Knitwear Sourcing • Bangladesh • From the Factory

The Buyer’s Guide to
Knitwear Sourcing.

Twenty years of answering the same questions from buyers in 17 countries. Here are the answers — written honestly, from a manufacturer that has nothing to hide.

Guides for knitwear buyers
Yarn Guide

Merino vs. Wool-Blend vs. Cashmere: Which Yarn for Your Collection?

The single biggest decision before you place an order. Here’s how to choose based on your market, margin, and end-consumer.

Read guide →
Tech Spec

Gauge Explained: What It Means for Feel, Weight, and End-Use

Gauge determines how your sweater looks, drapes, and performs. Fine gauge vs. chunky — what numbers mean in the real world.

Read guide →
Sourcing

OEM vs. ODM: What’s the Difference and Which Do You Need?

Both terms are used in B2B sourcing — often interchangeably. Here’s what they actually mean and how to decide which route fits your brand.

Read guide →
Timeline

Understanding Lead Times: Proto, PP Sample, and Bulk

Why “45 days” can mean very different things depending on what’s not being said. A realistic, honest guide to production timelines.

Read guide →
Compliance

What Certifications Should Your Bangladesh Supplier Hold?

BGMEA, SEDEX, OEKO-TEX, GRS, BCI, Higg SLCP — what each one means for your brand and your compliance team.

Read guide →
First Order

Placing Your First Knitwear Order from Bangladesh: A Step-by-Step Guide

From sending a tech pack to receiving your shipment — the exact steps, the right questions to ask, and what to watch out for.

Read guide →
01
Yarn Guide

Merino vs. Wool-Blend vs. Cashmere

The Three Core Yarn Categories

Choosing a yarn is not just a material decision — it’s a margin, positioning, and market decision. The wrong yarn for your customer profile will show up in returns, reviews, and repeat rate.

YarnBest forGauge rangeMOQLead time
100% Merino WoolPremium, performance, sport-luxe7–14 gauge1,000 pcs50–60 days
Cashmere Blend (70/30)Luxury, gifting, department store12–18 gauge1,000 pcs60–75 days
LambswoolHeritage, premium men’s, classics7–12 gauge1,000 pcs50–65 days
Wool-Acrylic BlendVolume, mid-market, value3–12 gauge1,000 pcs45–55 days
Organic CottonKids’, sustainable, summer knit7–12 gauge1,000 pcs50–65 days
Recycled Polyester (GRS)Sustainable collections3–14 gauge1,000 pcs55–65 days

When to Choose Merino

Merino wool is the default choice for buyers targeting performance-conscious and premium consumers. It’s naturally temperature-regulating, machine-washable (at the right specification), and soft enough for next-to-skin wear. The price premium over a wool-blend is significant — but so is the perceived value, which is why Merino sits naturally in the $40–$180 retail range globally.

When to Choose Cashmere Blend

If your end-consumer is buying as a gift or for a special occasion, a 70/30 cashmere-wool blend is the right direction. The softness is immediately perceptible. The price point justifies a luxury ticket. Be aware that 100% cashmere requires higher MOQ, longer lead time, and the margin risk shifts up. Most mid-to-luxury brands opt for a blend to balance margin and quality perception.

When to Choose Wool-Acrylic Blend

For volume mid-market collections — where price point matters and durability is a priority — a 50/50 wool-acrylic blend gives you the warm handle of wool at a much lower cost of goods. It washes easily, resists pilling better than pure wool, and is commercially safe at a wider range of retail prices. The tradeoff: it does not market as well as “100% natural.”

Atashi tip: If you’re launching a new label or ordering for the first time, start with Merino or wool-acrylic blend. Both have predictable properties and well-understood quality benchmarks. Cashmere is ideal once you know your customer.

02
Tech Spec

Gauge Explained

What Gauge Actually Means

Gauge (abbreviated as “gg” or simply the number before “gauge”) refers to the number of needles per inch on the knitting machine. A higher number = finer, denser fabric. A lower number = chunkier, more open fabric.

GaugeLook & feelBest product typeSeason
3–5 gauge (chunky)Visible stitch, thick, heavyOversized pullovers, statement knitsAW, outerwear
7–10 gauge (mid)Classic sweater look, versatileCrew-neck, cable-knit, turtleneckAW, SS crossover
12–14 gauge (fine)Smart, structured, lightweightFine-knit V-neck, office knitwearSS, transitional
16–18 gauge (ultra-fine)Almost woven-look, delicateLuxury turtleneck, cashmere layersSS, resort, luxury AW

How Gauge Affects Your Order

Gauge selection affects more than aesthetics. It affects your weight per piece (important for shipping cost calculations), your yarn consumption (fine gauge uses less yarn but more machine time), and your lead time. Chunky gauges are faster to knit; ultra-fine gauge requires more precision and time. Your choice of gauge should be guided by end-use, retail price, and target weight.

Atashi tip: When in doubt, Gauge 10–12 is your safest default for Merino women’s knitwear. It photographs well, fits across a broad size range, and performs at multiple retail price points. Tell us your target and we will recommend the gauge.

03
Sourcing

OEM vs. ODM: Which Do You Need?

The Definitions

OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer): You provide the design — tech pack, sketch, or reference garment — and we manufacture to your specification. Your brand, your design, our production. This is the most common model for established fashion brands.

ODM (Original Design Manufacturer): We design the garment from scratch or from a concept brief, and you sell it under your label. You provide a direction (colour palette, style references, target retail price) and we develop the full product. This model suits brands that don’t have in-house design teams.

 OEMODM
Who designs?You (buyer)Atashi (with your direction)
What you provideTech pack, reference, spec sheetBrief, mood board, target price
Design ownershipYoursNegotiated — typically yours on order
Proto lead time10–14 days14–21 days (includes design work)
Best forBrands with design teamsBrands without in-house designers

Private Label Is Not OEM

Private label means your brand identity is applied to a product that may or may not be custom-designed. You can private-label an OEM or ODM product. Private label refers to the branding layer: your woven label, hangtags, and packaging — not who designed the garment. Atashi offers private label on all OEM and ODM orders.

Atashi tip: First-time buyers often assume they need to bring a full tech pack to get started. You don’t. Send us a reference garment, a photo, or a brief — and we will build the spec from there. The proto phase is designed to refine, not require perfection up front.

04
Timeline

Understanding Knitwear Lead Times

The Three Phases of a Knitwear Order

Most buyers think of “lead time” as the time from order confirmation to shipment. The full picture is different — and understanding it will prevent the most common timing mistakes.

  • Proto sample phase — 10–14 working days from tech pack approval. This phase may go through 1–2 revision rounds. Budget 3–4 weeks from first submission to final approval.
  • Pre-production (PP) sample — Optional but recommended for complex or first-time orders. 7–10 days. This is a production-line sample confirming all materials, trims, and construction before bulk commences.
  • Bulk production — 45–60 days from confirmed order (PP approved). Includes in-line QC, AQL 2.5 final inspection, and packing.
  • Shipment transit — FOB Chittagong: 18–25 days to Europe, 22–28 days to East Coast USA, 20–30 days to Japan/Australia. Factor this into your in-store date.

Why “45 Days” Can Be Misleading

Some factories quote 45 days but start the clock only after fabric approval — which can add 2–4 weeks to your effective timeline if they need to source yarn first. At Atashi, bulk lead time starts from order confirmation and PP approval — not from a movable qualifier.

Atashi’s standard: Proto in 10–14 days. Bulk in 45–60 days. DHL Express for samples worldwide — tracked and insured at our cost.

05
Compliance

What Certifications Should Your Supplier Hold?

The Certifications That Matter to Buyers

In 2026, most large retailers and brands have a supplier compliance checklist. Here are the certifications you should look for — and what they actually verify.

CertificationWhat it verifiesRequired by
BGMEA MembershipFactory legitimacy; Bangladesh garment industry complianceMany EU/UK buyers
SEDEX / SMETALabour, health & safety, environment, business ethics (4 pillars)Most UK, German, Scandinavian buyers
OEKO-TEX® Standard 100No harmful substances in product; safe for skin contactPremium and children’s buyers
GRS (Global Recycled Standard)Recycled content verified; chain of custodySustainable collections
GOTS (Global Organic Textile Standard)Organic fibre certified; social and environmental criteriaOrganic cotton buyers
BCI (Better Cotton Initiative)Cotton sourced responsiblyCotton yarn buyers
Higg SLCP / FEMSocial and labour practices, facility environmental managementNike, H&M, Bestseller group suppliers

Open-Door Audit Policy

A supplier with strong certifications can still refuse an unannounced audit. We don’t. Any buyer or third-party compliance firm (SGS, Intertek, QIMA) is welcome at our Dhamrai facility at any time — without advance notice. If a supplier asks you to schedule audits in advance, treat that as a red flag worth investigating.

Atashi holds 14+ active certifications including BGMEA, EPB, SEDEX SMETA, OEKO-TEX® 100, GRS, BCI, Higg SLCP, and multiple government licences. Full documentation available on request. View all certifications →

06
First Order

Placing Your First Knitwear Order from Bangladesh

Step-by-Step: From Brief to Shipment

  • Step 1 — Send your brief. Email or WhatsApp your tech pack, sketch, reference garment image, or concept. Include: yarn preference, gauge, size range, target quantity, and delivery date. The more detail, the faster your quote.
  • Step 2 — Receive your quotation. We reply within 24 hours with yarn options, lead times, and any technical questions. No commitment yet.
  • Step 3 — Proto sample. Approve the quotation and we produce your proto sample. Ready in 10–14 working days from tech pack sign-off. DHL Express to your address worldwide.
  • Step 4 — Sample review. Review fit, construction, and material. Submit comments. We revise free of charge and reshoot or reship until you sign off. Most first protos approved in 1–2 rounds.
  • Step 5 — Confirm bulk order. Sign off the proto, confirm quantities, colours, and delivery date. 30% deposit required to start bulk production.
  • Step 6 — Production with QC. In-line QC at every stage. AQL 2.5 final inspection. You or your QC firm may attend. Packing sign-off before shipment.
  • Step 7 — Shipment & documentation. FOB Chittagong, CIF, or EXW. We prepare all export documentation. 70% balance before shipment.

What to Ask Before You Commit

  • Can I audit your factory? (The answer should always be yes.)
  • What is your actual proto lead time — from tech pack approval, not from yarn arrival?
  • Do you subcontract any production? (No legitimate answer is “sometimes”.)
  • What certifications are currently active — can I see the originals?
  • What is your QC standard? AQL 2.5 or 4.0?
  • What happens if the bulk shipment fails QC?

Ready to start? Send us your brief today. Our export team replies within 24 hours — usually same day. No commitment until your proto is approved.

Send Your Brief → WhatsApp Our Export Team

Questions not answered here?
Ask us directly.

Our export team has answered every conceivable knitwear sourcing question — from first-time buyers to established brands expanding their supply chain. No question is too basic.

Send Us a Question → WhatsApp — Fastest Reply
Chat on WhatsApp