Overview #
Garment hang tags and labels are the smallest touchpoint in a fashion brand’s packaging system — and consistently the most under-specified when brands come to us for OEM production. A tag that delights on a luxury knitwear piece requires fundamentally different board weight, coating, and attachment hardware than one on a children’s sneaker or a fast-fashion accessories line. Across our hang tag production lines, we work with brand partners across four distinct fashion verticals, each with its own structural requirements, print tolerances, and compliance obligations. Getting the specification right at brief stage saves 2–3 rounds of sampling and prevents costly production holds.
Luxury Apparel & Premium Knitwear: Specification Depth Matters #
For luxury apparel — think premium knitwear, tailored outerwear, or designer RTW — the hang tag is a brand equity carrier, not just a price vehicle. We typically specify 400–450 gsm uncoated woodfree board (UWF) or 350 gsm cotton-fibre board for this segment. The uncoated surface is non-negotiable for most luxury clients: it accepts soft-touch lamination at 28–32 microns and allows letterpress or foil blocking to sit cleanly without halation.
Foil blocking on uncoated board requires a dwell temperature of 110–130°C and a dwell time of 0.3–0.6 seconds — outside this window, foil adhesion fails or the board surface crushes. We run foil blocking in-house and hold a registration tolerance of ±0.25mm on our flatbed foil presses, which is critical when a brand’s logo has fine serif detail below 6pt.
Attachment hardware for luxury knitwear must be specified carefully. A standard 1mm natural cotton cord with a brass eyelet (2.5mm internal diameter) is our most common combination. Avoid plastic snap-lock pins on fine-gauge knitwear — the pin gauge (typically 0.8mm) can snag yarn loops and generate customer complaints.
Compliance note: luxury brands selling into the EU must ensure any metallic foil or coating on the tag does not exceed REACH Regulation (EC) No 1907/2006 thresholds for restricted substances, particularly if the tag contacts skin in packaged form.
Footwear: Durability, Moisture Resistance, and Regulatory Labelling #
Footwear hang tags live in a different environment from apparel tags — they are handled in warehouse conditions, exposed to humidity in shipping containers, and must survive the retail floor without delaminating or curling. For footwear, we recommend 350–400 gsm SBS (solid bleached sulphate) board with a C1S (coated one side) finish, or a 300 gsm kraft board for brands with a heritage or outdoor positioning.
Moisture resistance is the primary structural concern. We apply a 20–25 micron matte OPP lamination on the print face as standard for footwear tags — this reduces moisture vapour transmission and prevents the board from absorbing humidity during sea freight (typically 30–60 days at 60–85% RH in a container). Without lamination, a 400 gsm uncoated board can absorb enough moisture to curl 3–5mm across a 90mm tag width, which is visible at retail.
Footwear tags in the EU must comply with EU Regulation 1007/2011 on textile fibre names and labelling — if the tag carries fibre composition data for any textile upper material, the labelling sequence and terminology must follow the regulation exactly. We flag this to every EU footwear client at brief stage.
For attachment, a 16mm × 1.2mm polypropylene loop lock (standard “J-hook” style) is the most common footwear hardware. For premium leather footwear, a waxed cotton cord with a metal barrel crimp gives a better brand impression.
| Vertical | Recommended Board | Lamination | Attachment Hardware |
|---|---|---|---|
| Luxury Apparel | 400–450 gsm UWF or cotton-fibre | Soft-touch 28–32 µm | 1mm cotton cord + brass eyelet |
| Footwear | 350–400 gsm SBS C1S | Matte OPP 20–25 µm | PP loop lock 16mm or waxed cord |
| Accessories / Jewellery | 300–350 gsm duplex or kraft | Gloss or matte OPP 18–22 µm | Satin ribbon or fine cotton cord |
| Fast Fashion / Value | 250–300 gsm coated duplex | Gloss OPP 18 µm or none | Plastic snap-lock pin |
Accessories & Jewellery: Small Format, High Precision #
Accessories and jewellery tags are typically the smallest format we produce — common sizes run from 40mm × 60mm up to 60mm × 90mm — and small format amplifies every print and die-cut tolerance issue. A 0.5mm die-cut deviation on a 120mm apparel tag is barely visible; on a 45mm jewellery tag, it is immediately obvious.
We specify 300–350 gsm duplex board (grey back) for most accessories tags, or 300 gsm natural kraft for brands with an artisan or sustainable positioning. Print is typically 4-colour offset with a spot UV coating on the logo or hero graphic — spot UV layer thickness runs 8–12 microns on our UV flexo coating line, and we hold a registration tolerance of ±0.2mm for spot UV to print register on small-format tags.
For jewellery brands selling into the US market, any metallic ink or coating must comply with CPSC requirements under the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA) if the tag is likely to be handled by children under 12. Lead content in inks must not exceed 90 ppm per ASTM F963. We use only CPSIA-compliant inks across our entire accessories tag production.
A common mistake we see from accessories brands: specifying a die-cut shape with internal corners below 2mm radius. Our die-cutting tools cannot cleanly cut internal radii below 1.5mm on board above 300 gsm — the board tears rather than cuts cleanly. We always advise a minimum 2mm internal corner radius on complex die-cut shapes.
Fast Fashion & Value Retail: Volume, Speed, and Cost Control #
Fast fashion hang tags are a volume game — MOQs typically start at 5,000 pieces per SKU in our facility, and orders of 50,000–200,000 pieces per style are common. The specification priorities here are cost efficiency, fast turnaround, and barcode / QR code print quality for retail scanning compliance.
We run fast fashion hang tags on 250–300 gsm coated duplex board, printed on our sheet-fed offset lines at 10,000–12,000 sheets per hour. Standard lead time for a repeat order with approved artwork is 7–10 working days ex-factory. For new artwork, add 3–5 working days for digital proof approval.
Barcode print quality is a compliance issue, not just an aesthetic one. GS1 General Specifications require a minimum bar width reduction (BWR) of 0 for offset-printed barcodes at 80% magnification, and a minimum print contrast signal (PCS) of 0.75. We verify barcode grades on every fast fashion job using an inline verifier calibrated to ISO/IEC 15416 — any grade below 1.5 (on the 0–4 scale) triggers a press stop and reprint.
The most common brief mistake from fast fashion buyers: submitting artwork with barcodes embedded as low-resolution raster images. A barcode supplied below 1,200 dpi will fail our pre-press check and delay production. We require all barcodes as vector EPS or as a GS1-compliant data file so we generate the barcode natively in pre-press.
Specification Notes for Brand Partners #
When you brief us on a hang tag project, the first things we need are: finished tag dimensions, board weight preference or brand tier (luxury / mid / value), attachment hardware type, and whether the tag carries any regulated information (fibre composition, country of origin, care symbols, barcodes). Without these, we cannot generate an accurate quote — board grade and hardware together account for 40–60% of unit cost on a typical hang tag.
The most common mistake we see at brief stage is brands specifying a finish (e.g. “soft-touch matte”) without specifying the board substrate underneath. Soft-touch lamination on a 250 gsm coated duplex behaves very differently from the same lamination on 400 gsm UWF — the thinner board will flex and the lamination can delaminate at the fold point within 3–4 weeks of retail handling.
Our standard sampling process: digital colour proof in 3–5 working days, physical pre-production sample in 10–14 working days, production lead time 15–20 working days after sample approval for standard tags, 20–28 working days for tags with foil blocking or complex die-cuts.
Frequently Asked Questions #
Q1: What is the minimum board weight you recommend for a hang tag that will be used on outerwear with a cord attachment?
A: For outerwear with cord attachment, we recommend a minimum of 350 gsm — below this, the eyelet punch-out area can tear under the weight of the tag during retail handling. For heavier tags with multiple panels or embellishments, we move to 400–450 gsm UWF board.
Q2: What is your MOQ for hang tags, and what lead time should I plan for a new style launch?
A: Our MOQ starts at 5,000 pieces per SKU. For a new style with new artwork, plan for 3–5 working days for digital proof, 10–14 working days for physical sample, and 15–20 working days production after approval — so approximately 5–6 weeks total from brief to ex-factory shipment for standard specifications.
Q3: Do your hang tags comply with EU REACH regulations for restricted substances in coatings and foils?
A: Yes. All metallic foils, coatings, and inks used in our hang tag production are tested against REACH Regulation (EC) No 1907/2006 SVHC candidate list thresholds. We can provide material safety data sheets and third-party test reports for any coating or foil used on your order.
Q4: Can you produce hang tags with both foil blocking and spot UV on the same face?
A: Yes — foil blocking followed by spot UV is a standard combination on our production line. The key constraint is registration: we hold ±0.25mm for foil and ±0.2mm for spot UV, so the combined tolerance stack means artwork with fine detail below 4pt at the foil/UV boundary should be reviewed by our pre-press team before approval.
Q5: We received hang tags from a previous supplier that were curling badly after 3 weeks in our warehouse. What causes this and how do you prevent it?
A: Curling on hang tags is almost always a moisture absorption issue in unlaminated or under-laminated board. Uncoated 400 gsm board without lamination can curl 3–5mm across a 90mm width at 70–85% RH — typical warehouse conditions in humid climates. We prevent this by specifying a minimum 18–20 micron OPP lamination on the print face for any tag destined for humid storage or sea freight, and by conditioning board to 50% RH ±5% before printing per our internal QC protocol.
Planning a hang tag or label project for your next collection? Contact our team to request a complimentary specification review and sample quote.