How to Choose a Cashmere Knitwear Manufacturer: 9 Criteria Fashion Brands Should Use
Publish Time: 2026-03-06 Origin: WFS Cashmere
After 20 years in cashmere manufacturing at WFS Cashmere, I've watched hundreds of brands succeed and fail with their sourcing decisions. The difference usually comes down to how they evaluated their manufacturing partner. This guide covers the 9 criteria every fashion brand should use when selecting a cashmere knitwear manufacturer.
The Quick Answer
Choose a cashmere knitwear manufacturer based on 9 key criteria: (1) vertical integration (raw material to finished garment control), (2) cashmere sourcing transparency (Mongolian/Chinese origin, micron count), (3) technical capabilities (gauge range, stitch types, machinery), (4) quality control systems (in-process inspection, final AQL), (5) compliance certifications (BSCI, OEKO-TEX, GOTS if organic), (6) MOQ flexibility (alignment with your scale), (7) sampling speed and accuracy (prototype to production fidelity), (8) lead time reliability (seasonal calendar adherence), and (9) communication responsiveness (language, time zone, technical understanding).
Criteria |
What to Look For |
Red Flags |
Vertical Integration |
Owns yarn spinning or direct mill relationships |
Brokers with no production control |
Cashmere Sourcing |
Traceable Mongolian/Inner Mongolian origin |
Vague "imported" claims, no fiber specs |
Technical Capabilities |
3GG–18GG range, multiple stitch types |
Limited gauge range, basic stitches only |
Quality Control |
In-line inspection, AQL 1.5–2.5 final |
No QC documentation, rejects "after delivery" |
Compliance |
BSCI, OEKO-TEX Standard 100, RWS if claimed |
Expired certificates, no audit reports |
MOQ Flexibility |
100–300 pieces per style/color negotiable |
Rigid 500+ MOQ with no flexibility |
Sampling |
7–14 days prototype, accurate to spec |
3+ weeks sampling, prototypes don't match specs |
Lead Times |
60–90 days bulk production confirmed |
Vague "about 2 months" with no milestone breakdown |
Communication |
Technical English, same-day response |
Poor technical understanding, delayed replies |
Criterion 1: Vertical Integration
Why It Matters
Cashmere quality starts with fiber selection. Manufacturers who control—or have direct relationships with—yarn mills deliver more consistent quality and better pricing.
Fully integrated manufacturers:
Source raw cashmere directly from herders or auctions
Control fiber sorting, washing, and dehairing
Spin yarn to exact specifications
Knit and finish garments in-house
Trading companies/brokers:
Buy yarn from multiple sources (inconsistent quality)
Outsource knitting to various workshops
Limited quality control
Higher costs due to middlemen margins
How to Verify
Ask directly:
"Do you own spinning facilities or work exclusively with specific mills?"
"Can you show me your yarn supplier certificates?"
"What's your dehairing process?"
At WFS Cashmere, we maintain direct relationships with certified cashmere processors in Inner Mongolia and source traceable fiber from Mongolian herding cooperatives. This integration lets us control quality from raw fiber to finished sweater.
Criterion 2: Cashmere Sourcing Transparency
Fiber Quality Fundamentals
Not all cashmere is equal. Quality depends on:
Factor |
Premium Grade |
Standard Grade |
Commercial Grade |
Fiber diameter |
14–15.5 microns |
15.5–16.5 microns |
16.5+ microns |
Fiber length |
36–40mm |
32–36mm |
<32mm |
Origin |
Mongolian, Alashan |
Mixed Mongolian/Chinese |
Unspecified |
Dehairing |
<0.5% coarse hair |
<1% coarse hair |
>1% coarse hair |
Questions to Ask
Origin: "Where does your cashmere fiber come from?" (Mongolia and Alashan region produce the finest)
Micron count: "What's the average fiber diameter?" (<16 microns is premium)
Length: "What's the mean fiber length?" (>34mm reduces pilling)
Dehairing: "What percentage of guard hair remains?" (<0.5% for luxury grade)
Red flag: Manufacturers who can't answer these questions or claim "it's all the same quality."
At WFS Cashmere, we specify fiber origin, micron count, and length for every yarn lot. Our standard uses 15.5-micron Mongolian cashmere with 36mm mean length.
Criterion 3: Technical Capabilities
Gauge Range
Gauge indicates needles per inch and determines fabric weight and detail level:
Gauge |
Typical Uses |
Technical Requirement |
3GG |
Chunky outerwear, scarves |
Heavy-duty machines, thick yarn |
5GG–7GG |
Medium-weight sweaters, cardigans |
Standard capability |
9GG–12GG |
Fine knits, lightweight sweaters |
Precision machinery |
14GG–18GG |
Ultra-fine, luxury basics |
High-precision machines, skilled technicians |
Capability check: Can the manufacturer produce your target gauge? Many smaller factories max out at 12GG.
Stitch Types and Techniques
Beyond basic jersey, verify capability for:
Cable patterns
Rib constructions (1×1, 2×2, etc.)
Intarsia and jacquard colorwork
Links-links (double-bed) construction
Fully fashioned shaping
At WFS Cashmere, we operate 3GG through 18GG machines and specialize in complex stitch patterns including intarsia and fully fashioned construction.
Criterion 4: Quality Control Systems
In-Process Quality Control
Quality isn't checked only at the end. Effective manufacturers inspect:
Stage |
What to Check |
Acceptable Standard |
Yarn incoming |
Fiber specs, color consistency |
Lab test verification |
Knitting |
Stitch consistency, dimensions |
+/- 3% of spec |
Linking/seaming |
Seam strength, alignment |
No dropped stitches |
Washing/finishing |
Handfeel, shrinkage, dimensions |
Shrinkage <3% |
Final inspection |
Overall appearance, measurements |
AQL 1.5–2.5 |
Testing Capabilities
Verify the manufacturer can perform or arrange:
Fiber content analysis (ISO 1833)
Pilling resistance (ISO 12945-2, Martindale or ICI box)
Dimensional stability (washing/shrinkage)
Color fastness (washing, light, rubbing)
Documentation requirement: Every production batch should include test reports.
At WFS Cashmere, we maintain in-house testing for pilling, shrinkage, and color fastness, with third-party lab verification available for every bulk order.
Criterion 5: Compliance Certifications
Essential Certifications
Certification |
What It Covers |
Why It Matters |
BSCI |
Social compliance, worker welfare |
Ethical sourcing requirement for EU brands |
OEKO-TEX Standard 100 |
Harmful substance testing |
Consumer safety, chemical compliance |
GOTS |
Organic fiber processing |
Required for organic cashmere claims |
RWS |
Responsible Wool Standard |
Animal welfare, land management |
ISO 9001 |
Quality management systems |
Process consistency |
Verification Steps
Request certificate copies (check expiration dates)
Verify on certification body websites
Ask for recent audit reports
Confirm scope includes your product categories
Red flag: Certificates that don't cover the manufacturer's actual facility or expired documents.
WFS Cashmere maintains BSCI, OEKO-TEX Standard 100, and ISO 9001 certifications, with annual third-party audits.
Criterion 6: MOQ Flexibility
Understanding MOQ Structures
Manufacturer Type |
Typical MOQ |
Flexibility |
Large vertically integrated |
300–500 pieces/style |
Limited, focused on volume |
Mid-size specialized |
100–300 pieces/style |
Moderate, some negotiation |
Small workshops |
50–100 pieces/style |
High flexibility, variable quality |
Negotiation Strategies
Consolidate colors: Higher per-color quantities improve pricing
Commit to programs: Seasonal commitments reduce per-drop MOQ
Accept longer lead times: Smaller orders fit into production gaps
Pay premium: 10–20% upcharge for below-standard MOQ
At WFS Cashmere, our standard MOQ is 200 pieces per style/color, but we accommodate emerging brands with 100-piece minimums for program commitments or extended lead times.
Criterion 7: Sampling Speed and Accuracy
Sampling Timeline Benchmarks
Stage |
Standard Timeline |
Expedited |
Yarn development |
7–10 days |
5 days (stock colors) |
Knit prototype |
7–14 days |
5–7 days |
Revisions |
5–7 days each |
3–5 days |
Pre-production sample |
10–14 days |
7–10 days |
Accuracy Evaluation
The sample must match your tech pack in:
Measurements (within 2% tolerance)
Gauge and stitch pattern
Color (lab dip approval process)
Handfeel and weight
Construction details (seams, trims)
Red flag: Samples that require multiple revisions to match basic specs indicate poor technical understanding.
WFS Cashmere delivers first prototypes in 10–14 days with 90%+ first-sample approval rate. Our technical team reviews tech packs before sampling to identify potential issues.
Criterion 8: Lead Time Reliability
Production Timeline Breakdown
Phase |
Duration |
Critical Path |
Yarn preparation |
10–20 days |
Stock vs. custom dye |
Knitting |
15–25 days |
Gauge and complexity dependent |
Finishing |
5–10 days |
Washing, pressing, drying |
Trimming/inspection |
5–10 days |
Final QC, packaging |
Shipping |
15–35 days |
Sea freight to destination |
Total |
60–90 days |
From PO confirmation |
Reliability Indicators
Milestone reporting: Weekly production updates with photos
Buffer time: Realistic timelines vs. optimistic promises
Contingency plans: How they handle delays (yarn issues, machine breakdown)
Historical performance: References from existing clients
Red flag: Manufacturers who promise "45 days total" without breaking down milestones—they're either inexperienced or dishonest.
WFS Cashmere provides detailed production schedules with weekly photo updates and 95%+ on-time delivery rate for confirmed orders.
Criterion 9: Communication Responsiveness
Communication Quality Checklist
Aspect |
Good Sign |
Red Flag |
Language |
Technical English, understands garment terminology |
Basic English, requires repeated explanations |
Response time |
Same business day, urgent matters within hours |
24–48 hour delays, weekend blackouts |
Technical understanding |
Asks clarifying questions, suggests improvements |
Silent acceptance, errors in execution |
Proactivity |
Flags potential issues early |
Reactive, only responds to problems |
Documentation |
Detailed tech pack review, written confirmations |
Verbal agreements, no written records |
Time Zone Management
China-based manufacturers operate GMT+8. Effective partners:
Offer overlapping hours for calls (early China morning/late US/EU evening)
Use project management tools for async communication
Provide dedicated account managers for key clients
At WFS Cashmere, we assign dedicated account managers to each brand, maintain technical documentation in English, and use collaborative platforms for real-time production tracking.
The Evaluation Process
Stage 1: Initial Screening (Week 1)
Request company profile and certifications
Review website and online presence
Check references and reviews
Stage 2: Capability Assessment (Week 2–3)
Submit tech pack for review
Request sample of similar existing product
Evaluate communication quality
Stage 3: Sampling Validation (Week 4–6)
Develop prototype
Assess accuracy and timeline
Conduct wash/wear testing
Stage 4: Trial Production (Month 2–3)
Small production order (100–200 pieces)
Evaluate quality consistency
Test logistics and documentation
Stage 5: Partnership Decision (Month 4+)
Scale to seasonal production
Negotiate program terms
Establish ongoing QC protocols
Conclusion
Selecting a cashmere knitwear manufacturer requires systematic evaluation across 9 criteria. The cheapest quote rarely delivers the best value. Focus on technical capability, quality systems, and communication quality—these determine whether your seasonal programs succeed or fail.
At WFS Cashmere, we've built our business on transparency, technical excellence, and reliable delivery. We welcome factory visits, provide full certification documentation, and assign dedicated account managers to ensure your brand's success.
Schedule a factory tour or discuss your seasonal program: Visit https://www.wfscashmere.com/ to connect with our team. We'll review your requirements, provide detailed capability documentation, and develop a sampling plan tailored to your brand's needs.