What happens after I approve the sample?
Sample approval signals the green light to begin full production. We confirm all specifications, final dimensions, material batches, and dye colours. Colour matching and material consistency are locked at this point. Changing details after approval adds cost and delays.
Can I make changes after sample approval?
If you request changes after production starts, we pause work, adjust dyes or looms, and restart—adding 2–4 weeks and costs. This is why we invest in the design and sampling phases. If a change is essential, we discuss feasibility and additional costs upfront.
What’s your approval process for designers and architects?
We manage design approvals professionally. For multi-party approvals (designer, architect, client), we facilitate the process and track feedback. Change orders are issued if modifications arise post-approval. This ensures all stakeholders are aligned and accountable.
How many design revision rounds are included?
Revisions typically involve tweaks to colour, scale, pattern density, or proportion. Major direction changes count as a new concept. We encourage getting it right before sampling to avoid costly production changes.
Can I request design changes after approval?
Once we begin production, dyes are prepared, looms are warped, and artisans are allocated. Design changes mid-production are disruptive and expensive. This is why we invest time in the design phase to ensure you’re completely satisfied before we commit to production.
How does the design development process work?
Design development typically involves 2–3 rounds of concepts. You provide feedback on pattern, colour, scale, and overall direction. We iterate until the design resonates with your vision. Once approved, we move to material and colour sampling.
How many design concepts do you typically present?
Initial concepts explore different aesthetic directions—pattern density, scale, colour approach, or layout. You select a direction you prefer, and we create detailed refinements within that concept. Additional concepts beyond this are quoted separately.