• Linkdin

Speakers at 'Sizing up the global market' - Sizing no linear matter!

07 Oct '09
5 min read

The results are being shared with sponsors including the NHS, which is using it as an indicator of children's health/obesity, and to participating retailers, including George, M&S, Monsoon and Next, who are using the data to re-evaluate their sizing strategies.

Dr Steve Hayes, principal lecturer and Clare Culliney, programme leader for the clothing design and technology course at MMU, Hollings, followed with an overview of the sizing and fit technologies currently available to students and industry within its fashion faculty. These include a TC2 NX-16 body scanner for body measurement and the BodPod scanner that records body volume density/fat distribution.

It also offers the Optitex 3D system that produces static or animated virtual models upon which digital patterns can be fitted, flattened, altered and worn to show fabric performance and tension hotspots. MMU also has the Fastfit 360.com on-line e-sampling system that reduces product development time by 30 per cent and 'fit model' time by 50 per cent. Gerber Accumark, V-Stitcher and CNC Cutting systems are also available at MMU.

Continuing with the technology theme, Christopher Schyma, strategic account manager, Lectra recognized the unique and complex product development lifecycle within the clothing sector and showed how 2D and 3D technology has evolved to support the global supply-chain in its quest for faster fashion with better quality and 'fit'. From 2D digital patterns Lectra CAD systems create a virtual environment to generate any number of samples before a commitment is made to make a physical sample. Pattern adjustments will automatically update up to 33 measurements on Lectra's on-screen “fit parametric mannequin, which can be fed directly from body scan information.” Consequently a visual representation of a style's 'fit' can be generated, checked and validated in just two hours.

Crucially he concluded: “Teams across the supply-chain can collaborate across the globe – the technology in itself creates an efficient communication environment.”

In opening the afternoon session Ed Gribbin explained how the corporate clothing sector was not about selling uniforms but about promoting a: “100 per cent professional, presentable, corporate image regardless of age, size, stature, ethnicity or body shape. Every size has to fit so we need an awful lot of sizes...There is no target demographic, it's everyone.” Indeed garment inventory is a major challenge for corporate wear suppliers and buyers.

For those with large corporate purses the answer is often to “throw money at it.” However, for smaller budgets he advised delegates to get their shape and grading right as it would reduce inventory: “Research target end-user populations as there will be differences and commonalities with specific fit characteristics. Develop an optimum range of sizes needed with grade intervals that minimize size SKUs. Once you have your size range, slap down in the middle should be your core size.” He concluded: “Then put robust tools, such as a block programme, and processes in place to make consistent execution and communication inevitable.”

Click here to read more details:

Association of Suppliers to the British Clothing Industry

Leave your Comments

Esteemed Clients

TÜYAP IHTISAS FUARLARI A.S.
Tradewind International Servicing
Thermore (Far East) Ltd.
The LYCRA Company Singapore  Pte. Ltd
Thai Trade Center
Thai Acrylic Fibre Company Limited
TEXVALLEY MARKET LIMITED
TESTEX AG, Swiss Textile Testing Institute
Telangana State Industrial Infrastructure Corporation Limited (TSllC Ltd)
Taiwan Textile Federation (TTF)
SUZHOU TUE HI-TECH NONWOVEN MACHINERY CO.,LTD
Stahl Holdings B.V.,
Advanced Search