The term finishing includes all the mechanical and chemical processes employed commercially to improve the acceptability of the product, except those procedures directly concerned with colouring. The objective of the various finishing processes is to make fabric from the loom or knitting frame more acceptable to the consumer. Finishing processes include preparatory treatments used before additional treatment, such as bleaching prior to dyeing; treatments, such as glazing, to enhance appearance; sizing, affecting touch; and treatments adding properties to enhance performance, such as preshrinking. Newly formed cloth is generally dirty, harsh, and unattractive, requiring considerable skill for conversion into a desirable product. Before treatment, the unfinished fabrics are referred to as gray goods, or sometimes, in the case of silks, as greige goods.

Finishing formerly involved a limited number of comparatively simple operations evolved over the years from hand methods. The skill of English and Scottish finishers was widely recognized, and much British cloth owed its high reputation to the expertise of the finisher. More sophisticated modern finishing methods have been achieved through intense and imaginative research.

We offer various kinds of stiff and semi-stiff, soft and performance finishes as detailed below:

1. Soft

2. Mechanical Stretch

3. Easy to Iron

4. Water Resistant

5. Stain Release

6. Stiff Finish

7. Soil Resistant

8. Durable Fragrance Finish

9. Ultraviolet Protection

10. Anti-Pilling

11. High Abrasion-Resistant

12. Stain Repellant

13. Anti-Bacterial

14. PFGD/PFP/PFD”