Your Fabric Dye Lot Is Consistent. Your Second Order Won’t Be. Here’s Why.
Here’s something most fabric buyers discover the hard way: two batches of the same fabric, same color code, same mill — and they look slightly different side by side.
The buyer’s first instinct: “The supplier changed something.”
The truth is more subtle and more important to understand.
Why Dye Lots Vary
Every dye batch is a chemical reaction. The same formula produces slightly different results depending on water temperature, humidity, dye batch chemistry, and even barometric pressure. The textile industry has a standard for acceptable variation: the spectrophotometer reads Delta E of 1.0 or less. To the human eye, this difference is invisible when viewed separately.
But side by side, fresh out of the box, you might see a difference. Seven days later — once the fabric breathes and settles — it disappears.
The Fix Takes 10 Seconds
Most suppliers (including us) test every batch. Most buyers don’t know this test exists. The problem isn’t the color variation — it’s that nobody told the buyer it was normal.
When a buyer discovers “the colors don’t match” without prior warning, their trust is broken. They assume the supplier got careless. They wonder if the whole batch is compromised.
The fix is one sentence, said before the container leaves the factory:
“Your second order will match within industry standards. There may be a 0.5% visual difference from the first batch if viewed side by side — this is normal and will disappear within days.”
That sentence costs nothing to say. Not saying it can cost you the entire relationship.
BOYA’s Commitment
Every shipment includes a dye lot report showing Delta E vs. the approved master sample. We also keep the master sample on file for 24 months for reorder matching. If Delta E exceeds 1.5, we don’t ship — we reproduce.
When your second order arrives, if it doesn’t match, send us a photo. 9 times out of 10, it falls within spec. The 1 time it doesn’t, we redo it.** That’s our policy.
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