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Factory Spotlights

Inside a Bangladeshi Garment Factory: A Day in Production

BySohail M. August 9, 2025August 9, 2025

Walking Through a Day in a Bangladeshi Garment Factory

The pulse of Bangladesh’s garment industry beats through its factories—humming with energy, skilled hands, and steady machinery. To understand how garments from your favourite brands come to life, you need to step inside one of these production hubs and witness the daily rhythms that shape millions of ready-made garments (RMG) every year.

This article takes you on a detailed tour of a typical day inside a Bangladeshi garment factory. From the early morning arrival of workers to the final packed cartons ready for shipment, we’ll explore the processes, people, and precision that combine to meet global demand. Along the way, we’ll highlight the industry’s strengths, challenges, and how it continues evolving to meet buyers’ expectations for quality, speed, and sustainability.

1. Early Morning: Arrival, Attendance, and Factory Readiness

Before the sun rises over Dhaka, Gazipur, Chattogram, Narayanganj, or any of the many other garment hubs across Bangladesh, the factory areas are already stirring to life. Workers from nearby villages and urban neighbourhoods make their way to the gates, many carrying lunch boxes or chatting softly with friends. The workforce is predominantly female, reflecting the sector’s role in providing employment and economic empowerment to millions of women in Bangladesh.

Between 6 am and 7 am, the factory gates begin to open, welcoming a steady stream of workers arriving from nearby villages and urban neighbourhoods. Biometric attendance systems have largely replaced old paper registers, ensuring precise and efficient tracking of who is present on the factory floor that day (BGMEA Annual Report, 2024). The line moves quickly, but in those few moments, colleagues exchange smiles or brief chats about family and news—small moments that help ground the day ahead.

Once inside, workers move to their designated sections. Supervisors conduct brief morning meetings, often called “toolbox talks,” to communicate production goals, safety reminders, and any quality issues from the previous day (Bangladesh Textile Journal, 2024). These quick but vital sessions set the tone for the day’s work and encourage a culture of accountability and pride.

Meanwhile, maintenance staff begin pre-shift checks on sewing machines, cutting tables, and pressing equipment, ensuring everything is functional to avoid costly downtime. Cleaning teams sweep floors and sanitize work areas—cleanliness and safety have become non-negotiable standards since the industry reforms post-2013 (ILO Safety Report, 2023).

2. Fabric Reception and Quality Inspection: The First Crucial Step

Once the massive trucks rumble up to the factory gates, the fabric journey begins in earnest. Fabric rolls, often weighing several hundred kilograms each, are carefully offloaded by trained forklift operators or manual teams, depending on factory scale. The handling here is critical because any tear, contamination, or distortion can cause major defects downstream.

The fabric rolls are immediately tagged with batch numbers and supplier details, linking every piece to its source — an essential step for traceability and quality assurance. Quality Control (QC) teams spring into action with specialised tools: colour spectrophotometers to measure colour accuracy against buyer-approved standards, fabric thickness gauges to check GSM (grams per square metre), and even microscopic fabric inspection for weave consistency.

Lab tests may include colour fastness under different conditions (wash, light exposure), shrinkage tests by submerging fabric samples in hot water, and chemical analyses ensuring restricted substances are within limits (OEKO-TEX or GOTS standards). This guarantees compliance with international environmental and safety regulations.

Approved fabric is then stored in climate-controlled warehouses to maintain optimal humidity (usually between 60–70%) and temperature (around 20–25°C). This prevents fabric deformation or mildew — vital when shipments might be weeks away (BGMEA Quality Standards, 2024).

3. Spreading and Cutting: Precision Craftsmanship

Spreading is deceptively simple but technically demanding. The fabric must be aligned perfectly on the cutting tables, ensuring the grain runs correctly, patterns match, and fabric is smooth without wrinkles or tension. Any misalignment risks skewed or ill-fitting garments.

Factories may use automated spreading machines that precisely lay hundreds of layers with minimal human intervention. This automation increases speed and uniformity but still requires trained operators to oversee the process, catch faults, and adjust tension.

Cutting is where craftsmanship meets technology. Patterns—digital files created by designers and tech packs—are fed into Computerised Cutting Machines (e.g., Gerber, Lectra). These machines use laser or blade cutters controlled by software to slice through fabric layers with micron-level accuracy.

Manual cutters, using large straight knives or electric cutting tools, remain common in many factories for smaller batches or specialised cuts. Their skill ensures fabric economy, reducing wastage which can account for up to 10% of material cost if poorly done.

Cut pieces are organised by size, style, and order number, tagged with barcodes or QR codes for seamless tracking on the production floor. Efficient cut order planning minimises downtime and helps factories meet tight buyer deadlines (WTO Textile Report, 2023).

4. Bundling and Logistics: The Silent Efficiency Drivers

Bundling is a critical logistics step that ensures smooth workflow and inventory control. Cut pieces are counted and grouped into bundles, usually containing a standard number of pieces (e.g., 10 or 20 per bundle) for each size. Each bundle carries tags with detailed information—style number, size, colour, bundle number, and order batch.

Material handlers use hand carts or conveyor belts to swiftly move these bundles from cutting to sewing areas. The factory layout is optimised to minimise travel distance and prevent material pile-ups, which can cause production slowdowns.

Sophisticated factories employ barcode scanning and real-time inventory systems to track bundles. This technology reduces errors such as misplaced pieces, lost bundles, or size mix-ups, which could cause costly rework or shipment delays.

Logistics supervisors constantly monitor bundle flow, adjusting manpower and pace to maintain balanced production lines. This internal “just-in-time” material delivery ensures sewing operators receive bundles exactly when needed, eliminating waiting times and maximising productivity (Bangladesh Textile Journal, 2024).

5. Sewing Floor: Where Craft Meets Speed

The sewing floor is the most intense and dynamic section of the factory, blending human dexterity with industrial precision. Operators sit at high-speed sewing machines arranged in assembly lines or modular stations, each focused on a particular stitch or garment part.

Sewing machines vary by function—lockstitch for seams, overlock for edge finishing, flatlock for decorative stitching, and buttonhole machines with automatic cutters. Advanced factories invest in programmable machines with electronic tension controls and automatic thread trimming, which significantly reduce defects and improve operator ergonomics.

Operators are trained extensively, often specialising in one or two operations to gain speed and consistency. Their daily targets are set according to line balancing studies, ensuring the entire production process flows smoothly without bottlenecks. An average operator may sew hundreds of stitches per minute, producing dozens of garments daily.

To maintain quality, operators undergo regular skills assessments and refresher training. Supervisors conduct line walks, observing techniques and providing coaching on stitching accuracy, seam allowances, and thread tension.

Health and safety improvements have transformed many factories: adjustable chairs reduce fatigue, magnifying lamps improve precision, and ear protection is common due to machine noise levels. Break schedules are strictly enforced to maintain worker welfare and productivity (ILO Safety Report, 2023).

6. In-Line Quality Control: Constant Vigilance

QC inspectors work alongside production, walking the lines to monitor quality at every stage. Their eyes are trained to spot even subtle flaws—crooked seams, skipped stitches, puckering fabric, or misaligned trims.

Inspectors use detailed checklists developed with buyer standards, covering every aspect from seam strength to garment measurements and colour matching. Some factories equip inspectors with tablets linked to quality management software, enabling real-time defect logging and corrective action tracking.

Continuous feedback loops between QC and sewing operators foster improvement. When a defect pattern emerges, supervisors may halt lines temporarily for retraining or machine recalibration.

This real-time quality vigilance reduces downstream waste and rework costs, which are major profit drains in garment manufacturing. It also protects buyer relationships by ensuring only garments meeting agreed standards progress to finishing (BGMEA Digitalisation Report, 2024).

7. Pressing, Finishing, and Adding Details

Once sewn, garments arrive at pressing stations to restore their shape and visual appeal. Press operators use industrial steam presses or hand irons on tables covered with heat-resistant pads. Proper pressing removes wrinkles, sets seams, and shapes collars, cuffs, and hems.

Pressing requires a skilled touch—too much heat or pressure can damage fabric, while too little leaves garments looking unfinished. Pressers are trained to handle different materials appropriately, adjusting settings for cotton, polyester, or blends.

Finishing lines add final product elements such as buttons, zippers, labels, embroidery, or appliqué. These operations often require manual dexterity and care to avoid defects like misaligned buttons or loose threads.

Some factories have integrated laser cutting or embroidery machines, which require operators with specialised skills in machine programming and maintenance. These tech additions allow factories to produce customised or high-value products efficiently.

Quality checks at finishing verify that trims are secure, branding is correct, and garments meet buyer aesthetic expectations. Any minor repairs are performed here before garments move to final inspection.

8. Final Inspection: The Last Line of Defence

The final inspection is the most stringent quality gate, where garments are assessed in full against buyer-approved samples. Inspectors carefully examine every detail—from stitching to fabric cleanliness, fit to label accuracy.

This process includes both 100% checks for critical buyers and random sampling inspections depending on order size and risk tolerance.

Defects such as stains, tears, incorrect sizes, or missing accessories lead to rejection. Factories maintain rework units to fix salvageable garments, but rejected pieces are separated to prevent accidental shipment.

The inspection team documents defect rates and trends, reporting regularly to production and management. High rejection rates trigger root cause analysis and corrective actions—key to continuous improvement and buyer satisfaction.

9. Packing and Shipping: Ready for Global Markets

After passing final inspection, garments are folded precisely according to buyer specifications, often using folding templates to maintain uniformity. Automated folding machines are increasingly common in larger factories, improving speed and consistency.

Each garment is tagged with barcode labels containing style, size, colour, and order details, allowing precise tracking through the supply chain.

Packing teams organise garments into cartons, carefully balancing box weight and volume to optimise shipping costs. Cartons are sealed, labelled with shipping marks, and include essential documents like packing lists, compliance certificates, and export papers.

Loading dock teams coordinate with logistics partners to ensure timely transfer of cartons to trucks headed for ports or airports. The factory’s integration with shipping schedules and customs agents is crucial to meeting tight delivery windows demanded by global buyers (BGMEA Export Report, 2024).

Conclusion: The Daily Ballet Behind Every Garment

A day inside a Bangladeshi garment factory is a complex choreography of people, machines, and processes working in harmony. From the early morning arrival of skilled workers to the final packed cartons ready for shipment, every step demands focus, discipline, and craftsmanship.

The industry’s commitment to improving working conditions, embracing technology, and meeting global standards means buyers can expect not just cost-competitiveness, but reliability and quality.

Next time you see a label reading “Made in Bangladesh,” remember the countless hands and hearts behind it — a testament to resilience, skill, and global collaboration.

Sources & References

  • BGMEA Annual Report 2024
  • Bangladesh Textile Journal
  • ILO Safety Report 2023
  • WTO Textile Report 2023
  • BGMEA Quality Standards
  • BGMEA Digitalisation Report 2024
  • BGMEA Export Report 2024
Sohail M.
Sohail M.

Sohail M. is the founder of BDExportWear.com, a knowledge-driven platform connecting global apparel buyers with Bangladesh’s ready-made garments (RMG) industry. With hands-on experience in the buying house business and an MBA from Liverpool John Moores University, UK, he shares practical, research-backed insights to help buyers — new or experienced — navigate the world of garment sourcing with confidence.

Sohail is committed to promoting ethical sourcing, transparency, and the smart use of digital tools. His work supports Bangladesh’s continued rise as a global leader in apparel exports, while helping local exporters strengthen their reach and reliability on the international stage.

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