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4-Way Stretch Fabric for Activewear, Swimwear and Underwear: Factory Sourcing Guide

4-way stretch fabric extends in both length and width directions, but buyers should not approve it by stretch feeling alone. Recovery, opacity, shrinkage, handfeel and width stability decide whether the fabric works in real garments.

Start with the final garment, not only the fabric name

The same material description can behave differently across activewear, swimwear, underwear. A buyer should first define where the fabric will be used, whether it touches skin, how much stretch it needs and what testing standard the finished garment must meet.

Factory development becomes more accurate when the application is clear. Without that context, two samples may both match the name on a quotation but perform very differently in cutting, sewing, wearing and washing.

  • Confirm final application and body position.
  • Define handfeel, stretch, coverage and durability expectation.
  • Check whether printing, lamination, brushing or other finishing will be added.

Production variables buyers should not ignore

Yarn, machine gauge, loop density, finishing tension, heat exposure and inspection standard can all change the final result. A buyer who compares only composition and price may miss the real cause of performance differences.

For custom fabric development, the factory should keep the approved sample and bulk standard connected. If yarn, colour, finishing route or width target changes, the approval should be reviewed again.

Variable Why it changes the result
Yarn and filament Affects handfeel, strength and surface clarity
Fabric structure Controls stretch, stability, openness and drape
GSM and width Changes garment cost and cutting plan
Finishing route Can change shrinkage, recovery and touch
Inspection standard Defines what is acceptable in bulk rolls

How to approve the fabric in practice

The approval process should connect sample appearance with measurable checks. A good retained sample is useful, but it should be supported by GSM, width, shrinkage, colour fastness or other tests relevant to the garment.

Bulk approval should be done on finished fabric. Greige fabric, lab dip and small swatches do not always represent the final roll after dyeing, printing, lamination or heat setting.

  • Measure GSM and usable width.
  • Check stretch and recovery after relaxation.
  • Review shrinkage after the intended wash method.
  • Confirm colour, handfeel and surface condition in finished fabric.
  • Keep the bulk standard under the same order reference.

Related fabric sourcing path

For the next step, compare the relevant fabric categories, review application requirements on the Applications page, and send a concise specification through the fabric inquiry form.

FAQ

What is the first thing to confirm for 4-way stretch fabric sourcing?

Confirm the final garment use, target handfeel, stretch requirement, GSM, width, colour and testing expectation before sampling.

Can the fabric be adjusted after the first sample?

Yes. Yarn, structure, GSM, width, finishing and colour can often be adjusted, but every change should be checked against the final garment requirement.

Why can bulk fabric differ from the approved sample?

Bulk fabric can differ when yarn, dyeing, finishing tension, heat setting, relaxation or inspection conditions are not controlled under the same standard.

STRETCH PERFORMANCE HUB

Review stretch recovery, spandex content and bulk approval checks

Use this path when elasticity, recovery, width stability and final garment fit are key sourcing requirements.

category Swimwear Fabric Review high-stretch fabrics where recovery and wet opacity matter. category Underwear Fabric Compare skin-contact stretch fabrics for underwear, lingerie and support panels. product Polyamide Spandex Power Mesh Fabric Review a reference fabric where support and recovery are key buyer checks.