Saral Tds Professional

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Daisy Hughlett

unread,
Aug 4, 2024, 2:56:51 PM8/4/24
to scanacchristi
İrfanSaraloğlu (born 16 September 1962, in Ardeşen-Rize) is a Turkish soccer coach and former professional soccer player. He is currently an assistant manager at Galatasaray S.K.[1][2] He played professionally for 14 years.[2]

In this post, we'll go over the fundamentals of creating a professional Tech Pack and demonstrate how to make Tech Packs faster using cutting-edge fashion technology. We also included a bonus video in which we make a factory-ready Tech Pack in under five minutes!


A Tech Pack, also known as specification sheets, is a set of documents created by designers to explain their design to a manufacturer so that they can turn this information into a finished garment. It serves as a blueprint of a final garment that includes information like detailed flat sketches of the design, materials to be used like trims and labels, measurement specs, size gradings, colorways, etc.


When it comes to outsourcing garment production, most contractors and factories will not take your orders unless you provide a clear and detailed Tech Pack. A Tech Pack minimizes risk for both the manufacturer and the designer, by clearly setting out what the desired specifications are for the future product. The ultimate goal of a Tech Pack is to minimize the number of samples made and bring a product to market faster. The Tech Pack also serves as a master document to track product development including comments, revisions, and any last-minute changes.


When a fit sample is received from the manufacturer you can add a custom column, called Fit Sheet, and register the actual measurements. You can compare these actual measurements to the initial measurements in the table and check whether the particular dimensions are within tolerance. This gives you room to adjust accordingly and significantly improves fit quality.


A Tech Pack can be transformed from a mere document to a collaborative environment where designers, product developers, buyers, and quality control planners work together to create better products faster.




Be thorough and pay close attention to detail. Omitting parts of your sketch will only make it more difficult to explain your design to the factory. This requires that every seam, dart, stitch, and button be in place. A solid line on a garment typically represents a seam line, while a dashed line represents stitching. Don't point out a detail in your Tech Pack that isn't visible on your sketch!


The Bill of Materials (BOM) is a list of raw materials to produce a garment and prepare it for shipment. When your business makes a physical product, you need to source the materials to make it. Sourcing materials is an essential part of the production process. The materials you choose make a huge difference to the quality of your product.



A typical BOM table includes main fabric, secondary fabric (lining), thread, trims, closures, labels, and packaging.


In the apparel industry, a Bill of Materials is often created by a technical designer and product developers. These designers work closely together, sending comments to factories who can then adjust the Tech Pack accordingly. A technical designer usually creates a Bill of Materials based on a CAD (Computer-Aided Design) drawing.


Assuming you have defined the style, set up the sketches and materials page, the next step to creating your Tech Pack is to include measurements. The Measurements specification sheet (or measurement specs) is an elaborate detailing of the measurements of different components in a particular garment.


There are general measurement terms that are typically used in every Measurement Sheet, such as body length, chest, waist, hips, armhole, shoulder drop, and neck opening. However, depending on how complex the garment is, more points of measurement will need to be included. For example: collar length/width, cuff length/width, pockets measurements, etc.


To calculate the final cost of the garment, you must clearly specify each component that goes into its manufacture. Main fabric, lining, interfacing, trims, buttons, zippers, embellishments, appliques, and so on. The costing table must include all of these details. Quantities of each item must be listed, preferably in a separate column to facilitate visualization and calculation.


There are parts that are commonly used for all products. Things like tags, labels, sewing thread, packaging materials will be a part of any costing table no matter what type of product you are creating. So be sure to add those too.


Sketches, Bill of Materials, Point of measurements, Costing Tables, etc. - everything is visible on a single page. And at any time in just one click, you can turn this visual board into a PDF-ready Tech Pack and share it directly with your manufacturer.


And the best thing is that you can simply re-use your design specs for future collections by utilizing Techpacker card libraries. Where each card securely stores design info like sketches, measurements, or materials.


As with achieving gender parity more broadly, women face a number of disadvantages in taking their companies to scale. These include fewer role models, lack of access to seasoned advisors and less private start-up capital flowing in their direction. While these barriers remain, women founders should ask how adopting a certain mindset or set of strategies can help them to succeed.


We already know, for example, that participation in sport can help women break the glass ceiling and find a seat in the executive ranks. A majority of C-suite leaders, 94%, report having played a sport, with 74% of senior female executives agreeing that sports help them move forward in their careers.


Many of the athlete entrepreneurs say that sport has taught them the value of learning from a great coach, encouraging them to seek advisors who can offer perspective, suggest new strategic plays and bolster their resilience.


Many of our sportswomen say that playing competitive sport helped them to develop resilience, often at a young age, and that this quality has sustained them throughout the difficulties of running a business.


Read more in this report (pdf), in which we explore each of these attributes and suggest how they can be translated into behaviors that women can adopt to help them start, lead and grow their own companies.




EY refers to the global organization, and may refer to one or more, of the member firms of Ernst & Young Global Limited, each of which is a separate legal entity. Ernst & Young Global Limited, a UK company limited by guarantee, does not provide services to clients.




EY is a global leader in assurance, consulting, strategy and transactions, and tax services. The insights and quality services we deliver help build trust and confidence in the capital markets and in economies the world over. We develop outstanding leaders who team to deliver on our promises to all of our stakeholders. In so doing, we play a critical role in building a better working world for our people, for our clients and for our communities.


EY refers to the global organization, and may refer to one or more, of the member firms of Ernst & Young Global Limited, each of which is a separate legal entity. Ernst & Young Global Limited, a UK company limited by guarantee, does not provide services to clients. For more information about our organization, please visit ey.com.


This material has been prepared for general informational purposes only and is not intended to be relied upon as accounting, tax, or other professional advice. Please refer to your advisors for specific advice.


In addition to cookies that are strictly necessary to operate this website, we use the following types of cookies to improve your experience and our services: Functional cookies to enhance your experience (e.g. remember settings), Performance cookies to measure the website's performance and improve your experience, Advertising/Targeting cookies, which are set by third parties with whom we execute advertising campaigns and allow us to provide you with advertisements relevant to you, Social media cookies, which allow you to share the content on this website on social media like Facebook and Twitter.

3a8082e126
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages