According to www.knittingtradejournal.com, Texworld Apparel Sourcing Paris will take place from 31 August to 2 September 2026 at the Paris-Le Bourget Exhibition Centre, gathering more than 1,000 international exhibitors across fabrics, finished apparel, and fashion technology segments.
59th edition reflects evolving sourcing priorities
Organised by Messe Frankfurt France, the event marks its 59th edition — a milestone aligned with structural changes in global knit supply chains. Buyers are increasingly prioritising quality, flexibility, and cost-effective partnerships over sheer volume of choice. This strategic recalibration is driven by tightening margins, rising compliance expectations, and demand volatility across apparel markets.
The shift is evident in both exhibitor composition and buyer engagement patterns. According to the report, suppliers are showcasing high-efficiency production systems, energy-saving machinery, and automation-led solutions — particularly for circular knitting, flat knitting, and hosiery manufacturing. The emphasis on technical capability reflects broader industry trends: the global knitting machines market is projected to reach US$9.7 billion by 2033, underscoring sustained investment in precision equipment.
Technology integration accelerates across knit segments
Technology is no longer peripheral but central to sourcing decisions. The report highlights multiple concurrent developments: Shima Seiki has introduced a dedicated car seat cutter for automotive applications; Santoni and UTO have deepened their partnership on seamless apparel; and Steiger unveiled a knitted ‘smart glove’ integrating sensor-ready textile architecture. These innovations signal a move toward functional, application-specific knit solutions — not just aesthetic or volume-driven outputs.
Warp knitting, in particular, is gaining traction beyond traditional apparel: New Balance leverages warp-knitted components in footwear innovation, while adaptive lace developed via warp knitting targets everyday performance wear. Meanwhile, Cixing acquired the Stoll brand following Karl Mayer’s exit — a consolidation move reinforcing vertical capability in seamless and technical knit machinery.
New infrastructure supports R&D and scalability
A newly launched Textile Innovation Center brings together warp knitting, warp preparation, and technical textile development under one application-oriented facility. This physical hub enables rapid prototyping and co-development between machine makers, yarn suppliers, and end-product brands — shortening time-to-market for complex knit structures.
The center also addresses a persistent bottleneck: scaling lab-grade innovations into commercial production. According to the source, it serves as a bridge between fibre science — exemplified by Pitti Filati’s spotlight on knitting yarn innovations — and industrial deployment. Notably, Chanel strengthened its cashmere supply chain in 2026 by acquiring a stake in Todd & Duncan, a move reflecting growing brand-level control over premium raw material traceability and processing standards.
Regional dynamics shape sourcing geography
Geographic diversification is accelerating. India’s first hemp fibre-to-yarn chain now targets knitwear demand, while EU-backed initiatives aim to build an on-demand knit apparel network — reducing lead times and inventory risk. These efforts align with broader nearshoring and regionalisation pressures, especially within the EU regulatory environment where sustainability reporting and due diligence requirements intensify.
Supply chain professionals face practical implications: tighter vendor qualification criteria, increased scrutiny of energy consumption per unit output, and greater emphasis on modularity in production systems. As one industry observer noted, “
As flexible as the fabric that comes off our machines
— this isn’t just a slogan, it’s the new operational baseline for competitive knit sourcing.”
Source: knittingtradejournal.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










