China is home to the world's most developed period underwear manufacturing ecosystem, concentrated in Guangdong and Fujian provinces. This guide profiles 10 verified Chinese manufacturers — covering location, MOQ, certifications, and best-fit buyer profiles — so you can shortlist the right factory without wasting weeks on dead-end inquiries.
Why This Article ExistsFive weeks of this series have walked through what's in a period panty — PFAS testing, OEKO-TEX scope, hidden finish chemistry, GOTS organic content, synthetic material specifications. The question this week is different.It's not "what's in it." It's "how is it put together, a
本文存在的意义:本系列文章历时七周,详细阐述了如何才能做到真正意义上的清洁定位:PFAS 检测、OEKO-TEX® 认证范围、隐性化学物质审核、GOTS 交易证书、合成材料规范、建筑化学以及七步验证流程。如果您
Why This Article ExistsRoughly twice a month, a brand owner sends me a message that goes something like this:"We're launching a postpartum underwear line. Our hero SKU is essentially your period underwear in a higher-waist cut. Same fabric, same gusset construction, same absorbency. Can you produce
Why This Article ExistsIn Week 1 we talked about PFAS. In Week 2 we walked through how to read an OEKO-TEX certificate without getting fooled. Both of those topics have something in common: the consumer-facing conversation has at least started. People search for "PFAS-free period underwear." Retaile
Why This Article ExistsIn Article 1, I argued that postpartum is structurally a different product category from period — three different fluids, different absorbency curves, different chemistry standards, different fit dynamics. The C-section variant is the most engineering-intensive sub-category wi
Why This Article ExistsArticles 1 and 2 of this series made the case for postpartum as its own engineering category, and walked through C-section construction specifically. Both articles were product-focused — what to build and why.This article is the operational companion. If you're a brand owner w
Why This Article ExistsMost B2B buyers who land on this page fall into one of three groups.The first group is period underwear brand founders who have noticed a quiet but persistent pattern in their customer service inbox: women in their forties, fifties, and sixties writing in to ask whether the br