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Notes From a Garment Factory

The following are excerpts from my notes from my visit to Roo Hsing Garment Factory:-
“My boss says that he would like to dry your pants.”
“Sure, that’d be great.”
A phone call is made and someone whooshes in and off my jeans go
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We walk down the line starting at a completed pair of Levi’s. Some 85 people have a hand in sewing one pair of blue jeans. That doesn’t count the people who cut the fabric, wash the jeans, make the pockets, or ship.
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It’s seeing a pair of jeans being disassembled in 85 parts.
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The famous Levi’s gold thread spirals from the top of the sewing machines and into the blue jeans in short spurts.
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The girls, and they are mainly girls, not guys and not women, rarely lookup from their work to check us out. When your boss is looking over your shoulder, it’s a good idea to double your efforts and your output.
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In this room, women take completed, near flawless pairs of pants and fray the edges of the pockets and cuffs with a grinder. I guess I never thought that this was actually someone’s job - a single person on a single pair of pants. Someone that has a name and a family flawed the jeans because the people in other countries (Levi’s aren’t sold in Cambodia) would buy them because they thought they were cool.
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The legs of the jeans flop in the sandstorm. These are sand-washed jeans and this is the sand-washing guy.
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Are breathing these chemicals harmful? Who am I to say. You just have to have faith that the excellent monitoring system in place in Cambodia ensures that areas like this are relatively safe and healthy working environments. In fact, in the logbook I signed a member of the ILO (International Labor Organization) had signed in earlier that day. The industry has historically (on a global level) such a bad reputation that many people hear “garment industry” and they think the worst, when in fact, because of this reputation, a lot has changed. Workers in other industries would be lucky to have some of the conditions in the garment industry.
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A voice comes over the speaker and the rows and rows of workers step from their machines, putting a halt to the machine gun firing needles. Club music pounds a rhythm in the background over the cracking speakers. The voice directs the stretching.
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One machine is responsible for sewing the Levi’s back pocket design. It cost $20,000. A woman loads it with a pattern and some denim and presses a button. The design is on in less than 2 seconds.
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They return my jeans, dry and stainless. I’ve never had a cleaner pair.

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May 20th, 2007 at 3:28 am
Look like very nice . i feel you Kelsey .
May 29th, 2007 at 1:42 am
[…] I visited the Roo Hsing factory. They washed my pants. […]
August 7th, 2007 at 8:46 pm
[…] He suggests we don’t make music together, because we have techonology to relay to us someone else who does it 100 times better than we ever could. And so we listen. I want to suggest that we don’t sew our own jeans because (among other reasons like inherent laziness and the lack of time to *make* as many things as we could *buy* and the desire for our things to look exactly like everyone else’s and other probably-more-reasonable-excuses) someone else is more expert. You see, when I sew anything I have to sew every single seam myself (even the hem, which I have been known to leave - or the buttonholes, which I still haven’t done on a little suit I made for J12 before she was born and then swore would be finished for each subsequent child, but never has been). This is different to the pair of jeans you buy off the rack - whether that’s a rack in an op shop or a rack that charges $300. Those jeans were made by 73 people - each person does one part and because they sew exactly the same seam every day they get Very Good at it. So when I pick up my slightly-wonky-with-a-wee-wrinkle-not-quite-perfect anything that I’ve sewn, it just doesn’t look as good. (BTW, my been-to-the-factory-in-Cambodia-and-seen-jeans-being-made correspondent says it’s actually more than 85 people….but 73 sounded better, and I certainly can’t be accused of exaggerating) […]