If you spend your days specifying uniforms, you already know the quiet hero is the cotton suit fabric behind the badge. This 270gsm twill out of Hebei, China has been doing the heavy lifting in transit, logistics, and workshop kits—reliably, and without a fuss. I’ve handled enough swatches to say: weight, weave discipline, and predictable shrinkage make or break a roll. This one’s got the right signals.
Three currents dominate: stronger twills at 250–300gsm for year‑round wear, sanforized stability for industrial laundry, and cleaner chemistry (OEKO‑TEX, bluesign, the usual suspects). To be honest, buyers still want value first—but they’re asking for colorfastness data upfront, which is a good shift.
| Product name | 270GSM, 1612/10856 Wholesale for Uniform Work Suit Stock 100% Cotton Fabric |
| Composition | 100% Cotton, Twill (≈3/1) |
| Yarn count | 16s x 12s ring spun |
| Density | 108 x 56 (some lots noted 108 x 58—loom setup variance, real‑world use may vary) |
| Width | 57/58" |
| Weight | 270 gsm |
| Finishes | White, piece-dyed, printed; sanforized |
| Use | Uniforms, pocketing, lining, light work suits |
| Origin | Zhaoyuan Rd, Zhao County, Shijiazhuang, Hebei, China |
Municipal teams, security, warehouse ops, school blazers—anywhere you need breathable, scuff‑tolerant cotton suit fabric. Advantages include skin comfort (it’s all cotton), robust twill diagonal that hides wear, and sanforized stability that keeps tailors—and laundry managers—happy. Many customers say the pockets keep their shape longer, which sounds small but matters over 10,000 steps a day.
| Vendor | MOQ | Lead time | Certs | Custom dye | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jiexiang Textile (Hebei) | 1000–3000 m | 15–25 days | OEKO‑TEX, ISO 9001 | ≥800 m/colour | Stock shades; stable hand feel |
| Regional Mill A | 3000 m | 25–35 days | OEKO‑TEX | ≥1000 m | Good price; fewer stock colours |
| Trading Co. B | 500 m (mixed) | 20–40 days | Varies by mill | ≥500 m | Flexible MOQs; mixed origins |
Case 1: A Gulf distributor specced navy cotton suit fabric for security jackets; after 50 EN 15797 washes, shade delta E stayed under 1.2—surprisingly tight for reactive navy. Case 2: A steel‑fab shop layered the same base as pocketing; supervisors liked the tear numbers because tools aren’t kind to pockets.
Customer feedback? “Finally, shrinkage we can predict,” a purchasing manager told me. Not glamorous, but budget‑saving.
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