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Career Handbook - Apparel Manufacturing Occupations
Apparel Manufacturing
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Production workers account for about 70 percent of total employment in the industry. About 4 in 10 workers are sewing machine operators (table 2). The apparel industry also employs a small number of workers in administrative support, material-moving, and managerial occupations.

Fashion designers are the artists of the apparel industry. They create ideas for a range of products including coats, suits, dresses, hats, and underwear. Fashion designers begin the process by making rough sketches of garments or accessories, often using computer-assisted design (CAD) software. This software prints detailed designs from a computer drawing. It can also store fashion styles and colors that can be accessed and easily changed. Designers then create the pattern pieces that will be used to construct the finished garment. They measure and draw pattern pieces to actual size on paper. Then, they use these pieces to measure and cut pattern pieces in a sample fabric. Designers sew the pieces together and fit them on a model. They examine the sample garment and make changes until they get the effect they want. Some designers use assistants to cut and sew pattern pieces to their specifications.

Before sewing can begin, pattern pieces must be made, layouts determined, and fabric cut. Fabric and apparel patternmakers create the "blueprint" or pattern pieces for a particular apparel design. This often involves "grading," or adjusting the pieces for different sized garments. Grading once was a time-consuming job, but now it is quickly completed with the aid of a computer. Markers determine the best arrangement of pattern pieces to minimize wasted fabric. Traditionally, markers judged the best arrangement of pieces by eye; today, computers quickly help to determine the best layout.
 

Table 2. Employment of wage and salary workers in apparel manufacturing by occupation, 2002 and projected change, 2002-12
(Employment in thousands)
Occupation Employment, 2000 Percent
change,2002-
2012
Number Percent
All occupations 358 100.0 -68.6
Management, business, and financial occupations 16 4.4 -66.9

Top executives

6 1.5 -67.9

Operations specialties managers

5 1.3 -66.4
Professional and related occupations 7 1.9 -66.2

Fashion designers

2 0.62 -64.78
Service occupations 4 1.2 -69.3
Sales and related occupations 10 2.7 -69.5

Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing, except technical and scientific products

4 1.2 -67.7
Office and administrative support occupations 40 11.2 -72.0

Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks

4 1.00 -72.75

Information and record clerks

6 1.7 -70.2

Shipping, receiving, and traffic clerks

9 2.5 -72.1

Stock clerks and order fillers

4 1.1 -74.7

Office clerks, general

4 1.2 -72.1
Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations 7 1.9 -61.8

Industrial machinery installation, repair, and maintenance workers

6 1.6 -61.4
Production occupations 249 69.6 -68.3

First-line supervisors/managers of production and operating workers

11 3.1 -66.8

Team assemblers

5 1.3 -59.7

Pressers, textile, garment, and related materials

10 2.8 -67.5

Sewing machine operators

147 41.1 -69.5

Sewers, hand

8 2.4 -67.1

Tailors, dressmakers, and custom sewers

3 0.96 -75.50

Textile cutting machine setters, operators, and tenders

9 2.5 -71.1

Textile knitting and weaving machine setters, operators, and tenders

9 2.5 -59.5

Fabric and apparel patternmakers

4 1.2 -72.1

All other textile, apparel, and furnishings workers

6 1.8 -64.9

Inspectors, testers, sorters, samplers, and weighers

12 3.5 -66.4

Helpers--Production workers

4 1.2 -69.9
Transportation and material moving occupations 25 7.0 -69.7

Laborers and freight, stock, and material movers, hand

9 2.5 -73.3

Packers and packagers, hand

11 3.1 -67.0

NOTE: May not add to totals due to omission of occupations with small employment.

The layout arrangement is then given to cutters. In less automated companies, cutters may use electric knives or cutting machines to cut pattern pieces. In more automated facilities, markers electronically send the layout to a computer-controlled cutting machine, and textile cutting machine setters, operators, and tenders monitor the machine's work.

Sewing machine operators assemble or finish clothes. Most sewing functions are specialized and require the operator to receive specific training. Although operators specialize in one function, the trend toward cross-training requires them to broaden their skills. Team assemblers perform all of the assembly tasks assigned to their team, rotating through the different tasks, rather than specializing in a single task. They also may decide how the work is to be assigned and how different tasks are to be performed.

Pressers receive a garment after it has been assembled. Pressers eliminate wrinkles and give shape to finished products. Most pressers use specially formed, foot-controlled pressing machines to perform their duties. Some pressing machines now have the steam and pressure controlled by computers. Inspectors, testers, sorters, samplers, and weighers inspect the finished product to ensure consistency and quality.
 


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Data Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2004-05 Edition