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Bow, Skew and Spirality in Knitted Fabric: Inspection Notes for Garment Makers

Bow means the courses or pattern lines curve across the fabric width. Skew means they run at an angle. Spirality is twisting that can move side seams after sewing or washing.

These issues may not look serious on a small swatch but can become visible in a full garment.

For related fabric categories, see Changle Textile fabric products and compare the notes below with your own sample standard.

Distortion affects garment appearance

Bow means the courses or pattern lines curve across the fabric width. Skew means they run at an angle. Spirality is twisting that can move side seams after sewing or washing.

These issues may not look serious on a small swatch but can become visible in a full garment.

  • Check fabric direction before cutting.
  • Look at printed stripes, ribs or mesh lines across the full width.
  • Wash or relax samples when the garment is distortion-sensitive.

Production variables buyers should not ignore

The same written specification can behave differently when yarn source, knitting tension, dyeing route, finishing recipe or packing changes. This is why a retained standard and production record are useful for repeat orders.

A factory-side review should connect the visible sample with the process that created it.

  • Confirm composition, GSM, width and finishing route.
  • Check whether the sample was made under the same route planned for bulk.
  • Record what changes are acceptable before the order moves to production.

How to approve it in practice

A practical approval should combine physical sample review, measurable tolerances and written notes. If the requirement is subjective, such as handfeel or appearance, a reference sample becomes more important.

For technical points, test method and tolerance should be agreed before bulk fabric is produced.

  • Keep one approved sample for comparison.
  • Use roll numbers and batch records for traceability.
  • Do not change material source or finishing route without review.
  • Check bulk fabric after final finishing.

A practical sourcing note

The goal is not to make every fabric discussion complicated. The goal is to make the important risk visible early enough that the buyer and factory can solve it before cutting or shipment.

Questions buyers often ask

Can this be checked only from a photo?

No. Photos can help with communication, but fabric approval needs a physical sample, specification and sometimes test data.

When should this be discussed with the factory?

Before sampling or before bulk approval, especially when the fabric affects fit, appearance, comfort or compliance.

What should be kept for repeat orders?

Keep the approved sample, technical notes, roll records and any test reports connected to the order.

FABRIC SOURCING HUB

Compare related fabric categories, applications and inquiry steps

Review linked category pages, application notes and specification paths before preparing sampling details.

page Products and Fabric Categories Browse mesh, tricot, sportswear, swimwear and functional textile categories. page Fabric Applications Review common end-use scenarios before choosing a construction. page Send Fabric Requirements Send sample, target specification and quantity for quotation.