Width as a weaving decision, not an afterthought
Home textile programs often assume fabric width late in sourcing—after a supplier is chosen. In practice, maximum width is set by loom configuration at the weaving stage. Standard-width suppliers typically operate within conventional bedding ranges, while wide-width mills engineer reed, beam, and finishing lines for broader panels. That difference affects material yield, seam placement in curtains, and whether a single greige spec can serve both bedding and drapery lines.
What a standard-width supplier typically offers
Standard-width suppliers focus on common bedding widths and high-volume SKUs. For many sheet and pillowcase programs, conventional widths are sufficient—and widely available across the market.
- Familiar widths for mass-market bedding SKUs
- Often adequate when panels are small or seaming is acceptable
- Curtain or wide-panel programs may require joins or multiple SKUs
- Width customization may depend on upstream greige availability
Why wide-width mill capacity changes program economics
Weaverine Textile weaves greige polyester from 160–330 cm on 600+ waterjet looms across 31,000+ m² in Anhui and Zhejiang. Finished fabric after dyeing and finishing runs 150–315 cm—supporting curtain, bedding, and upholstery applications where width drives yield. With 200K+ meters daily and 73 million+ meters annually, wide programs scale on the same production floor that delivers Peachskin—our #1 bedding bestseller—and stock greige for downstream partners.