
- MOQ 100+

- Samples 7–10 days

- OEM/ODM








(use case, target retail, margin)
(flight satin vs Taslan vs leather)
(classic/boxy/oversized)
(shade bands if garment dye)
(zipper cycle/snap pull tests)
Brands can keep bomber jacket fit consistent when changing suppliers by controlling both the garment body and the structural details. A bomber jacket may match the size chart but still feel different if the shoulder slope, sleeve cap, armhole, lining ease, rib tension, zipper length, or hem shape changes. Brands should send an approved physical sample, tech pack, measurement chart, fabric standard, rib reference, zipper sample, lining details, and previous fit comments. The new bomber jacket manufacturer should verify the pattern, make a fit sample, confirm the PP sample, and check TOP samples before bulk production continues. Side-by-side comparison with the previous approved bulk sample is also important for mature brands that need stable reorders.
Yes. VANRD can develop custom windbreaker jackets from your reference sample, sketch, tech pack, mood board or product concept. Our team can help adjust the fit, fabric, lining, hood shape, pocket structure, zipper type, color blocking, logo placement and trim package before making samples. This is suitable for brands developing full-zip windbreakers, half-zip anoraks, packable windbreakers, running shells or lightweight streetwear jackets for new collections.
Yes. VANRD can make water-resistant windbreaker jackets using nylon or polyester shell fabrics with DWR finishes, coated backings, water-resistant zippers and adjustable hood or hem details. For most streetwear, running, travel and outdoor lifestyle collections, water-resistant windbreakers are lighter, more breathable and more cost-effective than fully waterproof jackets. If your project requires stronger rain protection, we can also discuss waterproof fabric options, seam construction and testing requirements based on your target market and budget.
Before repeating a bomber jacket order, brands should confirm whether the same fabric, lining, rib, zipper, buttons, labels, and packaging materials are still available. Even repeat orders can show differences if the fabric batch, dye lot, rib quality, or hardware supplier changes. Mature brands should keep an approved production record that includes fabric swatches, trim cards, color references, measurement specs, logo placement, and packing requirements. The manufacturer should compare the new pre-production sample with the previous approved sample before starting bulk production.
Brands should evaluate a bomber jacket manufacturer by checking whether the factory understands shell fabric, lining, padding, rib collar, rib cuffs, zipper quality, pocket construction, sleeve shape, embroidery, patches, labels, and size tolerance. Bomber jackets can look simple, but poor rib quality, weak zippers, uneven pockets, or bad lining attachment can lower the final product quality. Brands should review similar samples, confirm fabric and trim standards, and approve a pre-production sample before bulk production.