
- MOQ 100+

- Samples 7–10 days

- OEM/ODM








align market and budget
choose casual pants silhouettes and rises
confirm fabrics, waistbands, zips and hardware
map logos, labels and packaging requirements
build samples, review fit and construction
lock specs, colours, grading and branding
cut, sew, decorate and run inline QC
pack by ratio, label cartons and ship
Before reordering a best-selling streetwear style, brands should review more than total sales. They should check sell-through speed, size performance, color performance, return rate, customer reviews, wholesale demand, margin, and whether the next delivery window still fits market demand. A style may sell out quickly, but the reorder still needs to make sense. If the demand was seasonal, late delivery may create inventory pressure. If customers loved the fit but complained about hardware, the reorder should improve the hardware without changing the approved silhouette. If one size range sold much faster, the reorder ratio should be adjusted. Good reorder planning helps brands stay in stock without overproducing.
Brands can avoid tracksuit material delays by confirming the BOM early. The BOM should include fabric, lining if needed, zippers, pullers, elastic, drawcords, labels, hangtags, packaging bags, carton marks, and any special trims. Color approval should also happen before bulk production, especially if the fabric or rib requires custom dyeing. For nylon or performance tracksuits, the brand should confirm fabric function, hand feel, weight, coating, and stretch before sampling is finalized. Mature brands do not wait until the bulk order is ready to ask about trims. They check material lead time early so the factory can prepare sourcing, lab dips, approvals, and production scheduling.
Inline QC helps streetwear brands catch problems while production is still running. Instead of waiting until all garments are finished, the QC team checks cutting, stitching, measurements, seam quality, trim placement, logo position, embroidery, printing, stains, thread ends, and workmanship during production. This is valuable because many problems can still be corrected early. For example, if a zipper is misaligned on the first production pieces, the factory can adjust the process before hundreds of jackets are completed. Inline QC is especially important for custom hoodies, jackets, tracksuits, pants, and washed garments because these products have more details that can drift during bulk production.
Custom jackets usually take longer than basic apparel because they involve more materials and construction steps. A jacket may include shell fabric, lining, padding, rib, zipper, snaps, pockets, collar shape, sleeve construction, embroidery, patches, appliqué, washing, or special finishing. Each detail must be tested during sampling and controlled during bulk production. Jackets also require more measurement checks because shoulder width, sleeve length, body length, chest, hem, armhole, and lining fit all affect the final wearing experience. For streetwear brands, rushing jacket sampling can lead to poor fit, uneven trims, weak hardware, incorrect artwork placement, or bulk inconsistency.Streetwear brands should not reorder pants or sweatpants with the same size ratio automatically. A smarter reorder should be based on actual sell-through data. If sizes M, L, and XL sold faster than XS or XXL, the reorder ratio should change. If one color sold slowly, it should not receive the same quantity again. Brands should also review return reasons, customer feedback, fit comments, wholesale demand, and seasonality. For example, heavyweight fleece sweatpants may perform better before fall and winter, while lightweight nylon or track pants may perform better in warmer seasons. Reorder planning should protect both inventory efficiency and customer demand.
Streetwear brands should not reorder pants or sweatpants with the same size ratio automatically. A smarter reorder should be based on actual sell-through data. If sizes M, L, and XL sold faster than XS or XXL, the reorder ratio should change. If one color sold slowly, it should not receive the same quantity again. Brands should also review return reasons, customer feedback, fit comments, wholesale demand, and seasonality. For example, heavyweight fleece sweatpants may perform better before fall and winter, while lightweight nylon or track pants may perform better in warmer seasons. Reorder planning should protect both inventory efficiency and customer demand.
Before starting a custom tracksuit sample, a brand should prepare a clear design direction and production file. This usually includes the jacket and pants design, target fit, fabric type, color reference, size chart, logo placement, zipper style, elastic waistband, drawcord, pocket details, label position, decoration method, and packaging requirements. If the tracksuit uses nylon, polyester, fleece, or performance fabric, the brand should also confirm whether it needs water resistance, stretch, breathability, lining, mesh, or special finishing. Clear preparation helps the manufacturer create a more accurate first sample and reduces unnecessary revision rounds.