OEM
Produce from approved files.
Tech packs, samples, measurements, artwork, BOM, trims, and packing rules are converted into a production-ready route.
Manufacturing control tower
Aimbry connects OEM, ODM, sampling, bulk production, quality control, packaging, and delivery into one manufacturing workflow for overseas apparel teams.
Brief
Owner, approval, output, and next handoff are visible.
Sample
Owner, approval, output, and next handoff are visible.
Bulk
Owner, approval, output, and next handoff are visible.
QC
Owner, approval, output, and next handoff are visible.
Pack
Owner, approval, output, and next handoff are visible.
Buyer visibility
Sampling decisions, production gates, QC records, and packout details are structured before shipment pressure appears.
OEM / ODM
The route changes depending on buyer maturity, but the standard stays the same: clear inputs, sample approval, controlled bulk production, QC gates, and export-ready packout.
OEM
Tech packs, samples, measurements, artwork, BOM, trims, and packing rules are converted into a production-ready route.
ODM
References, fabric goals, target price, fit direction, and channel needs are translated into sample options and production specs.
Private label
Labels, hangtags, wash care, barcodes, polybags, carton marks, and repeat-order documentation are planned early.
Sampling and development
Each sample stage answers a specific manufacturing question: material feasibility, fit, construction, decoration, price, and bulk repeatability.
01
Category, target buyer, fabric direction, MOQ, and destination market are reviewed before sample work starts.
02
Fabric, rib, lining, zipper, drawcord, print base, and trim options are checked against cost and lead time.
03
Construction, proportion, decoration position, and initial measurement logic are tested in one physical garment.
04
Pattern updates, grading comments, tolerance targets, and buyer feedback are documented before final sample.
05
The approved pre-production sample locks the version used for cutting, sewing, finishing, and final inspection.
Production floor
The factory floor is organized around release points, not vague progress updates. Each phase has a visible input, output, and approval condition.
Material released
Line balanced
Inline checked
Finishing cleared
Approved sample, measurements, BOM, artwork, and packing details are checked before bulk release.
Fabric spreading, panel accuracy, shade grouping, and marker efficiency are managed before sewing starts.
Line setup, operation balance, seam quality, and inline correction keep output consistent across batches.
Thread trimming, ironing, pressing, folding, label placement, and appearance review prepare goods for inspection.
Quality control
QC is treated as a manufacturing system: fabric inspection, sample approval, inline correction, measurement control, final inspection, and packing verification.
Color, handfeel, shrinkage direction, defects, shade, and material consistency.
Sample approval, measurement chart, trims, artwork, and production file alignment.
Stitching, construction, operation sequence, panel balance, and early defect correction.
Tolerance checkpoints across key sizes, fit points, and graded production samples.
Print, embroidery, patch, heat transfer, placement, color, and wash resistance direction.
AQL-oriented random checks, packing review, carton marks, quantity, and shipment readiness.
Packaging and delivery
Private label teams, Amazon sellers, and ecommerce brands need garment finishing, barcode logic, carton details, and shipping coordination to work together.
DHL, FedEx, UPS, or buyer-nominated courier for prototypes, fit samples, and approval pieces.
For launch-critical drops, influencer seeding, replenishment pressure, and shorter delivery windows.
For bulk programs, carton-level planning, repeat orders, and buyer forwarder coordination.
Production-ready inquiry
Share a tech pack, reference sample, target MOQ, fabric direction, or delivery market. The next reply should be specific enough for production planning.