Eight stages.
One approved direction.
A transparent workflow helps prevent assumptions and gives you a practical decision point before each major production commitment.
- 01
Consultation & requirements
- 02
Design & tech pack
- 03
Sampling & approval
- 04
Material sourcing
- 05
Bulk production
- 06
Quality control
- 07
Finishing, packing & labeling
- 08
Shipping & export
Straight from our floor.
Real photos and clips from the Retrovis Industry floor in Sialkot — cutting, stitching, printing, embroidery, finishing and packing, all handled in-house.
Fabric selection
Rolls are picked and inspected — weight, stretch, colour and hand-feel are checked against your spec before anything moves to cutting.








Pattern making
Graded patterns are digitised, marked and laid on the fabric so every panel matches the approved sample and nests with minimal waste.




Cutting
Layered fabric is cut by hand and machine, precise to the pattern, then bundled and sorted for the sewing lines.







Stitching & assembly
Skilled operators across four production lines assemble each garment, checking construction and measurements as they build.

Printing & sublimation
Sublimation, screen, DTF and puff printing are all done in-house — artwork stays sharp and colour-accurate from sample to bulk.












Embroidery
Multi-head machines digitise and stitch logos, crests and lettering with consistent tension and clean backing.

Pressing & finishing
Every piece is steam-pressed and finished, then measured and inspected against the approved sample before it is packed.




Packing & dispatch
Folded, tagged, polybagged and carton-marked to your spec — ready for FOB dispatch through Sialkot or Karachi.









Recent pieces.
A quick look at finished work produced on our floor.


See it happen on the floor.
Fresh cuts, prints, embroidery and finished orders drop on our Instagram every week. Follow along for daily production, samples and behind-the-scenes.
Follow on InstagramEvery project has a different production clock.
Lead time depends on product complexity, sample revisions, material availability, order quantity, decoration and seasonal workload. Your quotation should confirm the current estimate. Production timing begins after the required approvals and payment milestones.
