How Long Does Cotton Garment Production Take?
If you're sourcing cotton garments for your brand, one question comes up every time: how long will it take? The answer depends on several moving parts—raw material sourcing, fabric processing, cutting, sewing, quality checks, and shipping. Miss one step, and your whole timeline shifts.
This guide breaks down each stage of cotton fabric garmenting, gives you realistic timeframes, and highlights the factors that can speed things up or slow them down. Whether you're placing your first bulk order or optimizing an existing supply chain, knowing the production timeline helps you plan smarter and avoid costly delays.
At Fabriclore Pvt Ltd, a leading clothing and garment manufacturing company trusted by 400+ private labels globally, we've worked through every stage of this process. Here's what the timeline actually looks like.
The Global Cotton Garment Manufacturing Timeline at a Glance
From raw cotton to a finished garment on the rack, production typically takes 90 to 180 days. That's three to six months, depending on order size, complexity, and your manufacturer's capacity.
Here's a rough breakdown:
- Raw material sourcing: 2–4 weeks
- Design and prototyping: 3–6 weeks
- Fabric processing (spinning, weaving, dyeing): 4–8 weeks
- Cutting and sewing: 2–6 weeks
- Quality control: 1–2 weeks
- Shipping and logistics: 1–4 weeks
Now let's get into each stage.
Sourcing and Selecting High-Quality Cotton Raw Materials
The process starts at the farm. Cotton is grown primarily in India, the United States, China, and Brazil. After harvesting, it goes through ginning to remove seeds, then gets baled and transported to mills.
Sourcing cotton fabric of the right grade—whether that's combed, carded, or ring-spun—takes time. Buyers must evaluate staple length, fiber strength, and moisture content. Rushing this step leads to inconsistent quality down the line.
Timeline: 2–4 weeks
Working with an established manufacturer like Fabriclore, which maintains supplier relationships across India's top cotton-producing regions, can cut this window significantly.
The Design and Prototyping Phase: From Sketches to Tech Packs
Once you have your raw material plan in place, design begins. This phase includes:
- Concept sketches and mood boards
- Technical drawings with measurements and construction details
- Tech pack creation — the document your factory uses to produce the garment
- Sample making and revision rounds
First samples rarely get approved immediately. Expect two to three rounds of revisions before you lock a sample. Each round adds a week or more.
Timeline: 3–6 weeks
Brands that come in with detailed briefs and clear specifications move through this phase faster. Vague instructions mean more back-and-forth.
Fabric Processing: Spinning, Weaving, and Dyeing Durations
This is one of the most time-intensive stages in garment manufacturing. After raw cotton is sourced, it goes through a multi-step process:
Spinning
Cotton fibers get cleaned, carded, and drawn into yarn. The type of yarn—ring-spun, open-end, or air-jet—affects both quality and processing time.
Weaving or Knitting
Yarn is then converted into fabric. Woven fabrics (like poplin, twill, or canvas) go through a loom. Knitted fabrics (like jersey or interlock) use knitting machines. This step can take two to four weeks depending on the fabric structure and order volume.
Dyeing and Finishing
Cotton fabric takes dye well, but the process requires precision. Reactive dyes, vat dyes, and pigment dyes each have different processing times and wash-fastness results. After dyeing, fabric goes through finishing treatments—softening, preshrinking, or mercerizing—before it's ready for cutting.
Timeline: 4–8 weeks
Custom colors and special finishes add time. If you need a specific Pantone shade matched accurately, factor in extra days for lab dip approvals.
The Cutting and Sewing Stage: Where the Garment Takes Shape
This is where cotton fabric garmenting gets physical. Approved fabric arrives at the production floor, gets spread in layers, and cut using manual or automated cutting systems.
Then comes sewing. A single garment might pass through eight to fifteen different sewing operators before it's complete—each one handling a specific seam, pocket, or attachment.
Factors that affect sewing time:
- Garment complexity: A basic t-shirt takes less time than a structured blazer
- Order quantity: Larger runs benefit from assembly-line efficiency
- Operator skill level: Specialized techniques like smocking or French seams require trained hands
Timeline: 2–6 weeks
High-volume orders at well-equipped factories can run faster. Small, complex orders with intricate detailing take longer.
Quality Control and Final Inspections
No garment ships without passing quality control. This stage covers:
- In-line inspections: Checks during sewing to catch issues early
- End-line checks: Finished garments inspected for defects, measurements, and construction accuracy
- AQL testing: Acceptable Quality Limit testing on a batch sample to decide if the full order passes
Common rejection reasons include stitching defects, incorrect measurements, color bleeding, and fabric pilling.
Timeline: 1–2 weeks
Factories with strong QC systems catch problems before they become expensive. Fabriclore's tech-enabled platform provides delivery transparency so clients can track quality milestones in real time.
Logistics and Shipping: Getting Products from Factory to Floor
Production ends at the factory gate. Getting garments to your warehouse is a separate timeline entirely.
- Sea freight: 15–45 days depending on origin and destination
- Air freight: 3–7 days, but significantly more expensive
- Customs clearance: 1–5 business days, sometimes longer
Documentation—commercial invoices, packing lists, certificates of origin—must be accurate to avoid clearance delays. Errors here can hold a shipment for days or even weeks.
Timeline: 1–4 weeks
Plan your inventory needs backward from your target launch date, not forward from your order date.
Key Factors That Can Accelerate or Delay Production
Several variables will push your timeline shorter or longer:
What speeds things up:
- Clear, detailed tech packs and design briefs
- Faster sample approval turnaround
- Pre-booked factory capacity
- Working with a vertically integrated manufacturer
- Sticking to stock fabrics rather than custom developments
What slows things down:
- Multiple sample revision rounds
- Custom dyeing and specialty finishes
- Factory peak seasons (typically Q3 and Q4)
- Last-minute design changes
- Delays in material approvals
One often-overlooked factor: communication speed. Slow response times between the brand and factory compound at every stage. A two-day delay in approving a lab dip might push your sewing start by a week if the factory has already scheduled another order.
Plan Your Production Timeline Before You Place an Order
The total time for cotton fabric garmenting—from raw material to delivered product—runs between 90 and 180 days for most brands. That's not a guideline to work around; it's a reality to plan for.
Start your timeline from the day you want products in-store, and work backward. Lock your design before you brief a factory. Approve samples quickly. Choose a manufacturer with proven capacity and transparent communication.
Fabriclore Pvt Ltd offers end-to-end garment manufacturing services—from cotton fabric sourcing and custom dyeing to full-scale production and delivery. With low MOQ options and a platform built for private labels, we help brands move from concept to finished garment without the guesswork.
Ready to plan your next production run? Get in touch with the Fabriclore team today.
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