Before you commit to producing branded workwear, it helps to see what you're actually getting. A well-presented mock-up lets you visualise the finished result, spot any issues, and make adjustments before anything goes to a supplier.
Clothing design mock-ups bring your uniform concepts to life visually. They show how your brand translates onto fabric, how different styles and colourways work in practice, and give you the confidence to approve the final design knowing exactly what you'll receive.
Clothing design mock-ups are visual representations of how branded workwear will look before it goes into production. Using design software to simulate the finished garment, they allow businesses to review logo placement, colour combinations and overall appearance in context — making it possible to identify and resolve any issues before committing to the cost of manufacturing.
You need this when your business details — address, phone number, opening hours — appear differently across different online directories and listing sites, when you’ve moved premises or changed contact details and the update hasn’t been reflected everywhere it needs to be, or when inconsistent citations are having a negative impact on your local search rankings.
This service includes an audit of your current online citations across key directories and listing platforms, identification of inaccuracies or inconsistencies, and a programme of corrections and new citation creation across relevant platforms. Delivered as a citation audit report and an ongoing citation management service to maintain accuracy over time.
Most marketing companies focus on channels and tactics.
We focus on reaction.
Before selecting platforms, formats, or media spend, we define how your audience thinks, feels, and decides. We use behavioural psychology to understand what will capture attention, build trust, and motivate action — then choose the channels that best support that outcome.
Every channel we use has a clear purpose, a defined role, and a measurable objective. Nothing is done “because it’s popular” or “because it’s expected”.
The result is marketing that feels natural to engage with, works across multiple channels, and is designed to deliver meaningful, long-term results.
Want to see how this approach works in practice?
Digital visual representations of how your branding, logo and design elements will appear on specific garments — produced before the clothing goes to production so that sizing, placement, colour and overall visual impact can be reviewed and approved.
Because what looks right in isolation on a design file may not translate well to a garment. Mock-ups allow you to see the real-world effect of placement decisions, colour combinations and logo sizing before spending money on production.
Digital flat-lay images, 3D garment renders and layered design files are common formats. Physical samples — a single printed or embroidered garment — provide the most accurate representation but have a longer lead time and higher cost.
Most clothing briefs are resolved in one to two rounds of revision. Clear briefing upfront — including reference images, brand files and specific preferences — reduces the number of revisions needed.
Yes. Multiple garment colour and style variants can be shown as mock-ups simultaneously, allowing side-by-side comparison before a final decision is made.
For embroidery and complex print work, physical sampling is strongly recommended. Digital mock-ups are accurate representations, but thread colours, embroidery digitisation and print texture can only be fully assessed on a physical sample.
The marketing or brand lead for brand consistency, the procurement or operations lead for practicality and cost, and ideally a representative from the team who will wear the clothing for a fit and comfort perspective.
Yes. Mock-ups can show primary logo placement alongside secondary marks, straplines, department identifiers or other design elements — giving a complete picture of how all branding components will work together on the garment.
Digital mock-ups can typically be produced within two to five working days of receiving a complete brief and brand assets. Physical samples take significantly longer, usually two to four weeks.
Yes, and this is one of their most practical uses. A set of well-presented clothing mock-ups gives leadership a clear visual basis for a decision that might otherwise be difficult to make from a written brief or garment specification alone.
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