APPAREL-INDUSTRY
(QUALITY)
Hello
Everyone!!!! Welcome you all once again
with today’s interesting topic , Without considering this as an important
factory we cannot move forward in apparel industry nor in any other sector in
this entire planet , it is “Quality”. Quality of a product describes a vital
image of an industry. It is not only important within product but it also
describes personality of a person. Let it be its only for your knowledge. Our focus how quality works
apparel industry , So lets start with one of the most important saying ” Cost
is more important than quality but
Quality is the best way to reduce cost”.
INTRODUCTION
Quality
means customer needs is to be satisfied. Failure to maintain an adequate
quality standard can therefore be unsuccessful. But maintaining an adequate
standard of quality also costs effort. From the first investigation to find out
what the potential customer for a new product really wants, through the
processes of design, specification, controlled manufacture and sale.
There
are a number of factors on which quality fitness of garment industry is based such as - performance,
reliability, durability, visual and perceived quality of the garment. Quality
needs to be defined in terms of a particular framework of cost.
In
the garment industry quality control is practiced right from the initial
stage of sourcing raw materials to the stage of final finished garment. For
textile and apparel industry product quality is calculated in terms of quality
and standard of fibres, yarns, fabric construction, colour fastness, surface
designs and the final finished garment products. However quality expectations
for export are related to the type of customer segments and the retail outlets.
Objectives:
1.
To maximize the production of
goods within the specified tolerances correctly the first time.
2.
To achieve a satisfactory
design of the fabric or garment in relation to the level of choice in design,
styles, colours, suitability of components and fitness of product for the
market.
Requirements:
Process Cycle
|
1.
Understanding the customers'
quality requirements.
2.
Organizing & training
quality control department.
3.
Ensuring proper flow of quality
requirements to the QC department.
4.
Ensuring proper flow of quality
requirements to the Production Department.
5.
Establishing quality plans,
parameters, inspection systems, frequency, sampling techniques, etc..
6.
Inspection, testing,
measurements as per plan.
7.
Record deviations
8.
Feed back to Production Department.
9.
Plan for further improvement.
Quality control in garment manufacturing technology:
In the apparel industry quality control is practiced right from the initial
stage of sourcing raw materials to the stage of final finished garment. Quality control in garment industry is very complex
and lengthy task. There are several stages to control quality in garment
manufacturing. They are given below:
1.
Pre-production quality control
2.
Quality control during production
3.
Final inspection
4.
Quality control to developing a sampling plan
5.
Post-production quality evaluation
1. Pre-production
quality control
In pre-production quality control, each component of a garment is tested prior to assembling. Closures, interlinings, sewing threads, and other design elements are tested for their quality and durability. Fabric with too many defects or closures that do not work properly can be detected prior to construction, which saves time and money in the long run. Fabric, accessories, closures, interlinings, sewing threads, and other design elements are all tested prior to the garment manufacturing in the pre production quality control phase.
Fabric quality:
In pre-production quality control, each component of a garment is tested prior to assembling. Closures, interlinings, sewing threads, and other design elements are tested for their quality and durability. Fabric with too many defects or closures that do not work properly can be detected prior to construction, which saves time and money in the long run. Fabric, accessories, closures, interlinings, sewing threads, and other design elements are all tested prior to the garment manufacturing in the pre production quality control phase.
Fabric quality:
Fabric quality is of utmost importance to
the overall quality of apparel and textile products. Regardless of how
well a product is designed or constructed, if the fabric is of poor
quality, the product will most likely to fail with the consumer. Most fabric
is comprised of fibers that are spun into yarns and then woven or knitted
into fabric. Support materials like interlinings usually go from the fiber
to the fabric stage. Since fibres are the building blocks of all apparel
and textile products, it is important to start with quality fibers
regardless if they are natural, manufactured, regenerated, or synthetic. Fabric
should keep the following properties.
·
Comfort: Comfort is very important fabric property. It Comfort
is studied by looking at fabric in terms of elongation and elasticity,
heat retention and conduction, moisture absorbency, water repellency,
waterproofing, hand and skin contact, drape, and air permeability.
·
Colorfastness: Colorfastness relates to
appearance retention and can be described as “how consumers use textile
products and includes factors that may cause colorants to change color
or migrate from one material to another”. Colorfastness is studied by
exposing the fabric to different conditions including acids and alkalis, crocking,
environmental conditions, frosting, heat, light, perspiration, or
water.
·
Durability: Durability evaluates “how
various materials used in a product perform when subjected to different
conditions”. Durability of a fabric is tested until it fails, and both
warp and weft yarns are tested. There are many ways to assess
fabric durability, including strength (tensile, tear, and bursting),
abrasion, pilling, snagging, and dimensional stability.
. FABRIC DEFECTS
1.
Wrong Shade
2.
Uneven dyeing
3.
Holes
4.
Knitting stripes
5.
Thick & Thin places
6.
Dirt & Stains
7.
Oil stains
8.
Sinker line
9.
Poor softness
10.
Higher Shrinkage
11.
Crease Marks
Quality inspection
of other accessories:
Garment accessories are inspected in the same manner
as other textile and apparel products. Accessories are checked during
preproduction, production, and post production with a final inspection.
Various fashion accessories include closures,
interlinings, sewing threads, elastic waistband, and other design
elements. These accessories should be able to withstand the care and
maintenance procedures devised for the clothing.
A brief inspection procedure for the accessories is described below:
A brief inspection procedure for the accessories is described below:
·
Closures: Closure strength and
durability is extremely important to garment construction and consumer
satisfaction. Closures for apparel and textiles products include
zippers, buttons, hooks, snap fasteners, drawstrings, hook-and-loop
fasteners, and others.
·
Interlinings: Interlinings, also called
interfacing, are generally nonwoven fabrics that add more structure and
body to garment components like collars, button plackets, waistbands, and cuffs.
Interlinings may be fusible or sew-on. Interlining durability is
important for garment construction.
·
Sewing threads: Sewing thread is the yarn used
to combine two or more fabric pieces together in garments, accessories,
and other textile products. Thread encompasses the majority of the stress
and strain from movement and needs to be strong and durable. It must
resist breaking and be compatible with the rest of the garment in terms of
color, care instructions, and construction. Sewing thread should be free from
imperfections such as knots, slubs, thick and thin places.
·
Elastic waistband: Elastic waistbands are tested
for fit (as per size) and durability (loss of elasticity). The fit is
measured by the force needed to stretch the waistband about 200 more than the
hip size (as per the size label) and bringing back to the waist size. The
durability can be measured by stretching the waistband by 50% and
measuring the force needed to stretch it. The loss of force in the two cases
should be less than 10% for the waistband to be acceptable.
Other design elements include beads,
sequins, braids, and fringes. They are tested for quality in similar ways
as closures. Beads are similar to buttons and are tested for their impact
resistance against creaking, chipping, or breaking during sudden external
force. Sequins are assessed for their strength and resistance to breaking
or tearing. Braids and fringes are checked for their quality in terms of
durability from fraying, unraveling, tearing, and ripping.
2. Quality control during production
Each step in the garment production process is vital to the overall quality of apparel products. The production of apparel products includes cutting, assembling, pressing and other finishing procedures, and final inspection. Pattern pieces need to be cut with precision and on grain. Cut pattern pieces should be assembled with accuracy and care. Assembled garments are finished and pressed. Poor attention to detail, or carelessness when sewing, could have the domino effect on other components or future assembling. For example, skewed fabric pieces will not fit together easily and sewing is difficult. Poorly sewn garments have popped stitches and loose seams. Poorly pressed garments will not lie on the body correctly and could have permanent wrinkles. The following section describes the quality control of apparels during various production processes.
a. Spreading and cutting defects
Proper care should be taken to avoid any mistakes during spreading, otherwise, it will result in improperly cut components. The major parameters such as ply alignment, ply tension, bowing, and splicing should be done with a great care. Not enough plies to cover the quantity of garment components required should also be taken care. Misaligned plies will result in garment parts getting cut with bits missing in some plies at the edge of the spread. Narrow fabric causes garment parts at the edge of the lay getting cut with bits missing. Incorrect tension of plies, i.e., fabric spread too tight or too loose, will result in parts not fitting in sewing, and finished garments not meeting size tolerances. Not all plies facing in correct direction (whether “one way” as with nap, or “either way” as with some check designs), may create in pattern misalignment or mismatch. This happens when the fabric is not spread face down, face up, or face to face as required. The patterns should be aligned with respect to the fabric grain, or else may not fit or drape properly. Spread may be distorted by the attraction or repulsion of plies caused by excessive static electricity.
Cutting is an important stage of the garment production process. Precision is needed to cut accurate pieces that will fit together during the assembly process. Cutting defects include frayed edges; fuzzy, ragged, or serrated edges; ply-to-ply fusion; single-edge fusion; pattern imprecision; inappropriate notches; and inappropriate drilling. Garment defects are occured by careless use of knife, perhaps overrunning cutting previous piece. Garment parts have bits missing at edge of lay. If too tight or too loose then garment parts are distorted. Slits opened inaccurately or omitted.
2. Quality control during production
Each step in the garment production process is vital to the overall quality of apparel products. The production of apparel products includes cutting, assembling, pressing and other finishing procedures, and final inspection. Pattern pieces need to be cut with precision and on grain. Cut pattern pieces should be assembled with accuracy and care. Assembled garments are finished and pressed. Poor attention to detail, or carelessness when sewing, could have the domino effect on other components or future assembling. For example, skewed fabric pieces will not fit together easily and sewing is difficult. Poorly sewn garments have popped stitches and loose seams. Poorly pressed garments will not lie on the body correctly and could have permanent wrinkles. The following section describes the quality control of apparels during various production processes.
a. Spreading and cutting defects
Proper care should be taken to avoid any mistakes during spreading, otherwise, it will result in improperly cut components. The major parameters such as ply alignment, ply tension, bowing, and splicing should be done with a great care. Not enough plies to cover the quantity of garment components required should also be taken care. Misaligned plies will result in garment parts getting cut with bits missing in some plies at the edge of the spread. Narrow fabric causes garment parts at the edge of the lay getting cut with bits missing. Incorrect tension of plies, i.e., fabric spread too tight or too loose, will result in parts not fitting in sewing, and finished garments not meeting size tolerances. Not all plies facing in correct direction (whether “one way” as with nap, or “either way” as with some check designs), may create in pattern misalignment or mismatch. This happens when the fabric is not spread face down, face up, or face to face as required. The patterns should be aligned with respect to the fabric grain, or else may not fit or drape properly. Spread may be distorted by the attraction or repulsion of plies caused by excessive static electricity.
Cutting is an important stage of the garment production process. Precision is needed to cut accurate pieces that will fit together during the assembly process. Cutting defects include frayed edges; fuzzy, ragged, or serrated edges; ply-to-ply fusion; single-edge fusion; pattern imprecision; inappropriate notches; and inappropriate drilling. Garment defects are occured by careless use of knife, perhaps overrunning cutting previous piece. Garment parts have bits missing at edge of lay. If too tight or too loose then garment parts are distorted. Slits opened inaccurately or omitted.
b. Defects in assembling
After the pattern pieces have been cut, they are assembled. Many issues and defects can arise during the sewing process. Defects in assembling include defects with both stitches and seams. Possible stitching defects include needle damage, feed damage, skipped stitches, broken stitches, wrong or uneven stitch density, balloon stitches, broken threads, clogged stitches, hangnail, and improperly formed stitches. Seam defects include seam grin, seam pucker, incorrect or uneven width, irregular or incorrect shape, insecure back-stitching, twisted seam, mismatched seam, extra material caught in seam, reversed garment part, wrong seam type used, slipping seam, and wrong thread used.
c. Defects during
pressing and finishing
After garments are constructed, final
preparations are completed. These final preparations include pressing
garments to help set seams and finish garment shaping. Defects during
pressing and finishing include burned garments, water spots, change in
original color, flattened surface or nap, creases not correctly formed,
fabric of finished garment not smooth, edges stretched or rippled, pockets
not smooth, garment not correctly shaped, and shrinkage from moisture and
heat.
3. Final inspection
After materials have been tested for quality and the products have been manufactured, products are tested for their performance requirements, overall appearance, and sizing and fit. Proper sizing and fit can be measured as per the size of the garment or they can be tested by putting the garments in manikins or even live models. They are also checked visually for any faults during the production process. Hence, the quality of stitching, joining of garment components and accessories are inspected.
Although each component of a garment is tested individually, in pre production quality control, products are tested for a final time to assess the compatibility of materials used together and any noticeable fault. Garments are inspected for off-grain fabric, poor or uneven stitching, mismatched plaids or stripes along seams, puckered or extra material caught in seams, and uneven seams along hems, among many other problems that can occur in the apparel industry.
During inspection, some parts of a product are more important than others in terms of allowable defects. Every garment manufacturer defines its own product zones and includes these in their specifications as there is no industry standard. They will also define what they deem as critical, major, and minor defects. A critical defect results in a flaw that produces an unsafe or hazardous situation like a hole in a latex glove that would compromise the safety of the wearer. A major defect is a flaw that often contributes to product failure or lack of usability for a product. Examples of a major defect could be a broken zipper, broken stitches, or tears in the fabric. A minor defect is a flaw that does not reduce the usability of a product, but still deviates from standards and specifications. Examples of minor defects could be an unclipped thread, untrimmed seam allowance, or slubbed yarns in the fabric.
3. Final inspection
After materials have been tested for quality and the products have been manufactured, products are tested for their performance requirements, overall appearance, and sizing and fit. Proper sizing and fit can be measured as per the size of the garment or they can be tested by putting the garments in manikins or even live models. They are also checked visually for any faults during the production process. Hence, the quality of stitching, joining of garment components and accessories are inspected.
Although each component of a garment is tested individually, in pre production quality control, products are tested for a final time to assess the compatibility of materials used together and any noticeable fault. Garments are inspected for off-grain fabric, poor or uneven stitching, mismatched plaids or stripes along seams, puckered or extra material caught in seams, and uneven seams along hems, among many other problems that can occur in the apparel industry.
During inspection, some parts of a product are more important than others in terms of allowable defects. Every garment manufacturer defines its own product zones and includes these in their specifications as there is no industry standard. They will also define what they deem as critical, major, and minor defects. A critical defect results in a flaw that produces an unsafe or hazardous situation like a hole in a latex glove that would compromise the safety of the wearer. A major defect is a flaw that often contributes to product failure or lack of usability for a product. Examples of a major defect could be a broken zipper, broken stitches, or tears in the fabric. A minor defect is a flaw that does not reduce the usability of a product, but still deviates from standards and specifications. Examples of minor defects could be an unclipped thread, untrimmed seam allowance, or slubbed yarns in the fabric.
Below are the some measurement defects
which is important to understand …
E. MEASUREMENT DEVIATIONS
1.
Garment length
2.
Body width
3.
Shoulder length
4.
Arm hole
5.
Arm Opening
6.
Sleeve length
7.
Placket length
8.
Placket width
9.
Neck width
10.
Neck opening
11.
Hemming width
12.
IRib or Collar width
4. Quality control
to developing a sampling plan
Although quality has been incorporated
into each product up to this point, products are selected for audits and
sorted into acceptable or unacceptable categories prior to shipment to
their final destination. There are many types of samples including random,
representative, convenience, stratified, constant percentage, and
systematic samples. A random sample is where every item has an equal
chance of being selected.
A representative sample includes a planned variation of items in a ratio that is appropriate. A convenience sample is made up of items that are easier to inspect over others and not random. A stratified sample is selecting a sample when a large lot of similar items exist. A constant percentage sample is sampling with a known constant percentage regardless of lot size to determine the sampling size. A systematic sample consists of items from equal intervals of time or the same location.
Types of sampling plans include lot-by-lot sampling, lot-by-lot sampling by attribute, skip-lot sampling, continuous production sampling, and arbitrary sampling.
A representative sample includes a planned variation of items in a ratio that is appropriate. A convenience sample is made up of items that are easier to inspect over others and not random. A stratified sample is selecting a sample when a large lot of similar items exist. A constant percentage sample is sampling with a known constant percentage regardless of lot size to determine the sampling size. A systematic sample consists of items from equal intervals of time or the same location.
Types of sampling plans include lot-by-lot sampling, lot-by-lot sampling by attribute, skip-lot sampling, continuous production sampling, and arbitrary sampling.
5. Post-production
quality evaluation
Post-production quality evaluation in the
apparel industry includes wear testing for realistic reactions to everyday
scenarios and testing with a simulation study when a consumer’s
reliability is in question. In wear testing, which is sometimes
called product testing, companies provide a small group of consumers with
products. Consumers are contracted to wear garments under certain stated
guidelines and requirements in order to determine whether they meet the
company’s intended performance criteria. Consumers report back to the
company and identify issues with the product before an entire production
lot of garments are produced. Testing with a simulation study is similar
to wear testing, but a consumer’s safety might be in question. Companies
would test items like helmets with a simulation prior to producing an entire
production lot, or would test the effectiveness of nonskid shoes on wet
surfaces. Appearance retention and care are other aspects of
post-production quality evaluation.
Apart from above below factor is also
necessary to understand which are also
important to maintain better Quality assurance in an industry.
AQL ( Acceptable Quality Level
)
A
certain proportion of defective will always occur in any manufacturing process.
If the percentage does not exceed a certain limit, it will be economical to
allow the defective to go through instead of screening the entire lot. This
limit is called the "Acceptable Quality Level" ( AQL )
Considering
the practical & economic aspects, Sampling Techniques are adopted to Accept
or Reject a Lot on the basis of the Samples drawn at Random from the lot. It
has been found and accepted that a scientifically designed sampling &
inspection plan protects a Manufacturer as well as the Buyer economically.
American
Military Standards known as MIL-STD-105A to 105E is accepted world-wide for
sampling sizes. It has the following sample size levels. Normally for Garment
Industry 105D or 105E are followed.
1.
Special Inspection Levels ( S1, S2, S3 & S4 )
2.
General Inspection Levels ( I, II & III )
3.
It has various AQL levels from 0.040 to 25 for Accepting or
Rejecting the lots. Normally for Garment industry, the AQL levels of 2.5, 4.0
and 6.5 are followed.
Ecological Parameters:
Now
all the Customers are asking for Ecological Parameters. Now European Buyers are
stressing this. Following are main Ecological Parameters to be considered.
1.
pH range
2.
Formaldehyde levels
3.
Extractable heavy metals
4.
Chlorinated phenols ( PCP, TeCP)
5.
Forbidden Amines of MAK III A1& A2 categories
6.
Pesticides
7.
Chlorinated Organic carriers
8.
Biocide finishes
10.
Colour fastness to Water
11.
Colour fastness to acid & alkali perspiration
12.
Colour fastness to wet & dry rubbing
14.
Emission of volatile chemicals
15.
Other specific parameters as required by the customers
Conclusion:
From the above discussion we can say that controlling quality in apparel industry is really tough task. If quality properly controlled then costs remain at an acceptable level and customers be satisfied. Because quality is ultimately a question of customer satisfaction. We can say that quality control in terms of apparel manufacturing, pre-sales and posts sales service, delivery, pricing, etc are essential for any garment manufacturer, trader or exporter. For getting quality garments have to use latest technology and well trained worker to give best output and complete planning before the production.
From the above discussion we can say that controlling quality in apparel industry is really tough task. If quality properly controlled then costs remain at an acceptable level and customers be satisfied. Because quality is ultimately a question of customer satisfaction. We can say that quality control in terms of apparel manufacturing, pre-sales and posts sales service, delivery, pricing, etc are essential for any garment manufacturer, trader or exporter. For getting quality garments have to use latest technology and well trained worker to give best output and complete planning before the production.
THE END
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