What to expect
Home textiles — bedding, towels, curtains, table linens, throws — are produced primarily in Nantong (Jiangsu) for bedding, Gaoyang (Hebei) and Anhui for towels, Shaoxing (Zhejiang) for curtains. The category has serious quality variations: thread count claims that don't match reality, towel GSM weights underspec, fabric chemicals causing skin reactions. We do thread count verification by microscopy, GSM measurement, and OEKO-TEX testing on every program.
Typical specifications & MOQs
| Typical MOQ | 500–10,000 units |
|---|---|
| Price range (per unit) | $2.50–$75.00 |
| Lead time | 30–70 days |
| Common materials | 100% cotton (combed, ringspun, mercerized), Egyptian cotton (often misrepresented), Polyester, Cotton-poly blends, Bamboo viscose, Linen, Microfiber, Tencel/Lyocell, Down and feather fills, Polyester fill |
Top manufacturing regions
Common quality issues to watch for
Thread count overstated (multi-ply counted)
Very commonHow to catch it: Single-ply thread count microscopy
Towel GSM below specification
Very commonHow to catch it: Weight per square meter measurement
Pilling within first wash
CommonHow to catch it: Pilling test (Martindale or random tumble)
Color bleeding or fading
CommonHow to catch it: Wash and light fastness testing (ISO 105)
Shrinkage exceeding 5%
Very commonHow to catch it: Wash cycle dimensional change test
Filling weight below claim
CommonHow to catch it: Weight measurement on samples
Formaldehyde or other chemical residues
ModerateHow to catch it: OEKO-TEX testing, formaldehyde test
Required certifications & compliance
- OEKO-TEX Standard 100
- GOTS (organic cotton)
- BSCI/SEDEX (factory audit)
- California Prop 65
- FR (fire retardancy where required)
- Down certifications (RDS, IDFL down testing)
- Cotton USA license (American cotton)
How we help
1. Brief
You tell us the product, target spec, quantity, and budget.
2. Source
We shortlist 3–5 verified factories and benchmark pricing.
3. Sample
We pull samples, run them through QC, and ship to you.
4. Produce
We supervise production with in-line and pre-shipment QC.
5. Ship
We handle customs, freight, and door-to-door delivery.
FAQs about sourcing Home Textiles
What thread count is real and meaningful?
True single-ply thread count: 200-400 is good, 400-600 is high quality, 800+ is very rare and only achievable with very fine yarns. The 'thread count fraud': multi-ply yarns counted as multiple threads (a 200-count multi-ply with 4-ply yarn counted as 800). Real high thread counts above 600 require ELS (extra-long staple) cotton like Egyptian or Pima. Most '1000 thread count' is multi-ply deception. Verify single-ply count via microscopy.
What does 'Egyptian cotton' really mean?
Real Egyptian cotton: ELS cotton from Egypt's Nile delta region — accounts for <5% of global cotton. Most 'Egyptian cotton' branded products are actually US Pima, Indian, or Chinese cotton. Demand Cotton Egypt Association certification for genuine Egyptian. Cotton USA license for American Pima. The premium positioning of 'Egyptian cotton' often doesn't match reality. Honest brands now market 'long-staple cotton' or 'Pima cotton' — defensible claims.
What towel GSM should I specify?
Hotel/budget: 350-450 GSM. Standard quality: 450-550 GSM. Premium: 600-700 GSM. Luxury hotel/spa: 750-900+ GSM. Most 'luxury' marketed towels are 500-600 GSM. Higher GSM means more absorbent and durable but slower drying. Demand GSM testing on production samples — cheap factories regularly underdeliver by 50-100 GSM.
What MOQs apply to home textiles?
Stock fabric with custom prints: 500-1,500 pieces. Custom embroidery: 300-1,000 pieces. Custom dyed colors: 1,000-2,000 pieces (dye lot constraints). Custom fabric weave (new specs): 3,000-5,000 pieces, $1,500-5,000 setup. Custom packaging: 1,000+ pieces. Multi-product programs: easier to negotiate small custom MOQs.
How do I prevent pilling problems?
Pilling causes massive review damage. Prevention: combed/ringspun cotton (not carded), tighter weave construction, mercerized cotton (chemically treated for smoothness), longer staple length cotton. Test: Martindale pilling test 5,000+ rubs without significant pilling for premium products. Cheap blended fabrics pill almost immediately — pure cotton with quality construction lasts.
How do I source quality bedding without OEKO-TEX issues?
OEKO-TEX Standard 100 verifies no harmful chemicals — required by many US/EU retailers. Common chemicals tested: formaldehyde, AZO dyes, heavy metals, pesticide residues. Demand OEKO-TEX certification at the factory level (covers all production) or product level. Cost: $500-2,000 per product/material to certify. Without it, marketing claims of 'safe for sensitive skin' are unverifiable.
What's the deal with bamboo bedding?
'Bamboo bedding' is almost always bamboo viscose/rayon — chemically processed bamboo fiber. It's not the antibacterial wonder fiber marketing claims (FTC has fined companies for these claims). Bamboo viscose feels soft, drapes nicely, but is not significantly more sustainable than cotton. Bamboo lyocell (Tencel-style processing) is more eco-friendly but expensive. Honest marketing: 'rayon from bamboo' per FTC requirements.
How do down certifications work?
RDS (Responsible Down Standard) verifies ethical sourcing (no live-plucking, no force-feeding). IDFL down testing verifies fill power, species, percentage cluster vs feather. Down quality: 600+ fill power good, 750+ premium, 850+ luxury. Many 'down' products are actually feathers or low-quality cluster — demand IDFL testing. Premium goose down: $40-100/lb. Duck down: $20-40/lb. Synthetic down alternatives: $5-15/lb.