Fashion & Textiles

Laser cutting support for fabric, acrylic and decorative components used in fashion, textile and wearable design projects.

Elegant black dress with an intricate laser-cut pattern, shown in a dramatic fashion editorial setting.

Why use laser cutting for fashion and wearable design projects?

  • Useful for fabric sampling, decorative cut work and repeat production

  • Suitable for both textile-based materials and rigid decorative components

  • Acrylic can be used for jewellery-style pieces, trims, tags and wearable details

  • Helps produce cleaner, more consistent results across repeated elements

  • Different materials can be tested before moving into final production

  • Engraving and layered construction may also be used depending on the project

Fabric, acrylic and decorative components for fashion projects

Laser cutting can be used across a wide range of fashion and textile projects, from fabric sampling and decorative cut work to acrylic components, wearable details and custom accessories. It can support both soft materials and rigid sheet materials where accuracy, repeatability and clean detailing matter.

Depending on the project, this may include fabric-based design development, layered decorative pieces, acrylic jewellery-style elements, garment accessories, tags, trims and other custom components used in fashion or wearable design. Because different materials respond differently, testing can still be an important part of the process before moving into a final piece or larger run.

A flexible service for one-off sampling, repeat production and design-led experimentation across both textiles and rigid decorative materials.

Fashion skirt featuring layered laser-cut embellishments with a feather-like texture, paired with a white shirt in a studio setting.

Beyond fabric: acrylic and mixed-material applications

Laser cutting can also support fashion projects through acrylic and mixed-material components such as jewellery-style pieces, decorative trims, branded tags, charms, layered wearable elements and other rigid details that sit alongside textiles or garments. These can be developed as one-off pieces, repeated components or custom additions to a wider design concept.

This can be especially useful for projects that combine soft materials with more structured or decorative elements, where contrast, layering and precise repetition are part of the final visual outcome.

Material testing matters

Not every fabric, synthetic material or decorative sheet behaves the same under laser cutting, so sample testing can be the best way to understand the result before committing to a final piece or larger run. If you already have a material in mind, we can discuss whether it is suitable and help explore a practical next step.

Working on a fashion or wearable design project?

Send us your file, sketch or material idea and we can help suggest a suitable fabrication approach for your project.