Features and advantages of computerized quilting machines

January 4, 2026

Computerized quilting machines employ a completely new quilting process, offering advantages far superior to traditional quilting. Hand quilting is inefficient, time-consuming, complex, and costly; for factories requiring mass production, hand quilting has been largely replaced by machine quilting.


Computerized quilting machines break away from the traditional needle-type threaded quilting, eliminating thread breakage and missed stitches, resulting in more novel and aesthetically pleasing products. They eliminate the broken thread joints common in traditional thread sewing, providing strong adhesion, clear embossing, and a more three-dimensional, embossed surface, making the products appear more upscale and attractive. They can sew a wide variety of complex discontinuous and symmetrical patterns, and various designs can be developed according to customer requirements.


Pleated fabric is a garment processing material, specifically the quilting patterns used in garment factories (such as those on the lining of coats). "Pleated fabric" refers to cotton-padded clothing, a general term for quilted garments. Furthermore, regardless of whether quilting is done by hand or machine, the lining fabric experiences shrinkage. Shrinkage ranges from 8% to 10%, depending on the density of the shape.


Hand quilting involves sewing row by row by a seamstress, which is inefficient and cannot guarantee that every quilting panel is exactly the same size on every garment; they may appear similar in appearance. Computerized quilting machines, on the other hand, can adjust the machine according to shape and size requirements, quilting a large area at once to ensure uniformity in shape and size. Computerized quilting machines are faster, have longer working hours, and are more efficient than hand quilting.