How Is Embroidery Fabric Made? Step-by-Step Factory Process

Embroidery fabric production follows a six-stage process: pattern digitizing, material preparation, machine setup, production run, quality inspection, and finishing. For a standard order of 5,000 yards, the entire cycle takes 20-30 days from order confirmation to shipment. Here's exactly what happens at each stage, based on how we run production on our Tajima multi-head machines.

What It Really Means

Industrial embroidery production is fundamentally different from the hand embroidery you see in craft tutorials. It involves multi-head machines running at 800-1,000 stitches per minute, producing 12-15 identical pieces simultaneously. The process requires precision at every stage: the digitizing file must be perfect, the fabric must be pre-treated, the machine must be calibrated, and every piece must pass quality inspection before shipping. Understanding this process helps wholesale buyers plan realistic timelines and evaluate supplier capability.

Embroidery fabric production follows a six-stage process: pattern digitizing, material preparation, machine setup, production run, quality inspection, and finishing. For a standard order of 5,000 yards, the entire cycle takes 20-30 days from order confirmation to shipment. Here's exactly what happens at each stage, based on how we run production on our Tajima multi-head machines.

I've been operating Tajima embroidery machines for over 30 years. In that time, I've watched countless buyers place orders without understanding what happens inside the factory between "confirmed" and "shipped." That gap in visibility leads to unrealistic timeline expectations, poor planning, and frustration on both sides. So I'm going to walk you through the real process, step by step, with actual timeframes from our production floor.


What Happens After You Place an Embroidery Order

When your order comes in, it doesn't go straight to the machine. There's a structured pipeline that every order passes through, and skipping or rushing any stage creates problems downstream.

Here's the complete timeline for a standard 5,000-yard order:

Stage Duration Key Activity
1. Pattern Digitizing Days 1-3 Convert design to machine-readable stitch program
2. Material Preparation Days 3-7 Source fabric, thread, backing; run pre-treatment
3. Machine Setup Days 7-9 Calibrate Tajima heads, tension, needle selection
4. Production Run Days 9-19 Actual embroidery across multi-head machines
5. Quality Inspection Days 19-21 Check every batch for defects, run needle detection
6. Finishing & Packaging Days 21-25 Wash, press, cut, fold, pack, and label

Total: 20-25 working days for standard orders. Custom colors or complex designs can push this to 30 days. Peak season (January-February, May-June, September-October) adds another 7-10 days due to raw material lead times and production queue congestion.

Understanding this timeline helps you plan backwards from your delivery date and know exactly where your order is at any point.

 


Stage 1: Pattern Digitizing (Days 1-3)

This is where your design file becomes a machine-readable stitch program. It's the most underestimated stage in the entire process, and it's where I've seen the most expensive mistakes happen.

What the digitizer actually does

Your design arrives as an AI, PSD, or PDF file. A digitizer (we call them "制版师" in Chinese) translates that visual design into a set of instructions that tells the embroidery machine:

  • Stitch sequence: Which areas to embroider first, second, third
  • Stitch type: Satin stitch for outlines, fill stitch for large areas, running stitch for details
  • Stitch density: How many stitches per square inch (typically 4-7 for standard work)
  • Color changes: When to switch thread colors
  • Underlay stitches: Hidden foundation stitches that stabilize the design

A typical fashion embroidery design has 15,000-30,000 stitches. A complex sequin design can exceed 80,000 stitches.

Why stitch count matters for your timeline

Production time = total stitches ÷ machine speed (stitches per minute).

Our Tajima machines run at 800-1,000 stitches per minute for standard work. For a 25,000-stitch design on a 12-head machine, that's about 25 minutes per head. But that's just the raw stitching time. Add thread trimming (about 120 stitches per trim), color changes, and machine stops for quality checks, and the real time is 30-40% longer.

What can go wrong here

Bad digitizing is the number one cause of production defects. Wrong stitch sequence → puckering. Too much density → the design feels stiff and cardboard-like. Missing underlay → stitches pull through on lightweight fabrics.

I always tell clients: "The digitizing file is the blueprint. If the blueprint is wrong, no amount of skilled machine operation can fix it." We reject about 15% of incoming digitizing files and send them back for revision before production.


Stage 2: Fabric & Thread Preparation (Days 3-7)

While the digitizer is working, the production team is preparing materials. This stage runs in parallel with Stage 1 to save time.

Fabric sourcing and inspection

For standard orders using our stock fabrics (cotton, cotton-poly blends, mesh), we pull from inventory and inspect each roll. For custom fabrics, we order from our verified textile suppliers, which adds 3-5 days.

Every roll gets checked for:

  • Width consistency: Must be within ±1cm across the full roll
  • Weave defects: We reject rolls with more than 2 visible defects per 50 yards
  • Color matching: Compared against the approved swatch under standardized D65 lighting
  • Weight (GSM): Must match the specified tolerance (±5%)

Pre-shrinking treatment

All base fabrics go through pre-shrinking before embroidery. This is non-negotiable in our factory. The fabric runs through a controlled wash cycle and is dried under tension to lock in dimensions.

Why this matters: embroidery stitches themselves take up space on the fabric. If the base fabric shrinks after stitching, the stitches pucker and the entire pattern distorts. Pre-shrinking adds 1-2 days to production, but it prevents the most common quality complaint we hear from buyers who sourced elsewhere.

Thread and backing material

We stock over 200 standard thread colors from Madeira and our own verified suppliers. For custom colors, we dye-match against Pantone codes, which adds 2-3 days.

Backing material (stabilizer) is selected based on the fabric type and design complexity:

  • Cutaway backing: For knit fabrics and designs with high stitch density
  • Tear-away backing: For woven fabrics and lighter designs
  • Water-soluble backing: For lace and open-work embroidery

 


Stage 3: Machine Setup & Test Runs (Days 7-9)

This is where the technical preparation meets the physical equipment. Every order gets a dedicated setup session before production begins.

Needle selection

We use three standard needle sizes depending on fabric weight:

  • DB-7 (size 11): For lightweight fabrics like chiffon, georgette, and fine cotton
  • DB-9 (size 14): For medium-weight fabrics like standard cotton, polyester blends
  • DB-11 (size 16): For heavy fabrics like canvas, denim, and thick knits

Wrong needle selection causes problems. Too fine on heavy fabric → needle breaks. Too heavy on fine fabric → visible holes and fabric damage.

Tension calibration

Thread tension is the machine setting that matters most. Too tight, and the thread breaks constantly. Too loose, and loops appear on the fabric surface. Each thread color can behave slightly differently depending on the dye, so we calibrate tension for each color individually.

On our Tajima machines, we test tension using a standardized test pattern: a 2-inch satin stitch square. The bobbin thread should be visible about 1/3 on the back. If it's pulling through to the front, tension is too loose. If the top thread isn't showing on the back at all, tension is too tight.

Test run and first-piece approval

Before running the full order, we produce 3-5 test pieces on the actual production fabric. These are inspected for:

  • Stitch registration (alignment between colors)
  • Puckering or distortion
  • Color accuracy against the approved sample
  • Backing adhesion

The test pieces are photographed and sent to the client for approval. This step takes 1-2 days but prevents costly rework later.


Stage 4: Production Run (Days 9-19)

This is the core of the process, where the actual embroidery happens across our multi-head Tajima machines.

How multi-head production works

Our factory runs Tajima machines with 12-15 heads per machine. Each head embroiders the same design simultaneously on a separate section of fabric. So a 12-head machine produces 12 identical pieces per cycle.

For a 5,000-yard order with a design that takes 30 minutes per piece, the math works out like this:

  • 12 heads × 2 pieces per hour = 24 pieces per hour
  • 5,000 yards ÷ (average 0.5 yards per piece) = 10,000 pieces
  • 10,000 pieces ÷ 24 per hour = ~417 machine hours
  • Running 2 machines × 16 hours per day = 32 machine hours per day
  • 417 ÷ 32 = ~13 production days

This is why we allocate 10 days for the production run stage on a standard order.

What operators monitor during production

The machine does the stitching, but the operator's role is critical. During a production run, operators watch for:

  • Thread breaks: The machine auto-stops, but the operator must re-thread and restart. Average thread break rate on well-calibrated machines is 1-3 per 10,000 stitches.
  • Fabric shifting: If the hooping isn't tight enough, fabric moves during stitching, causing misalignment.
  • Color registration: Checking that multi-color designs line up correctly.
  • Bobbin thread supply: Bobbins need replacing every 15-20 minutes depending on design density.

A skilled operator manages 2-3 machines simultaneously. Less experienced operators handle one machine at a time.

Common production issues and fixes

Issue: Excessive thread breaks Cause: Poor thread quality, incorrect tension, or damaged needle Fix: Replace thread cone, recalibrate tension, change needle

Issue: Design shifting on fabric Cause: Loose hooping, unstable fabric, or missing backing Fix: Re-hoop with tighter tension, add backing, or switch to cutaway stabilizer

Issue: Inconsistent stitch density across batch Cause: Machine timing drift, worn needle plates Fix: Machine recalibration, replace needle plates


Stage 5: Quality Inspection (Days 19-21)

Every piece of embroidered fabric goes through quality inspection before it moves to finishing. This is the stage where we catch defects that would otherwise reach your customers.

What we check

Our QC team inspects every batch against these criteria:

  • Stitch quality: No loose threads, no skipped stitches, no bird-nesting on the back
  • Color accuracy: Compared against the approved sample under D65 standardized lighting
  • Pattern alignment: Multi-color designs must register within 0.5mm
  • Puckering: Fabric should lay flat without visible distortion around the embroidery
  • Back appearance: Bobbin thread coverage should be clean and consistent

Needle detection

After visual inspection, every piece runs through a needle detection machine. This is standard practice in our factory, especially for orders going to markets with strict safety regulations (EU, US children's wear). The machine detects broken needle fragments that may have embedded in the fabric during production.

Any piece that triggers the needle detector is quarantined and inspected manually. If a needle fragment is found, we trace back to the specific machine and operator to prevent recurrence.

Defect rates and tolerances

Our standard defect rate target is under 2% for mesh embroidery, under 3% for chemical lace, and under 2.5% for crochet lace. These numbers are based on over 2 million yards of production data.

When we find defects, we don't just discard them. We categorize them:

  • Repairable: Loose threads, minor misalignment → fixed by hand
  • Replacement needed: Major defects → re-embroidered on fresh fabric
  • Scrapped: Unfixable → discarded and counted against our defect rate

Stage 6: Finishing & Packaging (Days 21-25)

The final stage transforms raw embroidered fabric into shipment-ready product.

Washing and pressing

Depending on the fabric type, embroidered fabric may go through a final wash to remove marking lines, backing residue, or processing chemicals. Chemical lace specifically requires a water wash to dissolve the PVA base film, leaving only the embroidered pattern.

After washing, fabric is pressed flat using industrial steam presses. Temperature and pressure settings vary by fabric type:

  • Cotton: 150-170°C, medium pressure
  • Polyester blends: 130-150°C, low pressure
  • Silk/chiffon: 110-130°C, minimal pressure

Cutting and inspection

Fabric is cut to the ordered width and length. Each cut piece is visually inspected one final time for any defects that may have been missed or introduced during washing.

Packaging

Standard packaging includes:

  • Rolls wrapped in polyethylene film
  • Inner cardboard tube for stability
  • Moisture-absorbing packet for sea shipments
  • Label with order number, color code, yardage, and lot number

For air shipments, we use vacuum-sealed packaging to reduce volume.


What Can Go Wrong (And How We Prevent It)

After 30 years of running embroidery machines, I've seen almost everything that can go wrong. Here are the most common issues and how we prevent them:

Problem: Thread color doesn't match the sample

Thread dye lots vary between production runs. A "red" from one dye lot can look noticeably different from another, especially under certain lighting.

How we handle it: We source thread from the same dye lot for the entire order. For repeat orders, we keep the dye lot number on record and request the same lot from the supplier. We also check colors under both D65 daylight and TL84 store lighting before approving.

Problem: Fabric puckers around the embroidery

Puckering is the most common complaint from buyers. The embroidery stitches compress the fabric, causing it to gather around the design.

We prevent this with proper digitizing (appropriate underlay stitches, correct stitch density) and pre-shrunk fabric. Hooping tension matters too: firm enough to hold the fabric stable, but not so tight that it stretches before the stitches go in.

Problem: Production runs behind schedule

Raw material delays, machine breakdowns, and quality issues requiring rework. These are the three usual suspects.

We maintain 2-week safety stock on our top 20 fabric types. Machines go through preventive maintenance every 500 operating hours. And we build 2 buffer days into every production schedule for unexpected rework.

Problem: Stitch count doesn't match the quoted estimate

This happens when the digitizer's estimate differs from what the machine actually produces, usually because density gets adjusted during test runs.

We quote based on the higher end of the estimated range. Actual count comes in lower → you pay less. Comes in higher → we absorb the difference on the first order.


Frequently Asked Questions

How long does standard embroidery production take?

For a standard order of 5,000 yards using stock fabrics and colors, plan for 20-25 working days from order confirmation to shipment. Custom fabrics, custom colors, or complex multi-color designs can extend this to 30 days. Peak season (January-February, May-June, September-October) adds 7-10 days.

What's the fastest turnaround possible?

For urgent orders using stock materials and existing digitizing files, we can compress the timeline to 12-15 days. This requires skipping the parallel processing of Stages 1-2 (using pre-digitized files and pre-approved fabrics) and running production on overtime. Expedited production carries a 15-20% surcharge.

How should I prepare my design files for production?

Send vector files (AI or EPS) at the actual production size. Include color callouts with Pantone codes. If you have specific stitch direction preferences or density requirements, note them in a separate document. The cleaner your input, the faster the digitizing stage goes.

Can I visit the factory during production?

Yes. We welcome factory visits and video calls during production. Many of our long-term clients schedule a mid-production video call to see their order in progress. This builds trust and lets you ask questions in real time about the process you're now reading about.

What if I need to change the design after production starts?

Changes after digitizing is complete (Stage 1) incur re-digitizing fees. Changes after test pieces are approved (Stage 3) may require starting over with new fabric if the change affects layout or stitch density. The further along in the process, the more costly the change. Lock in your design at the tech pack stage.


The Bottom Line

The embroidery production process isn't mysterious once you understand the six stages. Each stage has a specific purpose, a specific timeframe, and specific quality checkpoints. The buyers who have the best experience with us are the ones who understand this process and plan accordingly.

If you're evaluating a new embroidery supplier or planning your next collection's timeline, knowing these stages helps you ask the right questions and set realistic expectations. The 20-30 day timeline isn't arbitrary. It's the result of 30 years of refining a process that balances speed with quality.

Need a production schedule for your specific order? Send us your tech pack and we'll provide a detailed day-by-day timeline within 24 hours.

Step-by-Step Guide

Pattern Digitizing

📦 Materials: Design file (AI/PSD/PDF), digitizing software, experienced digitizer
1. Receive design file from buyer 2. Digitizer translates visual design into stitch program 3. Define stitch sequence, type, density, and color changes 4. Add underlay stitches for stability 5. Calculate total stitch count (typically 15,000-30,000 for fashion designs)
⚠️ Important Notes: Bad digitizing is the #1 cause of production defects. We reject about 15% of incoming files for quality issues

Fabric & Thread Preparation

📦 Materials: Stock fabrics, thread cones (200+ colors), backing material, pre-shrinking equipment
1. Pull fabric from inventory or order custom fabric 2. Inspect each roll for width consistency, weave defects, color matching, weight 3. Run pre-shrinking treatment (non-negotiable) 4. Select and prepare thread from same dye lot 5. Choose backing type: cutaway (knits), tear-away (wovens), water-soluble (lace)
⚠️ Important Notes: Pre-shrinking adds 1-2 days but prevents the most common quality complaint: puckering after washing

Machine Setup & Test Runs

📦 Materials: Tajima multi-head machine, needles (DB-7/DB-9/DB-11), thread, test fabric
1. Select needle size based on fabric weight 2. Calibrate thread tension for each color individually 3. Run standardized tension test (2-inch satin stitch square) 4. Produce 3-5 test pieces on actual production fabric 5. Send test pieces to client for approval
⚠️ Important Notes: Wrong needle selection causes breaks (too fine) or fabric damage (too heavy)

Production Run

📦 Materials: Calibrated Tajima machines, trained operators, monitoring equipment
1. Load fabric into machine frames 2. Run production across multi-head machines (12-15 heads per machine) 3. Monitor for thread breaks (1-3 per 10,000 stitches), fabric shifting, color registration 4. Replace bobbins every 15-20 minutes 5. Conduct periodic quality spot-checks during run
⚠️ Important Notes: A skilled operator manages 2-3 machines simultaneously

Quality Inspection

📦 Materials: QC inspection area, D65 lighting, needle detection machine
1. Check stitch quality: no loose threads, skipped stitches, bird-nesting 2. Verify color accuracy against approved sample under D65 lighting 3. Confirm pattern alignment within 0.5mm 4. Inspect for puckering and back appearance 5. Run every piece through needle detection machine
⚠️ Important Notes: Defect rate targets: mesh <2%, chemical lace <3%, crochet <2.5%

Finishing & Packaging

📦 Materials: Industrial steam press, cutting equipment, packaging materials
1. Final wash if needed (chemical lace: dissolve PVA base) 2. Press flat with industrial steam press (temperature varies by fabric) 3. Cut to ordered width and length 4. Final visual inspection 5. Wrap in polyethylene film, add cardboard tube, moisture packet, and label
⚠️ Important Notes: Cotton: 150-170C, polyester blends: 130-150C, silk/chiffon: 110-130C

⚡ Common Mistakes to Avoid

Thread color doesn't match the sample
Consequence: Dye lot variation between orders creates visible color differences, especially under certain lighting
Solution: Source thread from the same dye lot for the entire order. Keep dye lot numbers on record for repeat orders. Check colors under both D65 daylight and TL84 store lighting
Fabric puckers around the embroidery
Consequence: Embroidery stitches compress the fabric, causing it to gather and distort the design
Solution: Use proper digitizing with appropriate underlay stitches, correct stitch density, and pre-shrunk fabric. Adjust hooping tension to be firm but not over-stretched
Production runs behind schedule
Consequence: Raw material delays, machine breakdowns, or quality issues requiring rework push delivery past the quoted date
Solution: Maintain 2-week safety stock on top 20 fabric types. Preventive machine maintenance every 500 operating hours. Build 2 buffer days into every production schedule
Stitch count doesn't match quoted estimate
Consequence: Digitizer's estimate differs from actual machine output due to density adjustments during test runs
Solution: Quote based on higher end of estimated range. If actual count comes in lower, client pays less. If higher, factory absorbs the difference on first order

Everything You Need to Know

Conclusion

The embroidery production process isn't mysterious once you understand the six stages. Each stage has a specific purpose, a specific timeframe, and specific quality checkpoints. The buyers who have the best experience with us are the ones who understand this process and plan accordingly. The 20-30 day timeline isn't arbitrary. It's the result of 30 years of refining a process that balances speed with quality.
Stephen
Stephen
Stephen is the Chief Embroiderer at Fominte, with over 30 years of experience operating Tajima industrial embroidery machines. He specializes in pattern digitizing, sequin embroidery, bead embroidery, and quality control for high-volume production. Head of Brand & Strategy at Fominte

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