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Business / Economy

Dark legacy of Fumian’s factories

By Li Yang (China Daily) Updated: 2014-02-11 00:51

"We target the town and county consumers in China. The decline in foreign demand has turned more quality jeans makers in Guangdong to our market segment," said Tang, 33, who was a street vendor in Shenzhen before opening his own jeans factory in 2012.

He employs 169 workers, including a designer and several salesmen, producing 600,000 pairs of jeans in the first year of operation and last year, 1 million pairs.

Like other workshops in Fumian, his building's three stories are used as a raw materials warehouse, design and sales departments, and a workshop. Finished pairs of jeans tumble down to waiting minivans via a cloth chute on the third floor.

At ground level are stored rolls of dark blue denim, produced locally in Guangdong and Zhejiang, and which give off a pungent dyestuff aroma that most locals say they don't even notice anymore.

In a dim second-floor office, a young woman in her 20s was looking at new designs online.

Of her job, Lin Xingxing said: "YZY is the one of the few factories employing a full-time designer. The fashion in jeans changes so fast, I must research the latest trends online and then create them for our customers."

On the passage wall were colorful posters and encouraging catchwords designed by Tang Yue himself.

"Work to buy your house, your car and work for a better life," said one, its red letters bright against a green background.

"I pay attention to management details and am trying my best to transform a workshop into a modern factory, like the ones I worked at in Guangdong," said Tang, who pays his workers according to how many pieces they make.

It takes dozens of different steps to create a pair of jeans from the cloth piled up on the ground floor.

Each step takes about five people to sew the sides together as well as the pockets, waistband, fly, zipper, etc. The semi-finished products are heaped on the floor and carried by hand from one sewing station to the next.

On a recent visit, no sound could be heard but that of about 100 sewing machines all running at top speed. The workers' hands were all dyed blue by the cloth they handle.

"Once the boss gets the product order, we start working like machines," said a worker in her 30s. "We work 10 hours a day at least and make about 2,000 yuan a month at most."

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