Fabric Selection Guide
A practical guide to choosing fabric based on appearance, comfort, care, and operational reality.
Natural fibers generally look and feel more elevated, but they require more care and may wrinkle, fade, or shrink. Synthetic and blended fabrics are usually more durable, color-stable, and easier to maintain, with a less natural hand feel.
Confirm the fabric against the role, laundering method, climate, volume, and expected presentation standard.
100% Cotton
JERSEY, OXFORD, POPLIN, TWILL, FRENCH TWILL, CANVAS, DENIM, CHAMBRAY, PIQUE
BEST FOR
Shirting, tees, overshirts, casual workwear, denim-inspired pieces, aprons, pants, outerwear.
Natural hand feel
Breathable and comfortable
Softens and ages with character
Strong casual or lifestyle loo
PROS
Can shrink in early washes
Fades more than synthetics
Wrinkles more easily
Dark colors may soften over time
TRADEOFFS
Use when the priority is a natural, approachable, less corporate look. Avoid when exact color consistency, low maintenance, or minimal shrinkage are the top priorities.
FINERY RECOMMENDATION
DO WE NEED THIS LINE?
Linen & Linen Blends
BEST FOR
Luxury hospitality, resorts, spas, warm-weather uniforms, relaxed fine dining.
Natural hand feel
Breathable and comfortable
Softens and ages with character
Strong casual or lifestyle loo
PROS
Wrinkles on shift
Can shrink and fade
Requires more thoughtful care
Will not stay crisp all day
TRADEOFFS
Use when the wrinkle, softness, and lived-in texture are part of the design. Not recommended for clients expecting a pristine, pressed look after eight hours of service.
FINERY RECOMMENDATION
DO WE NEED THIS LINE?
Poly/Cotton Blends
BEST FOR
High-use shirting, aprons, casual uniforms, pants, outerwear, national programs needing balance.
More durable than 100% cotton
Better color retention
Less wrinkling
Less shrinkage
Easier daily care
PROS
Less natural than pure cotton
May not age as beautifully
Can look standard if fabric quality is too basic
TRADEOFFS
The practical middle ground. Use when you want some natural hand feel but still need the garment to survive real shift work.
FINERY RECOMMENDATION
DO WE NEED THIS LINE?
Polyester & Performance Fabrics
BEST FOR
High-volume programs, BOH, venues, fast casual, events, frequent laundering.
Most durable category
Strong color retention
Minimal shrinkage
Low wrinkling
Quick drying
Easy to maintain
PROS
Less breathable than natural fibers
Can feel synthetic
May retain odor more than cotton or linen
Can shine, glaze, or melt under high heat
TRADEOFFS
Use when consistency, longevity, and low maintenance matter more than natural texture. Not always the most luxurious choice, but often the right one when consistency, durability, and easy care matter most.
FINERY RECOMMENDATION
TROPICAL WOOL, WOOL BLENDS, POLY WOOL, SHARKSKIN POLY, BARBIE GABARDINE, STRETCH DOUBLE CREPE
Suiting & Specialty Fabrics
BEST FOR
Blazers, vests, tailored dresses, concierge, host, luxury FOH.
Most polished appearance
Structured and refined
Strong visual impact
Best for elevated presentation
PROS
Often dry clean only
Higher maintenance
Less forgiving for messy or physical roles
Typically higher cost
TRADEOFFS
Use for high-visibility roles where presentation matters. Avoid for roles requiring frequent laundering, heavy movement, or rough daily use.
FINERY RECOMMENDATION
TWILL, CANVAS, DENIM, POLY COTTON
Apron Fabrics
BEST FOR
Restaurants, F&B, coffee, bakery, bar, chef-adjacent, utility and retail roles.
Functional and durable
Strong brand visibility
Shifts from rugged to refined depending on fabric
Works across many service settings
PROS
Straps can twist or stress in wash
Heavier fabrics may crease or fade
Care depends heavily on fiber content
TRADEOFFS
Aprons take abuse. Choose based on whether the priority is rugged character, stain resistance, easy care, or a more refined front-of-house look.
FINERY RECOMMENDATION
These are general fabric-selection guidelines. Final care should always follow the sewn-in care label, and fabric choice should be confirmed against the role, laundering method, climate, volume, and expected presentation standard.