● Industry Insights

The Manufacturing Blog

Practical guides for hunting, shooting and outdoor brands — fabric selection, MOQ strategy, OEM vs CMT, and how to launch a private label line without surprises.

Manufacturing 101

OEM vs CMT — Which Model Suits Your Brand?

Both start from 30 pieces, both ship under your brand. The difference is who sources the fabric — and it changes everything about cost, lead time and quality control.

6 min readSourcing
Startup Brands

MOQ Explained — Why 30 Pieces Is the Magic Number

Most factories demand 500-1,000 pieces minimum. We start at 30. Here's the math behind low-MOQ production and why it's a game-changer for new brands.

5 min readStrategy
Product Design

Designing a Hunting Jacket for Cold-Weather Markets

Selling to Canada, Norway or Germany? The 7 design decisions — from fabric weight to seam sealing — that separate a winter-ready jacket from a returns nightmare.

8 min readDesign
Fabric Knowledge

Hunting Apparel Fabric Guide — Ripstop, Softshell, Canvas & More

Every fabric on our shelf has a job. Ripstop for budget, softshell for performance, canvas for tradition. Here's how to pick the right one for your product without guessing.

7 min readMaterials
Brand Toolkit

Tech Pack Checklist — 12 Things Every Factory Needs From You

No tech pack? No problem — we'll build one. But if you want a faster, cheaper, more accurate quote, these are the 12 things a factory needs before they can sample your product.

6 min readProcess
Brand Protection

5 Private Label Rules That Protect Your Brand From Day One

Confidentiality is fine on paper. Protecting your design, your patterns and your customer list takes more — NDA wording, sample storage, label control. Here's how it works at Qadri Sports.

5 min readLegal
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Manufacturing 101

OEM vs CMT — Which Model Suits Your Brand?

6 min readSourcingUpdated 2026

One of the first questions every new brand asks: "Should I do OEM or CMT?" The honest answer — it depends on what you already have, what you can manage, and how much risk you want to carry.

At Qadri Sports we offer both. But they suit very different brands. Here's the breakdown without the jargon.

What OEM Actually Means

OEM stands for Original Equipment Manufacturing. In practice, it means: you bring the design, we handle everything else.

OEM is the easiest model for new brands. You don't need fabric suppliers, you don't need a sourcing manager, you don't need to track 12 different POs. We do all of it.

What CMT Actually Means

CMT stands for Cut, Make, Trim. Translation: you provide the fabric, we just build the garment.

Side-by-Side

Here's the same product (hunting jacket, 200 pieces) under both models:

CMT looks cheaper on paper. But factor in your time, fabric shipping, customs, and the risk of running short — most new brands save money with OEM even though the unit cost is higher.

"Brands that already have established fabric supplier relationships (often Europe or USA-based) usually go CMT. Brands launching their first season usually go OEM. Both are equally welcome."

When to Pick CMT

When to Pick OEM

The Hybrid Option

Some clients do OEM for sampling and CMT for production once they've validated the design. Others do CMT for hero products and OEM for accessories. Mix and match — we don't lock you into one model.

Want a quote both ways?

Send us your tech pack or idea and we'll price it as OEM and CMT — you decide which fits.

Get Free Quote →
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Startup Brands

MOQ Explained — Why 30 Pieces Is the Magic Number

5 min readStrategyUpdated 2026

Walk into any factory directory and the MOQ (Minimum Order Quantity) hits you like a brick wall. "Minimum 500 pieces." "Minimum 1,000 pieces." Some factories won't even quote below 2,000.

At Qadri Sports our minimum is 30 pieces per style, per colourway. One of the lowest in the industry. Here's why it matters and how we make it work.

The Real Reason MOQs Exist

MOQ isn't arbitrary cruelty. It's economics. Every garment style needs:

These fixed costs get spread across the order. At 1,000 pieces, the setup cost per piece is tiny. At 30 pieces, it's significant — but still manageable if the factory is set up for it.

How We Make 30 Pieces Work

We're built for it. Three structural choices make low MOQ possible:

1. We hold fabric stock

Most of our common fabrics (Ripstop, Oxford, fleece, softshell) are kept in stock. You don't pay the mill minimum — you pay per meter we use.

2. Modular cutting lines

Our cutting room handles small batches efficiently. We don't need to dedicate a full line for a week to make 30 pieces — we batch multiple small orders together.

3. In-house labels and packaging

Woven labels, hang tags and poly bags — we source in bulk for ourselves and pass the access on. You don't need to find a label supplier for 30 pieces.

"30 pieces lets you test a design in real market conditions before committing serious money. That's worth more than the slightly higher per-piece cost."

The Cost Tradeoff (Honest Version)

Yes — 30 pieces costs more per piece than 1,000 pieces. Typical breaks:

So a jacket that costs $42 at 30 pieces drops to ~$28 at 1,000 pieces. The savings are real — but only matter once you've validated the design.

Who Should Order 30 Pieces?

The Bottom Line

30 pieces isn't about being cheap. It's about removing the risk barrier that kills new brands. You can launch a real product, test the demand, refine the design, then scale to 500 or 5,000 with confidence.

Ready to test your idea with 30 pieces?

Send us your tech pack or design reference — we'll quote, sample and produce. 24-hour reply.

Get Free Quote →
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Product Design

Designing a Hunting Jacket for Cold-Weather Markets

8 min readDesignUpdated 2026

A hunting jacket that works in Florida is not the same product as one for Norway. Selling into cold-weather markets — Canada, Scandinavia, Germany, Northern UK — means making 7 specific design decisions early. Get them wrong and you get returns, bad reviews, and a brand that doesn't get reordered.

Here's the checklist we walk every cold-market client through before sampling.

1. Outer Fabric Weight

For temperatures below -5°C with active hunting:

Most US brands underspec the outer shell. Aim heavier than you think — hunters move slow, get cold fast.

2. Membrane & Waterproofing

This is where pricing diverges most:

Add a DWR (Durable Water Repellent) treatment on the face fabric — water beads instead of soaking in. Lasts 30-50 washes.

3. Insulation Type

The cold-weather decision tree:

"For Scandinavian markets, synthetic fill wins. The climate is wet-cold. Down fails in real conditions even though it tests better in the lab."

4. Seam Sealing

A 20,000mm waterproof rating means nothing if water leaks through the stitch holes. Three options:

For the Scandinavian and German markets, fully taped is non-negotiable. Don't try to save $3/piece here.

5. Hardware Quality

Zippers fail more than fabric. For cold weather:

6. Hood Design

Often overlooked. A bad hood ruins a $200 jacket. Required features:

7. Colour & Camo Strategy

Cold-weather markets have specific preferences:

If you're selling globally, plan a 3-4 colourway range per style. Keep camo licensed patterns for markets that demand them.

The Sample-First Rule

Cold-weather hunting jackets are not the place to guess. Always sample first — wear it, wash it, test it in a cold room or fridge for a few hours. The market will tell you what works. We've helped 80+ cold-weather brands launch — happy to walk through your design choices with you.

Designing for a cold market?

Send us your tech pack or design reference. We'll quote, recommend fabrics from our cold-weather library, and sample in 7-10 days.

Get Free Quote →
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Fabric Knowledge

Hunting Apparel Fabric Guide — Ripstop, Softshell, Canvas & More

7 min readMaterialsUpdated 2026

Walk into our fabric library and you'll see 40+ rolls — different weights, different finishes, different price points. Most new brands get overwhelmed. Truth is, you only need to understand five fabric families to make confident decisions.

Here's what each one is, what it's good for, and what it costs.

1. Polyester Ripstop

The workhorse. Most hunting jackets, pants and shirts start here.

2. Softshell

The premium choice for cold-weather hunting. Bonded 2 or 3 layer construction.

"Softshell is what European buyers (Härkila, Seeland tier) expect. If you're targeting Germany or Scandinavia, plan on it."

3. Canvas & Waxed Canvas

Traditional, heritage, premium. Often used for upland hunting and shooting vests.

4. Fleece (Microfleece, Polar, Sherpa)

Insulation layer. Rarely the outer shell — usually inner.

5. Membrane-Bonded Waterproofs

3-layer construction: outer fabric + waterproof membrane + inner liner. Top of the line.

The Fabric Stack — How Pros Layer Materials

A premium cold-weather hunting jacket isn't one fabric — it's a stack:

What You Should Ask For

Don't just say "give me a hunting jacket." Specify:

If you don't know — that's what samples are for. We'll send you 3-4 fabric options for your style, you pick.

Need fabric recommendations?

Tell us what you're making and which market you're targeting. We'll suggest 3-4 fabric options matched to your price and quality goal.

Get Fabric Advice →
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Brand Toolkit

Tech Pack Checklist — 12 Things Every Factory Needs From You

6 min readProcessUpdated 2026

A tech pack is a manufacturing instruction manual. The better yours is, the faster the quote, the cheaper the sample, and the closer the finished product will be to what's in your head.

Don't have a tech pack? We'll build one for free with our Tech Pack Builder — but if you want to brief a factory like a pro, here's the 12-point checklist.

1. Front, Back & Side Sketches

Hand-drawn is fine. We just need to see the silhouette, seam lines, pocket positions and overall structure. Don't worry about Photoshop quality.

2. Construction Notes / Callouts

Annotate the sketch with: pocket sizes, zipper positions, snap closures, special seams (e.g. fully taped), elastic placement. This is where most miscommunication happens.

3. Fabric Specification

Outer fabric, lining, any membrane. If you don't know exact GSM, give us a reference (e.g. "softshell similar to The North Face Apex"). We'll match it.

4. Colourway(s)

Pantone codes if you have them. Otherwise hex codes or a swatch image. List each colour for each part (e.g. body in olive, contrast trim in tan).

"A reference photo of a real product is worth 10 paragraphs. 'Make it like this, but with these changes' saves everyone time."

5. Size Run

Which sizes do you need? Standard US/EU mens (S-XXL), women's, or custom sizing? Tell us the range and whether each size needs separate measurements.

6. Measurements (Spec Sheet)

The big one. Body length, chest width, sleeve length, hem width, neck opening — at minimum. We'll provide our standard spec sheet template if you don't have one.

7. Trim & Hardware

Zipper brand (YKK vs generic), zipper type (standard, water-resistant, reverse coil), snap material (brass, coated, plastic), drawcord style, elastic specs.

8. Labels & Branding

Main label (woven or printed), care label, size label, hang tag. Position of each. Provide artwork in AI/PDF/PNG. Logo placement on the garment itself (embroidery? heat transfer? rubber patch?).

9. Packaging

Individual poly bag? Hangers? Tissue paper? Master carton specs? UPC barcodes? If you don't know — we'll suggest standard retail-ready packaging.

10. Quantity per Size / Colour

If you're ordering 200 total: how does that split? 30 in each size? More mediums than smalls? Affects cutting plans and costing.

11. Target Price / Budget

Honest expectation. Helps us suggest the right fabric tier. If your target is $25/piece we won't quote with 3-layer membrane fabric.

12. Lead Time / Deadline

When do you need it? Sample first, then bulk? Critical date for trade show or season launch? Knowing this lets us plan properly.

The Bonus: Reference Photos

Honestly — photos of products you love (and products you DON'T) tell us more than 20 pages of tech specs. Pull from competitors, vintage gear, anything visual. We learn fast from references.

If You Don't Have Any of This

That's fine. Most first-time brands don't. Use our free Tech Pack Builder — it walks you through every field, generates a PDF, and you can send it to any factory. Built specifically for hunting and outdoor apparel.

Build your tech pack in 10 minutes

Free Tech Pack Builder — wizard format, PDF output, ready to send to any factory.

Open Tech Pack Builder →
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Brand Protection

5 Private Label Rules That Protect Your Brand From Day One

5 min readLegalUpdated 2026

Every private label brand owner has the same fear: "Will my factory copy my design and sell it to my competitors?"

It's a fair question. The industry's reputation isn't spotless. Here are the 5 rules we operate by — and how to make sure any factory you work with does the same.

Rule 1 — Sign a Mutual NDA Before Sharing Tech Packs

An NDA (Non-Disclosure Agreement) is a written contract that legally binds both parties to confidentiality. Most factories have a template — if they don't, you should provide one.

Key clauses to look for:

We sign NDAs on request — no fee. If a factory refuses, walk away.

Rule 2 — Your Patterns Belong to You

When we develop a pattern from your tech pack, that pattern is your intellectual property. It stays in your file. We never reuse it for another client. It never gets shown in our portfolio without your written approval.

If you ever stop ordering from us, we'll send you the pattern files (Gerber AAMA format). It's yours — not ours.

"The pattern is the product. Whoever owns the pattern owns the supply chain. Make sure that's you."

Rule 3 — Labels & Hardware Are Yours Only

Branded labels (woven main labels, hang tags, custom hardware) are produced exclusively for you. We never use leftover labels on another customer's order — that's a basic rule, but worth confirming in writing.

Any unused labels at end of production are either shipped to you with the order or destroyed (your call).

Rule 4 — Sample Storage Is Locked

Physical samples we develop for you are stored in a locked archive. They're not on display in our showroom. They're not shown to visiting buyers. When you ask for them back, we ship them or destroy them — your choice.

Some factories use samples as their portfolio. We don't. Your prototype isn't a marketing tool for our next client.

Rule 5 — Client Lists Are Confidential

We don't disclose who else we manufacture for. Not on our website, not in conversations with prospects, not in pitch decks. Your competitors aren't told you're our client, and you're never told who your competitors source from.

If you visit our factory, you'll see production lines — but you won't see who's behind any particular order. Master cartons are labelled with order numbers, not brand names.

What to Watch Out For

Red flags when evaluating a private label factory:

The Bottom Line

Trust is built on protocol, not promises. A factory can say "we'd never copy your design" but the protocol — signed NDAs, locked sample storage, exclusive labels, confidential client lists — is what makes that promise enforceable.

Want to see our confidentiality protocol?

Mutual NDA available on request before any tech pack is shared. Read our full confidentiality page or just send a quote request.

Read Confidentiality Policy →