protection packingCorset, structured bodice, padded stylesCup support, carton density, pressure points
Sequin-protection packingSequin, bead, rhinestone dressesReverse fold, surface protection, carton pressure
Color-size carton packingWarehouse receiving and retail allocationSize ratio, color separation, carton mark
Mixed-size cartonEcommerce or warehouse allocationSKU control, barcode check, packing list accuracy

Polybag size is often underestimated. A bag that is too small can crush the garment, create wrinkles, damage embellishment, or make the product look cheap after opening. A bag that is too large may increase carton volume and look messy. For ecommerce-ready packing, the bag should fit the folded garment, sticker placement, barcode scan area, and any warehouse warning text.

Carton density also matters. A carton packed too tightly may reduce freight volume, but it can damage satin, velvet, sequins, boning, cups, or delicate trims. A carton packed too loosely may increase shipping cost and allow garments to move too much during transit.

Before quotation, the brand should confirm whether the order needs:

  • Individual polybag
  • Hangtag and string
  • Barcode sticker
  • Size sticker
  • Color sticker
  • SKU label
  • Thank-you card
  • Brand sticker
  • Tissue paper
  • Hanger packing
  • Dust bag
  • Carton mark
  • Warehouse label
  • Packing list by carton

A practical packing instruction can say:

“Each dress should be folded into an individual polybag with hangtag, barcode sticker, size sticker, and SKU label. Pack by color and size ratio. Carton mark should show PO number, style code, color, size ratio, carton number, gross weight, net weight, and destination warehouse.”

This level of detail helps the factory quote packing materials, labor, carton size, QC checks, and document preparation more accurately.

Where Will Goods Ship?

Shipping details should be shared before bulk quotation because destination, freight method, carton size, delivery window, warehouse rules, and documents can affect final cost and timing. Even when freight is not included in the unit price, the factory still needs shipping information to prepare packing and export documents correctly.

A factory should know the destination country, delivery city, port or airport, warehouse address if available, preferred forwarder, shipping method, required delivery date, and whether the order will ship in one batch or split batches.

A simple delivery table can help:

Shipping DetailExampleWhy It Matters
Destination countryUnited States, United Kingdom, AustraliaAffects documents, care label planning, routing
Delivery pointPort, airport, 3PL warehouse, retail warehouseAffects carton label and booking method
Shipping methodExpress, air, sea, truck after importAffects cost and delivery speed
ForwarderBrand-appointed forwarder or factory-coordinatedAffects handover process
IncotermEXW, FOB, CIF, DAP, DDP if agreedDefines cost responsibility
Ship dateGoods ready dateAffects production and packing timeline
Arrival dateWarehouse receiving deadlineAffects shipping route choice
Split shipmentFirst batch air, balance seaHelps protect launch and cost balance

For launch-driven dress orders, shipping planning should start before bulk production finishes. If goods must arrive by a fixed date, the factory can work backward from the warehouse arrival deadline. A late shipping discussion often leaves only expensive options, such as air freight or express delivery.

Split shipment can be useful when launch timing and cost control both matter. For example, the first 20–30% of a dress order may ship by air for campaign launch or early selling, while the remaining quantity ships by sea. This can help protect the sales calendar without putting the full order into high-cost freight.

Warehouse rules also matter. Some warehouses require barcode labels on a specific side of the polybag. Some require carton labels in a fixed format. Some reject cartons if PO number, SKU, color, size, quantity, or carton sequence is missing. These rules should be sent before packing materials are prepared.

A strong delivery note can say:

“Goods will ship to our Los Angeles 3PL warehouse. We use our appointed forwarder. Please prepare carton marks with PO, style code, color, size ratio, carton number, gross weight, net weight, and barcode label according to our warehouse guide. We may need the first 200 pcs by air and the balance by sea.”

This gives the factory a realistic delivery picture before cost and timeline are finalized.

Are NDA Terms Needed?

NDA terms should be discussed before sharing unpublished designs, original samples, tech packs, patterns, label artwork, barcode data, packaging files, campaign plans, order quantities, or pricing information. For dress brands, confidentiality is not only about protecting one sketch. It also protects launch timing, private-label identity, supplier strategy, and future collection plans.

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Confidential information may include:

  • Tech pack
  • Original sample
  • Pattern file
  • Size chart
  • Fit comments
  • Fabric and trim plan
  • Label artwork
  • Hangtag artwork
  • Care label content
  • Barcode file
  • SKU table
  • Packaging instruction
  • Carton mark format
  • Unreleased collection images
  • Order quantity
  • Target price
  • Launch calendar
  • Warehouse information

A serious manufacturer should treat these files as project information, not marketing material. Sample photos, brand names, packaging files, and private project details should not be posted, reused, or shown publicly without written permission.

NDA is especially important for:

  • New seasonal collections
  • Designer labels
  • Influencer or celebrity collaborations
  • Unreleased occasionwear drops
  • Private-label retail programs
  • Original sample development
  • Exclusive fabric or trim direction
  • High-volume repeat-order styles

NDA should not feel like a barrier. It creates a clear working boundary before more detailed files are exchanged. In practical terms, it tells both sides how files, photos, samples, patterns, brand names, packaging materials, and project information should be handled.

A simple NDA request can say:

“Before sending the full tech pack, original sample photos, label artwork, and launch plan, we would like to sign an NDA. The files are for quotation, sampling, and production review only and should not be shared publicly or used for other projects.”

For factory review, NDA does not replace product information. The quote still needs style details, materials, quantity, and delivery requirements. NDA simply makes the file exchange safer and clearer.

Brand and delivery details should be treated as part of the quote, not as afterthoughts. A dress order is not only cut and sewn. It is labeled, packed, checked, documented, shipped, and received. When these details are shared early, the quote becomes more realistic, the packing process becomes smoother, and the final product is closer to what the brand expects to deliver.

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