About
We make apparel that has to work.
Community Attire has been building uniforms and private label apparel since 2004 — for operators who can't afford to look amateur, wait three months for the wrong product, or explain to their board why the fabric faded in a quarter.
Apparel manufacturing has two failure modes: it looks great on the sample mannequin and falls apart in the field, or it's built like a tank but looks like one too. Most manufacturers pick a lane. We don't think that's the job.
The garment has to survive the work and look like the brand — and getting both right is a craft that takes tech pack rigor, mill relationships, and the willingness to tell a client when a spec won't hold up. That's what this company does, and that's what we've been doing since day one.
What we keep non-negotiable
Say the real number
We quote the lead time we can actually hit, the price that reflects the actual cost, and the minimum order that makes the economics work. Optimistic forecasting is a lie with a softer label.
Build for the floor, not the photo
A garment's job is to survive its work. We spec fabric and construction against real wear — industrial laundering, twelve-hour shifts, ladder climbs — not the fifteen minutes it'll live in a product shot.
One point of contact, start to ship
You get a production lead who owns your program end-to-end. Not a sales rep who hands you off after signing, and not a team alias you have to chase through a ticketing system.
The people who'll work on your program
Every client gets a production lead, an account manager, and access to our sourcing and QC teams.
Meet our leadership →The short version
We make apparel that works. We tell you the real number. We assign a real human to your program. And we ship on the date we quoted — or we call you before the date we quoted if something changes. That's the whole thing.
Start a Quote