Apparel Production

Robotic sewing for scalable garment manufacturing

ADOTC develops machines and lines for automated apparel production that combine textile handling, robotic process execution, machine vision and monitored production workflows.

Apparel production lab and automation setup
ADOTC Apparel Robotics Flexible automation for garment manufacturing processes.

Why apparel automation matters

A

Repeatability

More structured handling and sewing logic can improve process consistency.

B

Scalability

Cell-based automation can support more modular production architectures.

C

Near-customer production

Automation can help make local and regional production concepts more viable.

D

Production visibility

Monitoring and software interfaces provide a stronger basis for process control.

ADOTC integrated technology approach

1

Assembly processes

Selected garment-related sewing operations with recurring seam paths and defined process requirements.

2

Line-based production

Modular automation line designed for structured production environments and scalable pilot setups.

3

Monitored execution

Integration of handling, process control and software-supported production logic.

Where it fits

Relevant for selected apparel assembly processes

Apparel production involves multiple handling-intensive and seam-critical steps. ADOTC focuses on process areas where robotic guidance, material control and monitored execution can create value.

  • Selected garment assembly operations
  • Defined seam types and repeatable process windows
  • Near-customer and modular production concepts
  • Pilot lines with measurable process stability targets
Garment assembly and sewing process prototype
System view

From textile handling to monitored sewing execution

For apparel production, automation goes beyond pick-and-place. The process architecture needs to coordinate material presentation, gripping, positioning, sewing execution and monitoring in one controlled setup.

  • Textile-specific end effectors and gripping logic
  • Robotic motion aligned with garment handling requirements
  • Machine vision for supervision and stability
  • Interfaces for connected manufacturing workflows
Cell, gripper and process monitoring setup
ADOTC T-shirt automation

ADOTC starts with automated T-shirt production

ADOTC starts with the automation of T-shirt production. The line is being developed for different sizes and styles and is designed for T-shirts made from cotton, polyester or mixed fibres.

The goal is a flexible production setup that combines textile handling, robotic sewing and connected process control with a target capacity of up to 2 shirts per minute.

Automated T-shirt production line
Next step

Discuss your apparel production process

If you are evaluating automation for a garment-related production step, ADOTC can assess whether a robotic sewing cell approach is technically meaningful for your use case.