Fashion Development and Production Explained

Fashion development and production is often misunderstood. From the outside, it can look like a simple progression from sketch to sample to sale. In reality, it is a layered, technical process that sits at the intersection of design, fit, sourcing, costing, timelines, communication, and systems.

This page explains how fashion development and production actually works, both for startup founders and established brands, and how thoughtful systems can significantly reduce cost, time, and waste while improving fit and consistency across collections.

Whether you choose to work with us directly or use our Fit-First Block Library independently, this is the framework we build everything on.

Find your free guide on everything you need to know before launching your label > here.

What fashion development really includes

Fashion development is not just pattern making or sampling. It is the process of turning an idea into a production-ready product that can be manufactured consistently, ethically, and at scale.

At a high level, development includes:

  • understanding the brand, customer, and market positioning
  • defining realistic price points and margins
  • setting timelines that account for design, sampling, production, and logistics
  • selecting or developing the right base patterns
  • refining fit, construction, and materials
  • coordinating communication across all stages of the process

Skipping or rushing any of these steps almost always results in higher costs later, through excess sampling, rework, delays, or inconsistent fit.

Our approach to development and production

When we manage full development and production, projects begin with a comprehensive briefing and roadmap. This applies whether you are launching your first collection or refining an existing range.

We start with an initial design and strategy meeting where we:

  • learn about your brand, customer, and product category
  • define price points and commercial targets
  • discuss local versus offshore production pathways
  • map out lead times from development through to delivery
  • outline the full project roadmap so expectations are clear from the start

From there, design is refined collaboratively. This may involve several design touchpoints until the direction, range, and details are resolved. At the same time, we assess sourcing options and materials in line with the product requirements and price positioning.

Once the design direction is locked, development moves into a fit-first phase.

The role of blocks and fit consistency

At the core of our process is our Fit-First Block Library. Rather than developing every pattern from scratch, we select an appropriate base block from our library and make considered pattern changes to create the style.

A block is not a single garment. It is a proven fit foundation.

  • Using a consistent block allows brands to:
  • achieve reliable fit across multiple styles
  • reduce unnecessary sampling
  • scale collections without starting from zero each season
  • maintain consistency across categories and future ranges

One block can be used to create endless styles. As long as a brand continues to build from the same base, fit remains consistent and predictable.

For brands working independently, purchasing a block from our Fit-First Library provides:

  • graded production-ready patterns
  • technical documentation and specifications
  • CLO3D files
  • a fit foundation that can be reused and adapted over time

For brands working with us, we apply the same system within a managed development framework.

Digital development and sampling efficiency

Before progressing to physical samples, we develop styles in CLO3D and conduct virtual fittings. This allows us to assess proportions, balance, and construction digitally, reducing guesswork early in the process.

In many cases, this enables:

  • fewer physical samples
  • clearer communication with factories
  • faster approvals

Typically, projects may involve:

  • a digital sample and virtual fitting
  • one physical prototype sample
  • a pre-production sample before bulk production

This is not a fixed rule. Sampling requirements always depend on garment complexity, fabric behaviour, and category. However, for established brands in particular, we often see sampling reduced by up to 50 percent when systems are in place.

Timelines you should realistically expect

Timelines vary depending on product category, complexity, sourcing, and decision-making speed.

As a general guide:

  • development can take anywhere from 3-7 months or longer for complex products or new categories
  • offshore production typically takes 2-3 months, plus logistics
  • sea freight usually adds around one month
  • air freight may take 1-2 weeks
  • local production timelines vary by season but are often 2-3 months

Fabric development or custom materials can extend timelines further and should always be factored in early.

Clear planning at the start of a project makes these timelines far more predictable.

Costs and commercial realities

Development costs vary significantly based on complexity, number of styles, and the level of refinement required.

As an indicative guide:

  • development commonly sits around $2000-3000 per style including block purchase
  • freelance technical support is currently around $150 per hour

These figures are not fixed and may change over time, but they provide a realistic starting point for budgeting.

Production minimums also vary:

  • offshore production often starts around 300 units per style
  • local production may be closer to 150 units

Lower quantities are sometimes possible, though this generally increases the price per garment. Every factory operates differently, and part of the development process is aligning expectations with manufacturing realities.

Ethics, sustainability, and responsibility in practice

Ethical and sustainable production is not a single decision. It is a system.

We work with factories that are audited under recognised frameworks such as BSCI, SMETA, and SEDEX, and we also apply our own internal vetting processes. This focuses on fair working conditions, legal employment, safe environments, and transparent communication.

From an environmental perspective, sustainability shows up in:

  • reducing unnecessary sampling
  • designing with longevity and reusability in mind
  • producing appropriate volumes
  • avoiding overproduction and excess waste

These outcomes are achieved through systems and planning, not slogans.

Common mistakes we see

Across both startups and established brands, the most common issues arise from:

  • starting with design before understanding costs and timelines
  • developing styles without a fit foundation
  • underestimating sampling requirements
  • rushing production decisions
  • changing direction late in the process

Clear structure early almost always saves time and money later.

Two ways to move forward

There is no single right way to approach fashion development. Brands typically move forward in one of two ways.

Some choose to work with us directly on full development and production management, using our systems and block library within a guided, end-to-end process.

Others prefer to purchase from our Fit-First Block Library and follow the same methodology independently, using the block as a foundation to build, adapt, and scale their own collections.

Both pathways are valid. The key is using a system that prioritises fit, clarity, and long-term consistency.

Next steps

If you are exploring full development support, we recommend getting in touch to discuss your project, timelines, and commercial goals.

If you are looking to develop styles independently, you can explore the Fit-First Block Library to purchase a proven foundation that can be adapted into multiple styles over time.

Either way, understanding the process is the first step to building a more efficient, responsible, and scalable fashion brand.