Resources/Sampling Guide/Photo-to-Sample Development

Sampling Guide

Photo-to-Sample Activewear Development: What a Reference Can Tell Us

A photo, sketch, link, tech pack, or physical sample can start development. The clearer the reference, the easier it is to confirm fabric, fit, construction, and branding details.

Activewear sample development with product sketches and fabric swatches

Choose the right sampling input

A photo is useful for appearance, but it does not show fabric weight, stretch recovery, seam construction, grading, or inside finishing. A physical sample gives more information about fit and handfeel. A tech pack provides the clearest instructions when measurements and construction are already defined.

What to send for a faster review

  • Product photos from front, back, side, and detail angles.
  • Reference links or sketches that show the intended silhouette.
  • Preferred fabric handfeel, stretch, opacity, and performance needs.
  • Target size range, quantity, colors, logo placement, and packaging details.
  • Any physical sample or tech pack available for comparison.
The first sample should answer a defined question: fit, fabric, construction, logo placement, or overall feasibility. Confirming the question before sampling reduces unnecessary rounds.

Frequently asked questions

Can you develop activewear from one photo?

One photo can start the review, but accurate development usually needs more views, material direction, measurements, and buyer confirmation.

Is a tech pack required for every project?

No. Early projects can start from photos, sketches, links, or physical samples. A tech pack becomes more valuable when precise repeatable specifications are needed.

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