Mimaki: How Microfactories can Change the Face of Fashion

Mimaki: How Microfactories can Change the Face of Fashion

Globally, the fashion industry is estimated to account for around 10 per cent of greenhouse gas emissions and 20 per cent of wastewater, making the pursuit of greener production methods more pertinent than ever before. A new era of production is entering the fashion arena, with the increasing emergence of technologically advanced, highly automated microfactories.

Along with reducing unnecessary waste through on-demand production, microfactories have a smaller ecological footprint than traditional garment production. They require no water use during the production process, making it a faster solution and a greener one.

FESPA 2021 saw Mimaki team up with fashion designer Carolina Guzman to bring her designs to life in real time, setting up its working microfactory live on-site to take her designs from screen to garment within just a day. Guzman’s designs were created using Mimaki’s TS100-1600 Sublimation Printer before being transferred to textile, digitally cut and finally pieced together and devised with a string of ethical and environmental objectives threaded throughout, the microfactory utilised eco-friendly Greentex fabric. Any remaining material was donated to Sheltersuit: a wind- and waterproof coat that can be transformed into a sleeping bag, provided free of charge to homeless people and refugees.

Through working with several strategic partners – including transfer printing expert, Klieverik; paper solutions specialist Neenah Coldenhove; and digital cutting equipment provider, Summa – Mimaki was able to produce a collection of unique, high-quality garments live on the stand during the tradeshow, demonstrating to visitors from more than 100 countries some of the critical reasons that microfactories seem set to change the future of fashion.

Where traditionally, apparel manufacturing has centred on a production chain model of sourcing materials and producing garments in bulk, microfactories are now enabling on-demand, on-location production, making it possible to create everything from unique, one-off pieces and samples right through to entire product lines – all at unprecedented speeds. This means greater flexibility and customisation, enabling designers to modify or update designs and respond to market trends.

The microfactory setup brings production in-house and on-demand, minimising the cost of storing stock and shipping it and responsibly disposing of unsold items. Where recent geopolitical events have highlighted the fragility of global supply chains, microfactories offer unique independence from these systems, empowering garment manufacturers to future-proof their businesses, become less reliant on external systems and suppliers, and reduce the risk of disruptions.

Facilitating savings in a whole line of resources, from physical storage and production space to time and energy, microfactories ultimately significantly increase profitability for garment manufacturers, with the additional benefit of being easily scalable as production increases. Perhaps even more compelling are the environmental considerations. Demonstrated on a small scale through Mimaki’s recent project, the ecological benefits inherent to microfactory production will have an even more significant impact as it becomes more prolific and commonplace throughout the fashion world, with the potential to effect meaningful environmental change as adoption increases in the years to come.

 

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