Consistent quality is not luck — it is a clear spec sheet, a sealed sample and checkpoints at every stage. Here is how we get a knit order right for the Nigerian market, including SONCAP and NIS labelling.
When a Nigerian brand imports knitwear, two things have to line up: the garment must match the standard you sold to your customer, and the shipment must clear Nigerian regulatory requirements without a hold at the port. Both are achievable from a Turkish factory — but only if the expectations are written down before a single needle moves. Quality is engineered at the spec-sheet stage, not inspected in at the end.
A precise tech pack removes guesswork. For a knit order we want measurements with tolerances, yarn composition and count, gauge, stitch type, colour references (a physical lab dip or Pantone, never "navy"), trims, and a clear measurement chart graded across your size run. The clearer the document, the smaller the gap between what you imagined and what ships.
Fibre blend, yarn count and gauge (we run 3–14GG) define the hand-feel. We confirm these against your target before bulk yarn is committed.
Each point of measure gets a value and an allowed +/- range, so "fits" is defined in centimetres, not opinion.
An approved lab dip becomes the reference for the whole run, checked under controlled light to limit shade variation between batches.
Care label, fibre-content label, brand label and any swing tags are specified up front — including the Nigerian labelling content below.
Before bulk production we make a pre-production sample. Once you approve it, that piece becomes the sealed sample — the physical benchmark every later step is judged against. Two are kept: one with you, one on our floor. If a bulk piece drifts from the sealed sample, there is an objective standard to point to rather than a debate. This single step prevents most of the disappointment that ruins first orders.
We do not rely on one final check. Quality is verified at four points:
Incoming Quality Control on yarn and trims before production: count, shade and quantity verified against the order so faults do not enter the line.
In-Process Quality Control during knitting and linking: tension, measurements and stitch quality checked on the floor so a drift is caught early, not after 1,000 pieces.
Outgoing Quality Control after finishing and pressing: appearance, measurements, labelling and packing confirmed against the sealed sample.
A final inspection on the packed lot using a statistical AQL (Acceptable Quality Limit) sampling plan, with the major/minor defect limits agreed in advance — and open to your nominated third-party inspector.
Most regulated goods entering Nigeria fall under the SON Conformity Assessment Programme (SONCAP), administered by the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON). In practice this means a pre-shipment inspection or product-certification step is carried out, typically by a SON-appointed agent, leading to a SONCAP Certificate against the relevant Nigerian Industrial Standards. Our role is to supply what that process needs: accurate product details, fibre-composition data, the certified-yarn documentation we hold from suppliers, and cooperation with the inspection your import agent arranges.
An honest caveat: SONCAP scope, fees and the exact route can change, and the certificate is issued through Nigerian channels — your customs broker or appointed agent owns that filing. We make the factory side audit-ready; we do not issue Nigerian certificates ourselves.
Textile and garment labelling in Nigeria follows Nigerian Industrial Standards (NIS) and consumer-protection labelling rules. For knitwear that generally means clear, durable, English-language information covering:
Accurate composition by percentage (e.g. "80% Cotton, 20% Polyester") — and it must match the garment, because mislabelled content is a common reason goods are rejected.
Washing, drying and ironing guidance, usually with international care symbols plus text, sewn in so it survives wear.
"Made in Türkiye" stated clearly and truthfully.
Size marking and your brand/importer identification, formatted to your label spec.
We knit, sew and apply these labels to your approved artwork. You confirm the exact wording your import agent requires for SON/SONCAP and NIS compliance — that final regulatory sign-off sits with you and your broker.
Nigeria runs business in English, and so do we. Spec sheets, comments, inspection reports and label artwork move back and forth in English with no translation layer — which removes a surprising amount of the friction and error that creeps in when a brand and factory do not share a working language. A misread measurement chart is an expensive mistake; sharing English makes it far less likely.
Send your tech pack or a target sample. We will map the spec, sealed sample, inspection stages and labelling so your shipment is built to clear and built to last.