A trim development partner who reads a mood board as fluently as a tech pack — and who understands that what a buyer sends is rarely what they want explained back to them, but what they want built.
"Most suppliers reproduce. We interpret — then ask one precise question to make sure we've got it right before we make a single metre."
Every development brief carries something unstated: the texture the buyer felt on a reference sample, the weight they're trying to match, the end customer they haven't described. Our team has learned to read between the lines — asking the right questions early so corrections don't happen late.
We work with buyers at every stage of sophistication. Some send a finished product with a Post-it note attached. Some send a 40-page technical specification. Both get the same rigour of attention. The process adapts; the standard doesn't.
Pinterest boards, tear sheets, campaign imagery. We extract colour, texture, and weight intention.
A ribbon from another supplier, a garment trim, a fabric swatch. We deconstruct and rebuild.
Detailed specifications with measurements, HEX codes, construction notes. We follow exactly.
"Something like this but narrower and in gold." We've shipped thousands of metres from starts like that.
Hand-sketched pattern ideas, CAD illustrations, weave diagrams. Any visual is a workable starting point.
A finished piece you love. We identify every trim component and can replicate or rework individually.
A consistent, disciplined process is what allows us to turn a loosely described idea into something that runs reliably at 50,000 metres a month. Every development follows the same path — adapted to your pace, not ours.
You send us whatever you have. We read it completely before we respond. Then we confirm our understanding in a single structured reply — not a list of questions that asks you to do our job for us.
Our design team translates the brief into a weavable or workable construction. For Jacquard work this means setting up the pattern on our CAD system. For crochet and embroidery it means selecting the right needle and movement sequence. This stage doesn't involve the buyer unless there's a specific creative decision that needs your input.
We produce a physical sample on our actual production machinery — not a hand-made mock-up. This means the sample you receive is a true indicator of what bulk production will look like: same loom, same settings, same yarn. What you approve is what ships.
Most developments require one or two rounds of revision. We treat feedback as information, not criticism. When you say "slightly warmer in the gold" we understand exactly what that means — and we adjust without asking you to translate it into a spec.
When you approve a sample, we lock the construction file permanently. Every repeat order — whether placed six weeks or three years later — runs from the same locked specification. This is what consistency actually means: not "approximately the same," but exactly the same.
We've developed trims from receipts with a colour scribbled on the back. We've matched a ribbon pulled off a boutique shopping bag. We've replicated a hand-embroidered trim from a photograph taken at an angle in bad light. The brief doesn't have to be polished — it has to communicate intent.
Send us a sample from another supplier, a rival product, or something you found at a trade fair. We deconstruct it fully: yarn count, weave structure, colour composition, finish treatment. Then we build our version — which you can own outright.
Sometimes the brief is as simple as a HEX code, dimensions, and a rough direction: #C4A484, 25mm, Jacquard weave, something geometric. From there, we propose multiple construction approaches across different price points and production considerations — helping buyers choose the most suitable path before development begins.
You have a garment or home textile product you need to source the trims for — or re-source because your current supplier has changed quality. Ship it to us and we'll identify every trim component individually and quote on each.
A saved Instagram post, a runway look, a lifestyle campaign. You know the aesthetic you're going for. We extract the material and texture references, propose constructions that match the visual intent, and sample until it's right.
If you have a fully specified brief — construction, yarn, measurement tolerances, packaging requirements, label content — we execute it exactly. We don't second-guess a well-written spec; we follow it and flag anything that needs clarification before we start.
You've ordered from us before and want the same trim in this season's colourway. No re-development, no re-sampling of construction — just a colour sample of the new shade, approval, and production. Fast, low-cost, and consistent with the original.
A real development brief rarely looks like a specification document. Here is an example of how a development conversation typically runs — from a loose reference to a sample on its way.
Hi, I'm attaching a photo of a ribbon I found at a trade show in Paris. Love the geometric border pattern and the slight metallic sheen. Need something similar in about 25mm, for a knitwear collection — so not too stiff. Colourway should be dusty rose with an antique gold. Quantities would be around 2,000 metres to start.
Good morning. We've looked carefully at the reference. Our read: the pattern is a Greek key variant in a 2/2 twill Jacquard, approx 24mm. The metallic effect appears to be a viscose-lurex blend rather than Zari — which would give you the softer hand you need for knitwear. We'd propose dusty rose in viscose weft with a pale antique gold lurex border thread.
One question before we begin: do you need the reverse side clean (for an exposed hem) or is it acceptable to have float threads on the back?
Reverse doesn't matter — it'll be folded under. And yes, that construction interpretation sounds exactly right. Let's proceed.
Confirmed. Weave pattern is being set up today. We'll pull two antique gold lurex shades — one warmer, one cooler — and include both in the sample so you can choose in hand rather than on screen. Sample dispatch in approximately 7 working days.
That's great — two shades is smart, thank you. Looking forward to seeing it.
The most common reason a buyer changes trim supplier is inconsistency — not price. The shade drifts between seasons. The weight drops. The weave structure gets subtly re-engineered by a factory trying to reduce costs. We don't do any of these things.
When you approve a sample at Lami, that sample becomes the permanent legal and production reference for every subsequent order. The machine settings, yarn lot source, and construction file are archived under your design code. A repeat order placed three years later is checked against the original sample before it ships.
This is not a marketing promise. It is a documented, archived, and auditable process — because consistent production is the one thing a buyer can't compromise on and a supplier can't fake.
| Parameter | Our Standard | Status |
| Width tolerance | ± 0.5mm from approved | Measured |
| Colour consistency | Delta E ≤ 1.5 vs approved sample | Checked |
| Construction file | Archived permanently on approval | Locked |
| Approved sample | Physical reference retained on file | Retained |
| Yarn lot sourcing | Same supplier, same grade, documented | Documented |
| Pre-dispatch QC | Bulk checked against approved sample | Every order |
| Re-order lead time | 10–14 days (no re-development) | No extra cost |
We hear from buyers regularly who have approved a sample from a supplier and then received bulk production that looks nothing like it. The sample was handmade. Or produced on a different machine. Or the yarn was substituted for bulk.
Our samples are always produced on the same equipment that will run bulk. Same loom, same embroidery machine, same braiding set-up. What you receive is a true pre-production pilot — not a demonstration piece.
Every sample is accompanied by documentation: the construction sheet, the yarn specification, and the settings that produced it. So if you need to brief a second factory or a QC agent, you have the evidence base to do that.
Not handmade, not prototyped. The actual production line.
Enough to assess drape, handle, and pattern repeat in context.
Item code, approved colour direction, packaging specification, and construction reference for production alignment.
Your approved sample is retained as a permanent physical benchmark.
Sent with every development sample from Lami.
The same person who reads your brief is the person who communicates with the weaving floor and who sends you the revision. You're never briefing someone who then briefs someone else who then briefs a factory.
When you say "the gold feels cheap" we know that means the lurex percentage is too low and the twist is too tight. We translate design intent into technical instruction without asking you to do it for us.
No handmade mock-ups. No separately sourced yarn. Our samples run on the same machines, with the same materials, at the same settings as your bulk order. The sample is a contract, not a suggestion.
Archived construction files, retained approved samples, documented yarn sources. Your design doesn't drift because someone on the floor made a small substitution. It stays locked because we've engineered it to.
We adapt to however you work. Loose brief, tight spec, or anything in between — we ask only what we need and nothing more. The output standard is identical regardless of how the brief arrived.
Because every approved design is permanently archived, a re-order is exactly that: an order, not a new development. No re-sampling, no re-briefing, no lead time penalty. Just production against a locked file.
Seasonal development cycles, trend-aligned colourways, consistent quality across collection runs. We work at both small-batch design-led quantities and larger volume production.
Exclusive designs that competitors can't access. Repeat ordering without variation. A supplier that doesn't share your development with the wider market.
Trims for curtains, upholstery, bedding, and decorative textiles. Wider widths, heavier constructions, and the durability requirements that home use demands.
High-end ribbon for branded packaging, corporate gifting programmes, and premium retail presentation. Custom logo weaving and bespoke colourways available.
You don't need a polished brief. Send us a reference, a photo, a link, or a description. We'll come back with a clear interpretation and a timeline within 24 hours.