What Is a Tech Pack in Fashion? A Plain-English Guide for Non-Designers
What Is a Tech Pack in Fashion? A Plain-English Guide for Non-Designers
A tech pack (short for "technical package") is the detailed instruction document that tells a manufacturer exactly how to produce your garment every measurement, every material, every stitch, every label. Without one, factories guess. With one, they build precisely what you designed. It is the single most important document in clothing production.
Every week, brand founders reach out to us at Plucky Reach and say some version of the same thing: "A manufacturer told me I need a tech pack, but I have no idea what that is." If that sounds familiar, you are in the right place. We have helped over 1,000 clothing brands get from concept to production, and one of the first conversations we have with every single founder is about tech packs.
This guide breaks it down in language anyone can understand no design degree required. We will walk through what a tech pack actually contains, why manufacturers refuse to work without one, what happens when you skip it, what it costs, and how to get one made. By the end, you will understand this document better than many people who have been in the industry for years.
What Exactly Is a Tech Pack?
Think of a tech pack the way you would think of architectural blueprints for a house. A builder cannot construct a house from a photograph. They need exact dimensions, material specifications, structural details, and finishing instructions. A tech pack serves the identical purpose for a garment.
The term "tech pack" is short for "technical package." It is a multi-page document sometimes 5 pages for a simple t-shirt, sometimes 30 pages for a structured jacket that captures every single decision about how your garment should be made.
"A tech pack removes opinion from the manufacturing process. When every measurement, every material, and every construction detail is documented, the factory doesn't interpret your design they execute it." Rosa Mendez, Senior Technical Designer, LA Fashion District
Here is the simplest way to think about it: if you handed your tech pack to a factory on the other side of the world and walked away, they should be able to produce your exact garment without calling you once.
Why Every Clothing Brand Needs a Tech Pack
There is no manufacturer worth working with who will accept a production order without a tech pack. Here is why that standard exists.
Manufacturers Cannot Quote Without Specifications
A garment's production cost depends on dozens of variables: fabric type and weight, number of construction operations, thread count, trim components, label type, packaging method. When you ask a factory for a price without providing these specifics, they are not quoting your garment they are guessing at a hypothetical garment.
According to industry data, quotes given without a tech pack deviate from final production costs by 25-40% on average. That is not a rounding error. On a 500-unit order at $30/unit, a 30% cost overrun turns a $15,000 budget into $19,500.
Quality Control Requires a Written Standard
When 200 units come off the production line and 15 of them have the pocket placed half an inch too low, who is right you or the factory? Without a tech pack, there is no answer. There is no agreed-upon standard to measure against. With a tech pack that specifies pocket placement at exactly 8.5 inches from the shoulder seam, the defect is objective and the resolution is clear.
Communication Across Languages and Distances
The global apparel supply chain spans dozens of countries and languages. Your factory floor workers in Los Angeles, Guangzhou, or Dhaka may not speak your language. A tech pack communicates through universal tools: measurements in inches or centimeters, Pantone color codes, standardized stitch type designations, and precise technical illustrations. The document transcends language barriers entirely.
"I've seen founders lose $10,000 or more because they thought a mood board and a few text messages could replace a tech pack. The factory isn't being difficult when they ask for one they're protecting both sides from expensive mistakes." David Park, Production Manager, 15+ years in garment manufacturing
The 9 Essential Components of Every Tech Pack
Every tech pack we create at Plucky Reach and we have created thousands contains these core sections. The specifics vary by garment type, but the structure is consistent across the industry.
1. Cover Page and Style Identification
The cover page is administrative, but it is not optional. It includes:
- Brand name and logo
- Style name and style number (e.g., "Essential Crew Tee ST-001")
- Season and delivery date (e.g., "Fall 2026, delivery August 15")
- Gender category (Men's, Women's, Unisex)
- Size range offered (e.g., XS-XXL)
- Date of current revision and revision number
- Designer or developer contact information
Factories often produce dozens of styles simultaneously for multiple brands. The cover page prevents your garment from being confused with someone else's.
2. Technical Flat Sketches
These are not fashion illustrations. They are precise, black-and-white line drawings that show your garment as if it were laid perfectly flat on a table. No body shape, no artistic interpretation just the garment itself, drawn to accurate proportions.
A standard tech pack includes flat sketches showing:
- Front view with every visible design element
- Back view with every visible design element
- Detail callouts for areas like collar construction, pocket shape, cuff detail, zipper treatment, button spacing, or any unique design feature
Every seam line, stitch line, and design element that exists on the finished garment must appear in these drawings. If a feature is not on the flat sketch, it does not exist as far as the factory is concerned.
3. Bill of Materials (BOM)
The BOM is the complete inventory of every physical component used to construct one unit of your garment. Nothing is left out.
Every item on this list has a cost. The BOM is what allows the manufacturer to calculate your exact per-unit production cost. Change one zipper brand, and the cost changes. Switch from woven labels to printed labels, and the cost changes. The BOM makes those cost implications transparent.
4. Colorway Pages
If your style comes in multiple colors, each colorway gets its own page showing the flat sketch filled with the actual colors, along with the Pantone code for every component.
A common mistake we see from first-time founders is describing colors in subjective terms: "dusty rose," "ocean blue," "warm gray." These descriptions mean different things to different people and on different screens. Pantone codes are the universal language of color in manufacturing. Pantone 16-1511 is the same shade in every factory in the world.
We recommend providing both Pantone codes and physical lab dip approvals for any colorway where accuracy matters which, for most brands, is every colorway.
5. Measurement Specifications and Size Grading
This is the section that determines whether your garment fits correctly, and it is the section where the most costly errors occur.
A measurement spec is not a generic size chart. It is a detailed table showing the finished garment measurements not body measurements at every critical point, for every size you offer.
For a men's crew neck t-shirt, the measurement spec might include:
- Chest width (1 inch below armhole)
- Body length from high point of shoulder
- Across shoulder
- Sleeve length from shoulder seam
- Sleeve width at bicep
- Sleeve opening
- Neck width
- Neck drop (front and back)
- Bottom opening width
- Armhole depth
Each measurement is listed for every size (XS through XXL), and the document specifies the grade how much each measurement increases or decreases from one size to the next.
Industry data shows that 60% of first-sample rejections trace back to measurement specification errors. The measurements are either missing, ambiguous, or wrong. Getting this section right on the first attempt is the single most effective way to reduce your sampling timeline and costs.
6. Construction Details
This section tells the factory how to assemble the garment, not just what it looks like when finished.
- Seam types: French seam, flat-felled seam, serged seam, bound seam each produces a different look, feel, and durability level
- Stitch types: Single needle lockstitch, double needle chain stitch, coverstitch, overlock specified by ISO 4915 stitch type designation
- Stitch density: Stitches per inch (SPI) for each seam typically 8-12 SPI depending on fabric and application
- Seam allowances: Width of fabric beyond the stitch line, specified in fractions of an inch
- Hem construction: Depth, stitch type, number of needle rows
- Topstitching: Distance from edge, thread weight, single or double row
- Bartacking: Reinforcement stitch locations at stress points (pocket corners, belt loops, zipper stops)
For brands positioning themselves in the premium or luxury space, construction details are not just functional they are part of the product's value proposition. Starting a clothing brand in 2026 means competing on quality, and quality is determined by construction.
7. Label and Branding Specifications
Every label on your garment needs documentation:
- Main brand label: Exact position (center back neck, 0.5" below neckline seam), attachment method (sewn into seam vs. topstitched), material (woven damask, satin, cotton twill), artwork file reference
- Size label: Position relative to main label, whether it is integrated or separate
- Care and content label: Required by FTC regulation in the US must include fiber content percentage, country of origin, manufacturer identification, and care instructions using ASTM standard symbols
- Hang tags: Attachment point, hardware (plastic barb, cotton string, safety pin), position on garment
Label placement seems minor until your main label is sewn in crooked across 500 units and you are hand-removing and reattaching them at $0.50 per garment.
8. Artwork and Print Specifications
If your garment includes any prints, embroidery, screen printing, heat transfers, or other graphic elements, each one needs its own specification page:
- Print method: Screen print, DTG (direct to garment), sublimation, heat transfer vinyl, embroidery
- Artwork file format: Vector (AI, EPS) for screen print and embroidery; high-resolution raster (300+ DPI) for DTG
- Exact placement: Distance from shoulder seam, center chest, or other reference points measured in inches, not estimated by eye
- Print dimensions: Width and height of the finished graphic
- Color specifications: Pantone codes for each ink color, or CMYK values for process printing
- Special instructions: Flash cure between colors, underbase for dark garments, stitch count and density for embroidery
9. Revision History and Notes
A tech pack is a living document. It changes as you refine your design through sampling, adjust specs based on factory feedback, or modify materials based on availability.
The revision log tracks:
- Revision number and date
- What was changed
- Who authorized the change
- Which sections of the tech pack were affected
When you are on Revision 4 and the factory is cutting fabric based on Revision 2, you have a problem. The revision log prevents this by making the document's version history explicit and traceable.
Tech Pack vs. Spec Sheet vs. Line Sheet: Clearing Up the Confusion
These three documents serve different purposes, but founders mix them up constantly.
A spec sheet is a component of a tech pack, not a substitute for one. When a manufacturer asks for your tech pack and you send a spec sheet, you have given them roughly 20% of the information they need. For a deeper look at building your own, see our tech pack template guide.
What a Tech Pack Looks Like in Practice: Real Examples
Abstract descriptions only go so far. Here is what tech pack components actually look like for two common garment types.
Example 1: Basic Crew Neck T-Shirt
A crew neck tee is one of the simplest garments to spec, and a competent tech pack for this style runs 5-8 pages:
- Cover page: 1 page
- Flat sketches (front, back, detail of neck construction): 1 page
- BOM: 1 page listing shell fabric, thread, main label, size label, care label, hang tag
- Colorway pages: 1 page per colorway (3 colorways = 3 pages)
- Measurement spec with size grading: 1 page covering approximately 12 measurement points across 6 sizes
- Construction details: 1 page specifying seam types, stitch counts, hem construction
Even for something this simple, the tech pack contains approximately 150 individual data points that the factory needs to execute correctly.
Example 2: Lined Bomber Jacket
A bomber jacket with lining, ribbed trim, pockets, and a zipper is a moderately complex garment. The tech pack runs 15-25 pages:
- Cover page: 1 page
- Flat sketches (front, back, interior, pocket detail, collar detail, cuff detail, zipper detail): 3-4 pages
- BOM: 2-3 pages listing shell fabric, lining fabric, ribbing for collar/cuffs/hem, zipper, interior pocket zipper, snap buttons, interfacing, thread (multiple types), all labels, hang tags
- Colorway pages: 1 page per colorway
- Measurement spec: 2 pages covering approximately 25 measurement points across 6 sizes
- Construction details: 3-4 pages covering shell construction, lining attachment, pocket construction, ribbing attachment, zipper installation
This garment has approximately 400+ individual data points. The difference between a $35 production cost and a $50 production cost often lives in the construction detail decisions documented here.
Who Creates Tech Packs? Your Options and Their Trade-Offs
You have four realistic paths to getting a tech pack created. Each has a different cost, speed, and quality profile.
Option 1: Freelance Technical Designers
The largest market for tech pack creation. You can find freelancers on platforms like Upwork, Fiverr, LinkedIn, or through fashion industry networks.
Cost: $75-$600 per style, depending on complexity and freelancer experience
Timeline: 3-14 days for initial draft
Quality range: Highly variable
The challenge with freelancers is quality consistency. A $100 tech pack from an inexperienced freelancer may look complete but contain measurement errors, missing construction details, or BOM entries that use non-standard specifications your factory cannot interpret. The revision cycle to fix these issues often costs more in time and sampling fees than the savings on the initial tech pack.
Option 2: In-House Technical Designer
If your brand is producing 10+ styles per season, hiring a technical designer (full-time or part-time) starts making financial sense.
Cost: $55,000-$85,000/year full-time salary in Los Angeles (2026 market rate)
Quality: Consistent and tailored to your brand's standards
Best for: Brands with ongoing seasonal collections
Option 3: Factory-Created Tech Packs
Some full-package production (FPP) manufacturers will create tech packs as part of their service, especially for simpler garment types.
Cost: Often included in production pricing or charged at $100-$300 per style
Caution: Confirm in writing that you own the tech pack. Some factories retain ownership of tech packs they create, which means you cannot take that document to a different manufacturer if you ever need to switch. This is a significant risk we warn every founder about. Read our guide on how to find a clothing manufacturer for more on evaluating factory partnerships.
Option 4: Fashion Consulting Firms ( Plucky Reach )
We create tech packs as part of our end-to-end brand development process. The advantage: our technical designers work directly with the vetted manufacturers in our network, so your tech pack is written in the format and language that your specific factory prefers.
Cost: Included in brand development packages; standalone tech pack services available
Timeline: 5-10 business days for initial draft
Quality: Factory-ready, reviewed by production managers before delivery
"The best tech pack is one built by someone who already knows the factory that will receive it. Format preferences, measurement conventions, even the order sections appear in these vary by manufacturer. A tech pack built in coordination with your factory eliminates an entire category of miscommunication." Angela Torres, Head of Production Development, Plucky Reach
How Much Does a Tech Pack Cost? Complete Breakdown
Tech pack cost depends on garment complexity, the creator's experience level, and your location. Here is what the market looks like in 2026:
The math that matters: A single incorrect production run at 300 units and $28/unit costs $8,400. If measurement errors require a re-cut, you pay for fabric twice. If the wrong zipper is installed, every unit needs rework. The $200-$600 you spend on a proper tech pack is insurance against losses that are 10-50x higher. Use our cost calculator to see how tech pack costs fit into your total brand budget.
Common Tech Pack Mistakes That Cost Brands Money
We have reviewed thousands of tech packs over 20+ years. These are the errors we see most often and they are almost always avoidable.
Mistake 1: Incomplete Measurement Specifications
The founder provides 6 measurement points when the garment needs 15. The factory fills in the gaps based on their own standard blocks. The result: a garment that fits differently than intended, requiring a new sample cycle ($150-$400) and 2-4 weeks of additional time.
Mistake 2: Missing or Wrong Pantone References
Colors specified as "navy blue" instead of Pantone 19-4024. The factory selects a navy that is close but not what the founder envisioned. The lab dip comes back wrong. Another 1-2 weeks lost.
Mistake 3: Unspecified Construction Details
The tech pack shows a flat-felled seam in the illustration but does not call it out in the construction details section. The factory uses a less expensive serged seam instead. The founder sees the sample and rejects it. The factory points out that the construction section did not specify flat-felled. Both parties are right, and the only loser is the timeline.
Mistake 4: No Tolerance Specifications
Professional tech packs include measurement tolerances the acceptable range of variation for each measurement. A chest width specified at 22 inches with a +/- 0.5 inch tolerance means anything from 21.5 to 22.5 inches passes quality control. Without tolerances, every unit that is not exactly 22.0 inches is technically a defect, which is impossible in garment manufacturing where small variations are inherent.
Mistake 5: Forgetting Packaging Specifications
The garment is perfect, but it arrives at your warehouse folded wrong, in the wrong size poly bag, with no hang tags attached. Now you are paying a fulfillment team to repack 500 units. This is entirely preventable by including packaging specs in the tech pack.
For a deeper dive into these pitfalls, read our full guide on tech pack mistakes to avoid.
How to Create a Tech Pack: The Step-by-Step Process
Whether you are working with a designer, a consultant, or building it yourself, the process follows the same general sequence. Our complete guide on creating a tech pack covers each step in detail, but here is the overview.
Step 1: Define Your Design (Days 1-3)
Before any technical work begins, you need clarity on what you are making. Gather:
- Reference images or inspiration photos
- Any existing sketches or illustrations
- Sample garments you want to use as a starting point
- Decisions on fabric type, weight, and color
- Your target retail price (this affects material and construction choices)
Step 2: Develop Flat Sketches (Days 3-7)
A technical designer translates your design concept into precise flat technical illustrations. This is where every design detail is finalized pocket shape, collar style, closure type, seam placement.
Step 3: Specify Materials and Build the BOM (Days 5-8)
Every component is identified, sourced, and documented. If specific materials are not yet confirmed, the tech pack notes them as "TBD" with the general spec (e.g., "100% cotton jersey, 160-180 GSM, exact mill TBD").
Step 4: Create Measurement Specifications (Days 6-9)
Measurements are developed from your base size (usually M for men's, S or M for women's), then graded across the full size range. This step often involves referencing comparable garments for fit, or working from a fit model.
Step 5: Document Construction Details (Days 7-10)
Seam types, stitch specifications, edge treatments, and assembly sequence are documented for every part of the garment.
Step 6: Add Labels, Artwork, and Packaging (Days 8-11)
All branding elements and finishing details are added.
Step 7: Review, Revise, Finalize (Days 10-14)
The completed tech pack is reviewed for accuracy, completeness, and factory compatibility. At Plucky Reach , we have the receiving manufacturer review the tech pack before we finalize it catching issues before the first sample is cut.
Tech Pack Software and Tools
The industry uses a range of software depending on the task within the tech pack:
For founders who are not designers, platforms like Techpacker offer template-based workflows that simplify the process significantly. However, even with software assistance, the quality of the tech pack depends on the accuracy of the information entered and that requires either technical fashion knowledge or a knowledgeable partner.
How Long Does a Tech Pack Take?
Timeline depends on garment complexity and how quickly you make decisions:
The number-one cause of tech pack delays is founder indecision. When we ask "what fabric weight do you want?" and the answer is "I'm not sure yet," the tech pack cannot move forward. Come to the process with as many design and material decisions finalized as possible.
When to Update Your Tech Pack
A tech pack is not a one-time document. It evolves throughout your product's lifecycle:
- After every sample round: Measurements, materials, or construction details may change based on what you see and feel in the physical sample
- When changing colorways: Adding or removing colors for a new season
- When changing materials: Switching fabric suppliers, updating trim components
- When changing manufacturers: A new factory may require format adjustments or have different capability constraints
- When scaling production: Moving from 200 to 2,000 units may require construction changes for efficiency
- Before every production run: Confirm the factory has your most current revision
Statistical note: approximately 35% of production errors in small-brand manufacturing result from the factory working from an outdated tech pack revision. Version control is not glamorous, but it prevents expensive mistakes.
The Real Cost of Skipping a Tech Pack
We are going to be direct here because we have seen this scenario destroy small brands financially.
A founder comes to us after completing their first production run without a proper tech pack. They sent the factory a few photos, a mood board, and some text messages. Here is what typically goes wrong:
Sampling costs multiply. Without clear specs, the first sample is wrong. The second is closer but still off. By the third sample attempt, the founder has spent $600-$1,200 in sampling fees and lost 8-12 weeks time they could have spent building their sales channels.
Production costs escalate. The factory quoted $22/unit based on their interpretation of the design. Midway through production, they realize the construction is more complex than assumed. The final cost comes in at $29/unit. On a 300-unit order, that is $2,100 in unplanned cost roughly 4x what a proper tech pack would have cost.
Quality disputes have no resolution. When 40 units come back with inconsistent stitching and the hem depth varies by a quarter inch across the run, there is no tech pack to reference. No agreed-upon standard means no objective basis for a complaint. The factory did their best with what they were given.
Intellectual property is unprotected. Your tech pack is a legal document that defines your product. Without one, your design exists only in conversations and photos. If you ever need to prove ownership of a design, a dated and versioned tech pack is your strongest evidence.
The math is not complicated. A tech pack costs $150-$600. The consequences of not having one routinely cost $2,000-$15,000 in wasted samples, production overruns, quality defects, and lost time. There is no scenario where skipping the tech pack saves money.
How Plucky Reach Handles Tech Packs Differently
We have been building tech packs for over 20 years in the Los Angeles Fashion District, and our approach reflects what we have learned from over 1,000 brand launches.
We build tech packs in coordination with your manufacturer. Most tech pack creators work in isolation they build the document and hand it to you, and you hand it to the factory. That creates a translation gap. Our technical team works directly with the 100+ vetted manufacturers in our network, so your tech pack arrives at the factory in a format they already know how to read.
We pair tech pack development with pattern making. A tech pack tells the factory what to build. A pattern tells them how to cut the fabric. When these two documents are developed separately by different people, inconsistencies are almost guaranteed. We develop them together, verify them against each other, and deliver a package where every spec in the tech pack matches the physical pattern exactly.
We include costing analysis. Your tech pack is not just a manufacturing document it is a financial planning tool. Every material choice and construction decision has a cost implication, and we make those implications transparent so you can make informed decisions about your product's margin structure.
Book a free strategy call to discuss your project and find out how we can help you build factory-ready tech packs that eliminate revision cycles and production errors.
FAQ: What Is a Tech Pack in Fashion?
Do I need a tech pack if I am only ordering 50 units?
Yes. Order size does not change the manufacturer's need for complete specifications. In fact, small-batch production has even less room for error because you cannot absorb the cost of defective units across a large volume. A 10% defect rate on 50 units costs you 5 garments. That is 5 sales you will never make.
Can I make a tech pack myself with no design experience?
You can attempt it using template tools like Techpacker, but the results are rarely factory-ready without technical fashion knowledge. The most common issues: incorrect measurement specifications, missing construction details, and non-standard terminology that the factory cannot interpret. If budget is tight, start with a template and have a professional review it before submitting to a manufacturer.
What file format should a tech pack be in?
Most tech packs are delivered as PDF files for sharing and review, with the source files (Adobe Illustrator .AI files) retained by the creator for future edits. Some factories accept Excel-based tech packs for simpler garments. Always ask your manufacturer what format they prefer.
What is the difference between a tech pack and a pattern?
A tech pack is the instruction document it tells the factory what to build. A pattern is the physical or digital template used to cut fabric pieces. Both are required for production. The pattern is developed from the specifications in the tech pack. Learn more in our guide on how to create a tech pack for your clothing line.
How many revisions should I expect before my tech pack is finalized?
For a straightforward garment with clear design direction: 1-2 revisions. For a complex or highly detailed garment: 2-4 revisions. If you are going beyond 4 revisions, the issue is usually unclear design direction rather than tech pack quality. Finalizing your design decisions before starting the tech pack process dramatically reduces revision rounds.
Does a tech pack guarantee my garment will be produced correctly?
A tech pack significantly reduces production errors, but it does not eliminate them entirely. Manufacturing is a human process, and variations occur. What a tech pack does guarantee is that you have a documented, agreed-upon standard to measure quality against and a legal basis for requesting corrections or compensation if the manufacturer deviates from that standard.
What happens to my tech pack if I switch manufacturers?
The tech pack goes with you it is your intellectual property. However, confirm ownership in writing before commissioning a tech pack from any third party, including your manufacturer. Some factories include clauses that restrict your use of tech packs they create. This is a red flag we always warn our clients about. Read more in our guide on red flags when choosing a manufacturer.
Should I have a separate tech pack for each colorway?
No. A single tech pack covers all colorways of one style. Each colorway gets its own page within the tech pack showing the color-filled flat sketch and Pantone references, but the measurements, construction, and BOM structure remain the same across colorways.
Can a manufacturer create the tech pack for me?
Some full-package production manufacturers offer this service. The benefit: they build the tech pack to their own internal standards, reducing miscommunication. The risk: if they retain ownership of the document, you are locked into that factory. Always negotiate tech pack ownership before starting the engagement.
What is a tech pack called in other countries?
The term "tech pack" is widely understood in English-speaking markets. In other regions, you may hear "garment specification sheet," "product specification file," "dossier technique" (French), or "ficha técnica" (Spanish/Portuguese). The content and purpose are the same regardless of the name.
How is a tech pack different from a CAD file?
A CAD (Computer-Aided Design) file is typically a single component of a tech pack usually the flat sketch created in Adobe Illustrator or similar software. A tech pack is the complete document that includes the CAD drawings plus measurements, BOM, construction details, colorways, and all other specifications. The CAD file is an ingredient; the tech pack is the full recipe.
Do I need a new tech pack for each season?
If you are carrying the same styles into a new season without changes, you do not need new tech packs just confirm the factory has the current revision. If you are making any modifications (new colorways, updated materials, fit adjustments), the tech pack should be revised and re-issued with a new revision number and date.
What is the most important section of a tech pack?
Measurement specifications. Every other section matters, but measurement errors are the most expensive to fix because they affect the physical pattern, which affects every single unit produced. An error in your measurement spec is an error multiplied by your entire production quantity.
How do I know if my tech pack is good enough for production?
Ask your manufacturer to review it before you approve sampling. A competent factory will identify missing information, ambiguous specifications, or format issues and flag them before cutting a single piece of fabric. At Plucky Reach , we facilitate this review as a standard part of our process. Reach out to our team if you want expert eyes on your tech pack before it goes to production.
Can I use a tech pack from one garment to create a similar style?
Yes. This is called "cloning" or "adapting" a tech pack, and it is standard practice. If your new style is a variation of an existing one (same silhouette, different neckline), duplicating the original tech pack and modifying only the changed elements is faster and more reliable than starting from scratch. Just make sure to assign a new style number and clearly mark it as a new document.
About the Author
Plucky Reach is a fashion business consulting firm based in the Los Angeles Fashion District. We have helped 1,000+ clothing brand founders go from idea to production — from first sketch to retail shelf. Our team has 20+ years of direct relationships with LA garment manufacturers, and we specialize in connecting emerging brands with the right production partners.
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Plucky Reach
Fashion Business Consulting • Los Angeles Fashion District
Plucky Reach is a fashion business consulting firm based in the Los Angeles Fashion District. We have helped 1,000+ clothing brand founders go from idea to production — from first sketch to retail shelf. Our team has 20+ years of direct relationships with LA garment manufacturers, and we specialize in connecting emerging brands with the right production partners.