Abstract:
Off—cut fabrics are generated in the cutting departments of the apparel manufacturing
industry, which mostly end up in landfills. This off—cut fabric pieces have the potential of turning into
a piece of art or something meaningful to fashion industry. This research has conducted to explore
the potential of off-cut fabric pieces and fabric constructing methods with an approach of mixed
method in which both qualitative and quantitative data gathered through literature and interviews.
With gathered data and with the limitations, fabric constructions have done using hand-loom
weaving technique with off—cut denim fabrics which can be constructed into wearables to show the
difference which can be made with a waste of a fabric piece. After experimenting with different
fabric construction methods in the loom, five fabric developments have been discovered and five
wearable options have done with the fabric developments to show the potential in real scale.
Feasibility tests have done to each fabric development before converting them into wearables. After
analyzing the behaviour of the fabric developments, wearable silhouettes have created with less
cuts and moreover the fabric waste accumulation in the process of constructing the wearable with
the new fabric development has considered. A shuttle has developed to ease the process of the
fabric development and to focus on the mass market of this fabric developments with off out fabric
strips in the handloom machine. Here the main focus comes into Sri Lanka’s apparel manufacturing
industry and into fabric waste accumulation of local apparel industry. BAM Holdings which is a
leading apparel exporter specialized in baby clothing has been selected to conduct interviews and
collect data for the research and proposing them a fabric waste management department which end
up as local high end fashion brand is the end goal of this research. Fabric developments and
wearables will be proposed to them to show the market potential of a little fabric waste piece.