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I have a beautiful granddaughter who was born with Down syndrome. She has enough challenges to face in her life and I want to make sure that finding appropriately fitting clothes will not be one of them.

Friday, March 30, 2012

Moving On

After a frustrating start to 2012, I have made a major decision.  I am now on the hunt for new factories to make our jeans.   This year has been a complete bust!   The disappointment from the jeans factory that I have been working with for over two years has led me to look elsewhere. 
It’s now the end of March and I still don’t have any jeans produced.   The children’s jeans have been in production since the end of last of year so I was told.  And they are still not done!  This is unbelievable to say the least.  Excuse after excuse why they are not finished is more than I can take.  Of course, they had the Spring Festival which closes down the whole country for weeks, but after that they should have been completed.  I only ordered 500 pair. 
I think I waited too long to make this decision.  I should have made this decision months ago. Now I’m going to take what I’ve learned and move on.  I’ve already been communicating with several jeans factories and Jillian has been preparing new samples to send to them.  Once they get our sample, they will follow our instructions and make a denim pair according to our pattern.  Once we see how they turn out, we can make a decision about starting to manufacture. 
I have learned a lot about this industry from my friend Andy, but since he opened his own jeans factory, he has let me down.  I think the pressure of being a new business owner has been a bit too much and he is overwhelmed with work.  My little order of 500 pieces just doesn’t seem to be important enough to complete in a timely manner. 
Our waistbands have been a problem for him because they must be put on one by one.  If they were made of denim, they could use a special machine to sew on the waistbands, but our soft ribbed material is too delicate for this method.  I asked him how many people were working on them and he told me two.   No wonder they are not finished.
So, with a sad heart I decided that I must look for other factories.  With what I have learned about manufacturing, I am more confident and experienced and not afraid to venture out into this industry.  I have chosen factories that are in the same area so when I visit China in May, I can go to these factories myself and check them out.  Now I'm looking for factories that are much bigger with more years of experience. 
I would never abandon my friend Andy either.  He has been an enormous part of Downs Designs.  He has taught me so much about this industry and the way of Chinese manufacturers and I value our relationship.  But, I think I must, for the sake of my business, find other factories to help with our development.  I’m ready to take what I’ve learned and start negotiations elsewhere.
The true test will be when I get the samples back from these various other factories.  I can’t wait to see how they look.  Our pants are so unusual that we just won’t know until they get here.  So again, I wait.  It will be about a month before I actually have them.  By the time I mail the package to them, they pretest the fabric, make the sample, then ship it back to me, it takes about a month.  There’s just no faster way.  The year is speeding by and I still have nothing new to sell.
Our ladies jeans are selling slowly and so far everyone who buys them is very happy and excited to have found something that fits their daughter or family member.  Most everyone reorders a few more pairs, but they are really waiting for more styles.  One customer bought 8 pairs of the same pants.  She asked Jill if she could make 4 of them into capris and she did.  They turned out fine but our jeans were not made or styled to be capris.  One day we will offer that style as well but probably in other fabrics.
I started learning Chinese this year and I find I really enjoy the language.  I think it’s important for me learn some basic Chinese if I am going to work with the Chinese people.  When I go there, I’m like a fish out of water.  No one speaks English accept my friend Andy and if he’s not with me, I’m lost.  I can’t walk down the street or go to a store because not one person speaks English.   So making the decision to learn their language (in some small way) was a good one I think. 
As with any foreign language, their sentence structure is completely different and that’s one thing I find complicating.  But the words themselves are not that hard.  They use the same words for many different meanings, but by changing the tone of the word, the meaning changes.  So that part of the language can be a bit confusing.  I might easily say that the meal tasted very “newspaper” because I didn’t use the correct tone. 
I’m sure once I get there I will feel completely lost.  My vocabulary will be limited and they talk very fast.  But my hopes are to at least have some sense of the language and be able to have small, simple conversations.    Even now as I communicate with representatives from these new factories through Skype, I am able to share a few words of Chinese.  Communication with the factory representative is usually done through typed conversation and I have learned to write the language in Pinyin.  Pinyin is writing Chinese with letters from our alphabet, not their drawings.  Once I learned the letter combinations and sounds of the letters, it has gotten fairly easy to type the words.  I just need to build my vocabulary and that will take time and practice.
I have hopes that my next writing will be good news.  I hope our children’s jeans will be finished soon and on their way to our shop.  I hope that these new factories will successfully duplicate our patterns.  And I hope I continue to stay focused and positive.  Sometimes it’s not easy, but my strong belief in what I am doing keeps me going through the disappointments that I have experienced over these months.  I look forward to the future and the new direction that I am headed.

2 comments:

  1. Oh, I'm so very sad and sorry to hear this! It's funny - when you first began on this journey (or when I first began following it!), I wasn't that invested in the idea of needing specifically-designed pants for my daughter. I think a lot of that had to do with the fact that she was a toddler, and nearly *all* toddler pants come with elasticized waistbands. However, now that she's nearly 6, I'm starting to realize the difficulty of finding jeans to fit her. I have several pairs in her drawer, supposedly of sizes that should fit her, but I avoid putting them on her because they just don't fit right, or are too tight over her stomach. *Now* I fully understand, and am looking forward to the finished product. :-) Thank you again for your passion with this. Maggie is just tooooo adorable!

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    1. Hello Becca, it's nice that you have been following my progress, it's been quite a journey I can tell you. But your daughter is almost the same age as Maggie and Maggie is not as challenging as the older children and adults to fit into clothes. There is a change that comes as they grow older and their bodies mature. Over these last few years I have worked with hundreds of people with Down syndrome...measuring and using them as models. I feel confident that I have a good grasp of their daily clothing challenges. And I can tell you, some really struggle. I can't even imagine how uncomfortable it must be to wear clothes everyday that don't fit. I won't let Maggie grow up and face that challenge...or your daughter either. I'm committed to this journey and I won't give up. One day, we will have a full line of clothing and change the lives of so many. That's my promise.

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