100% Organic Sugarcane Fiber Plain Fabric
| SKU | AYURSUG12 |
|---|---|
| Color |
Natural White
|
| MOQ | 5 |
| Material | Sugarcane |
| GSM | 110 to 120 |
| Composition | 100% sugarcane |
| Finish | RFD |
| Weave | Plain |
- In stock, ready to ship
- Backordered, shipping soon
100% Organic Sugarcane Fiber Plain Fabric – 110–120 GSM, RFD, Natural & Azo-Free Dye Friendly
This 100% organic sugarcane fiber plain fabric is a beautiful choice if you are looking for something light, breathable, and genuinely eco-conscious. With a GSM of 110–120, it feels airy yet reliable, making it ideal for shirts, summer dresses, kids’ wear, linings, and everyday sustainable clothing.
The fabric comes in a simple plain weave, so the surface is smooth, clean, and perfect if you love neat, minimal fabrics that take color and prints really well. It is RFD (Ready for Dye), which means it is already prepared for coloring, so you can directly use natural dyes or azo-free dyes without extra hassle in processing.
Machine wash cold or hand wash at a maximum of 30°C, dry in shade only, and use a low-temperature iron if needed.
5 to 7 working days
1. What is 100% Sugarcane Fiber Plain Fabric used for clothing?
It is a light plain‑weave fabric made from 100% sugarcane‑derived cellulosic fibre, usually in the 110–120 GSM range and supplied in natural white, RFD (Ready for Dye). It gives brands a plant‑based alternative to regular cotton or polyester plains for everyday apparel.
2. How does sugarcane fabric feel compared with cotton?
Sugarcane fibre fabrics are generally smooth, breathable, and comfortable, with a clean, neat hand feel when woven in plain weave, sitting somewhere between soft cotton and a fine viscose‑style fabric.
3. Is 110–120 GSM sugarcane fabric too light for real garments?
No. This GSM band is widely used for shirting, summer dresses, kids’ wear, and linings because it feels airy but still has enough body for everyday clothing when patterns and colours are chosen well.
4. What does the plain weave add to this fabric?
Plain weave gives a flat, even surface that makes colours and prints look sharp and helps the fabric cut cleanly and sew predictably in a production line.
5. What are the most common uses for sugarcane plain fabric?
Sourcing teams usually place this quality into shirts, dresses, blouses, kids’ wear, casual trousers, and natural linings for garments that need to be light, breathable, and easy to wear.
6. Is sugarcane fabric a good option for kids’ and family clothing?
Yes. Because it is breathable and comfortable, sugarcane fibre works well for family basics and kids’ garments when processed with skin‑safe dyes and finishes, similar to other plant‑based garment fabrics.
7. How does this fabric perform in hot, humid weather?
Sugarcane‑based cellulosic fibres can be engineered for good moisture handling and airflow, so the fabric tends to feel cooler and more comfortable than many synthetic plains in warm conditions.
8. Can this fabric be used as a natural lining instead of polyester?
Yes. At 110–120 GSM, it works as a lightweight, plant‑based lining for dresses, summer jackets, and skirts, ideal when you want the entire garment to follow a more eco‑aware material story.
9. What does “RFD – Ready for Dye” actually mean for my dye house?
RFD means the fabric has already been cleaned and prepared, so your dyeing or printing process can start directly, without extra scouring or heavy pre‑treatment steps.
10. Can this sugarcane fabric be dyed with natural colourants?
Yes. As a cellulosic textile, it can be dyed with many natural dye systems, which suits slow‑fashion and botanical dye projects.
11. Is it suitable for azo‑free reactive dyes?
It can also be dyed with azo‑free reactive dyes, giving brighter, repeatable shades while aligning better with restricted‑substance expectations when the right dyestuffs are used.
12. How do prints and solid colours look on this surface?
The smooth plain weave helps solid colours appear even and makes digital or screen prints look crisp and tidy—important for brands that rely on neat, minimal aesthetics in sustainable apparel fabrics.
13. What is a realistic wash routine for sugarcane plain fabric garments?
A sensible care label could recommend: gentle or normal wash in cool to mild water, mild detergent, avoid chlorine bleach, and line‑dry in shade or low tumble, with a light iron or steam if needed.
14. Will this fabric shrink, and should I pre‑wash bulk rolls?
Like other light cellulosic fabrics, some shrinkage is normal, so pre‑washing or pre‑shrinking yardage before cutting is good practice for production orders.
15. Is sugarcane fibre strong enough for everyday shirts and dresses?
Research shows sugarcane‑based cellulosic fibres can reach strength levels appropriate for apparel when produced correctly, making them suitable for regular clothing and home textiles.
16. Does it crease easily in wearing?
It can pick up creases like many natural fashion textiles, but wrinkles generally respond well to steaming or a quick press, especially when garments are stored and finished properly.
17. What is the MOQ for 100% Sugarcane Fiber Plain Fabric?
The minimum order quantity is 5 metres, giving brands and designers enough fabric for sample sets or small trial runs before committing to bigger volumes.
18. When do you offer wholesale or bulk pricing for this quality?
Once a single order goes beyond 100 metres, Ayurkruti can offer bulk or wholesale pricing, which is useful for garment factories and export programs planning seasonal production.
19. Do you export sugarcane fibre fabrics to US and European buyers?
Yes. Sugarcane fibre plains are part of a wider move towards bio‑based textiles, and Ayurkruti supplies these fabrics from India to brands in the USA, Europe, and other markets that favour plant‑based garment fabrics.
20. Can sourcing teams request technical sheets and test data?
Technical details such as GSM band, approximate width, weave, and composition, along with standard test reports, can be shared so that buying teams can plug the fabric into their internal QA and compliance checks.
21. Why is sugarcane fibre considered a responsible textile choice?
Sugarcane bagasse and leaf residues are abundant by‑products; turning that cellulose into fibre provides a value‑added route instead of burning or discarding it. This supports more circular use of agricultural resources.
22. Is 100% sugarcane fibre fabric biodegradable?
Sugarcane‑derived cellulosic fibres can be biodegradable under suitable conditions, which helps reduce long‑term microplastic build‑up compared with many synthetic woven fabrics.
23. How can brands talk about sugarcane fabric without over‑claiming?
Most brands focus on clear, factual points: the fabric is made from sugarcane‑based cellulose, it is a plant‑origin textile, and it can be part of a move towards bio‑based and lower‑impact material mixes, alongside honest statements about dyeing, finishing, and certification where available.
24. How can I quickly check if this fabric works for my collection?
You can contact Ayurkruti with your intended use (shirts, dresses, kids’ wear, linings), GSM preference within 110–120, and colour direction, and request swatches or initial yardage. This lets your team test hand feel, sewing, and dye/print results in your own patterns before scaling to bulk orders with a sugarcane fibre fabric that fits both design and sourcing objectives.