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What details should I pay attention to when buying clothes?
Methods/steps

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One: Trademark

Trademark is a unique symbol of a brand, but as we all know, the trademark on clothes may not be what we think. For example, I thought it was Adidas, but I was dumbfounded when I bought it. So first of all, pay attention to the details of the trademark when buying clothes.

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Two: look at the workmanship.

Fine workmanship, if not a professional clothing manufacturer, may not know much about the quality of a dress from the details. Most of them are just the right style. The details of a dress depend on the lathe worker, who directly affects the version and overall feeling of the dress. Of course, this also depends on whether the goods you make are high-grade or low-grade, and on your actual situation. Work depends on the route, mainly on whether the car line of clothes is straight. Is it symmetrical? Is the needle pitch thin or dense? Generally, the needle spacing is better. Whether there is a "reverse stitch" at the beginning and whether the stitches are aligned. Rewinding needle: it usually takes several stitches to make a dress, so that the dress is not easy to open, and the needle should be knocked down when a part of the car is finished. Obviously to prevent him from blurting out as soon as he pulls it. For example, a woven skirt, you can see whether there are more stitches at its interface, and you can also see some off-center places. Most people don't pay attention to what they see, "collars, sleeves, cuffs, underarms, etc." 3. The version is asymmetrical left and right, and whether there is an anti-needle tread line in the place where the slices are neat and unconnected. General brand clothes with clean lines. They have tails, special people cut the threads, and generally have no cheap clothes. There is also a piece of clothing. If good quality is required, the thread should not exceed 1cm'.

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Three: Materials on the factory label

Look at the ingredients on the label and feel the feel with your hands. Is it close to what the label says?

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Four: mark on the label

Grade a can be worn by babies under 2 years old;

Class b is a product that can contact the skin;

Class C is a product that cannot directly contact the skin.

Class C or marked as "qualified product", it is recommended not to buy.