Monday, October 27, 2025 Kornit Digital unveils innovations for bulk apparel production at ITMA Asia Kornit Digital has unveiled three major innovations, at ITMA Asia + CITME Singapore 2025, saying the they will shape the future of the industry: the introduction of the All-Inclusive Click (AIC) business model to the Asian market, its new digital footwear solution, and demonstrations of how its MAX and Apollo technologies are replacing traditional screen printing for bulk apparel and mass fashion production. Visitors to the Singapore Expo will experience the presentation of Kornit’s vision for agile, smart manufacturing. Kornit’s live demonstrations show how the company enables brands and manufacturers to design, produce, and deliver at speed, with quality, creativity, efficiency, and sustainability. Kornit has introduced its All-Inclusive Click (AIC) business model to the Asian region. The company says AIC provides customers with a more straightforward, predictable, and profitable way to grow. By transforming digital production into a fully managed service, AIC enables customers to reduce operational complexity, gain transparency over costs, and scale with confidence. Kornit states that through this model, its success is directly tied to the customer’s success, fostering long-term partnerships centred on performance, efficiency, and shared growth. Another major focus at ITMA is Kornit’s leadership in bulk apparel production, where the company demonstrates how MAX technology and Apollo systems can replace traditional screen printing for longer runs. Visitors will see Kornit’s solutions delivering high-quality output, with the consistency and speed of analogue production, combined with the flexibility, sustainability, and economics of digital. The company states that, with the latest evolutions, it is positioned to set a benchmark for mass-produced apparel, enabling brands and manufacturers to meet the growing demand for speed, quality, and efficiency. Kornit is also demonstrating mass production for the fashion and apparel market using its Presto MAX system. The solution features, for the first time, a combined neon and white live production. It has special capabilities for printing on dark fabrics with advanced texture printing (XDi) effects, offering new levels of creativity and product differentiation to clients. Ronen Samuel, Chief Executive Officer at Kornit Digital, says, “At ITMA Asia, we are not just presenting solutions, we are presenting the future of how fashion and textiles are created. From footwear to bulk apparel, and from high-volume manufacturing to personalised production, Kornit is proving that digital can now replace analogue at every level. The AIC model and our latest technologies make sustainable, high-quality, on-demand production a reality today.” Kornit says it will also feature real customer success stories and partnerships with technology leaders that demonstrate agility, profitability, and sustainability in action, highlighting the company’s leadership. Key technologies featured at ITMA Asia + CITME Singapore 2025 include: • Atlas MAX PLUS – Retail-grade quality with 3D effects and DTFilm capabilities for apparel/accessories. • Apollo – Automated, high-throughput delivering quality that surpasses traditional screen printing for mass digital manufacturing. Presto MAX – Direct-to-fabric printing with white and neon inks, exceptional hand-feel, and advanced texture printing (XDi) for dark fabrics. • Footwear Solution – Fully digital, high-performance workflow for athletic and technical footwear. • All-Inclusive Click (AIC) Model – New operational approach delivering predictable costs and shared success. • K-Flow – Precision job management and colour control for complete production visibility Previous Article Currie Group and Epson Spotlight Signage Innovation at Melbourne Showcase Next Article Roland DG expands VersaWorks 7 with remote printing and productivity add-ons If you have a news story, or story about an interesting project or installation please contact [email protected] Sign up to Image Magazine Newsletter. Print Rate this article: No rating