Bartack Station
Bartack Machines
Programmable bartack heads — 28-stitch, 42-stitch and beyond. Belt loops, pocket corners, fly ends, shoulder straps. Pneumatic clamp, footswitch, fast cycle.
Finishing · Specialty Stations
Bartack, button-attach, buttonhole, label printer, snap-attach and small-scale embroidery heads — the high-cycle stations that quietly multiply the value on every piece. Stocked, demoed and serviced.
Why these stations earn their keep
A bartack on the belt loop, a clean buttonhole on the placket, a printed care label inside the seam — none of these add a stitch the customer notices, but each one is the difference between a piece that ships at piece-rate and one that ships with a price tag. Value-added stations earn their floor space because they convert sewing minutes into finished-garment minutes — which is what the buyer is actually paying for.
What we stock
The stations Indore floors actually deploy — from formal-shirt buttonholes to t-shirt label printers.
Bartack Station
Programmable bartack heads — 28-stitch, 42-stitch and beyond. Belt loops, pocket corners, fly ends, shoulder straps. Pneumatic clamp, footswitch, fast cycle.
Button Attach
Button-sewing heads for 2-hole and 4-hole flat buttons — programmable cycle, jam-detect, replaceable button-clamp jaws for sizes from shirt to coat buttons.
Buttonhole
Lockstitch buttonhole heads for shirts; eyelet buttonhole heads for trousers, jackets and uniforms. Programmable size and stitch density, with the gimp-thread option.
Label Printing
Thermal-transfer printers for care labels and barcode tags — prints on satin, taffeta and nylon ribbons, with carbon ribbons in stock. Bulk roll feed for export volumes.
Snap Attach
Pneumatic and manual snap-fastener and eyelet-attach stations — for jackets, denim, kids-wear and uniform shirts. Tooling sized to the snap supplier's standard.
Embroidery
Single-head, multi-needle embroidery for logos, monograms and small-batch decorative work — the value add on uniform shirts, polos and bag panels.
How to spec one of these stations
1 · Operation
Bartack on belt loops, lockstitch buttonhole on shirt placket, eyelet on trousers — tell us the operation, we'll suggest the head and cycle.
2 · Volume
Cycles per shift sets whether one station is enough or you need two — we'll size for headroom, not just current volume.
3 · Service
Programming, tooling change, daily maintenance — we set up the station and train the operator before we leave the floor.
More in Finishing
Press line
Steam irons, vacuum tables, fusing presses, form finishers and boilers — the press-line core that ships the garment.
See range →Hub
Browse every finishing line in one place — press, fusing, value-added stations and the spares that go with them.
Open the hub →Quote · Demo · Spares
Operation, cycle volume, fabric — that's enough to size the head. Demo on either showroom floor or on your line.