In the Garment Manufacturing industry, fabric accounts for 60–70% of garment cost—yet most factories still lose 2–5% of it silently. Not in CAD. Not in markers. But on the cutting floor.

Why Focus on fabric

Over the years, manufacturers have invested heavily in CAD systems, marker optimization, and auto-nesting tools. Marker efficiencies are closely tracked, reviewed, and pushed to their practical limits. Yet, despite all these efforts, actual fabric consumption often remains unchanged. On paper, efficiencies improve—but on the shop floor, savings don’t reflect.

 

This leads to a common misconception: that further improvements must come from better CAD systems or more advanced automation. In reality, most factories have already extracted maximum value from marker optimization. The real problem lies elsewhere.

 

Where the Fabric Really Gets Lost

The hidden loss begins in the cutting room—after the marker is finalized.

Fabric rolls arrive in varying lengths, while marker lengths remain fixed. During cutting, each roll leaves behind small leftover pieces—sometimes 10 meters, sometimes 5, sometimes just 1–2 meters. Individually, these seem insignificant.

 

These leftovers, known as end-bits, are usually stored with the intention of reuse—for smaller markers, panels, or garment replacements. However, in practice, most of them never get utilized. They got misplaced on the floor or left idle in racks, forgotten, or eventually sold as scrap.

 

What appears minor at the roll level accumulates into 2–5% fabric wastage at the factory level, directly impacting profitability.

 

A Problem Hidden in Plain Sight

Factories often attempt to control this through SOPs or manual tracking, but results remain inconsistent.

 

In deeper studies across multiple factories, another issue surfaced. While standard end loss per layer is defined as 2 cm, actual losses on the cutting table frequently reach 4–5 cm. This silent variation reduces cut quantities and increases fabric consumption—yet goes unnoticed due to lack of control systems.

 

Beyond CAD: Bringing Intelligence to Roll Planning

This is where OptaCut by Jaza Software makes a real difference.

OptaCut does not focus only on markers—it focuses on how fabric is actually used on the cutting floor, where most of the loss happens. Before cutting starts, the system helps decide which roll should be used for which marker, instead of leaving it to guesswork or availability.

 

It considers things like fabric width, shade, shrinkage, and order needs, and then suggests the best roll to use. It also keeps a check on end loss per layer and alerts the team if the wastage is going beyond the allowed limit.

 

At the same time, it guides how many plies should be cut from each roll so that maximum fabric is used. Even the leftover fabric is not ignored—OptaCut plans in advance where that leftover can be used next.

Roll Utilization

With this approach, the cutting team does not have to depend on assumptions. Everything is guided step by step, which helps reduce mistakes and avoid unnecessary fabric loss.

 

The Impact on Cost and Profitability

Factories implementing intelligent roll planning through OptaCut have unlocked up to 5% fabric savings—not by changing inputs, but by eliminating hidden inefficiencies on the cutting floor.

 

This translates into:

 

  • Drastic reduction in end-bits that were previously untracked and underutilized
  • Significant decline in dead stock, freeing up working capital locked in cutting rooms
  • Tighter control over actual vs. planned consumption, eliminating silent losses from excess end loss and poor roll selection

Importantly, these savings come without changing fabric quality, workforce, or production speed—only by using existing fabric more efficiently.

 

Instead, the improvement comes from bringing intelligence, visibility, and control into roll-level planning—an area that has traditionally been manual and assumption-driven.

In simple terms, OptaCut doesn’t ask you to do more. It ensures you stop losing what you already have.

 

Conclusion: End-Bits Are Not Inevitable

 

For decades, end-bits were considered unavoidable and remained a hidden cost. With OptaCut, this is no longer the case.

 

By bringing data-driven decision-making to the cutting room, real-time control over fabric utilization, OptaCut ensures better roll utilization, transforms end-bits from unavoidable waste into a manageable with minimal leftovers.

 

Because in garment manufacturing, every meter of fabric saved goes straight to profit.

Want to know how much fabric your cutting room is losing? Let’s connect and analyze your data.