If you have been sourcing interlining for sherwani or suit production in India, you have heard the number. “Give me 111 quality.” No GSM mentioned. No specification sheet needed. Just that number, and both sides of the transaction know exactly what is being discussed, 140 GSM woven fusible interlining, PA double-dot coated, 50-metre rolls.
At Double Ghoda, 111 quality is our most-ordered product. Buyers across Surat, Ludhiana, Delhi and Kolkata reach for it by name. But if you are newer to the market, or switching suppliers, or trying to understand whether it is the right specification for your production, this blog gives you the complete answer.
Table of Contents
- What 111 Quality Actually Means
- Why 140 GSM Became the Standard for Ethnic Formal Wear
- Where 111 Quality Is Used, Garment by Garment
- Full GSM Reference, Which Weight for Which Garment
- How to Verify Quality Before You Order in Bulk
- Ordering 111 Quality From Us

What 111 Quality Actually Means
111 quality is a trade name, not a brand, not a certification, not a global standard. It is market shorthand that has developed over decades in India’s ethnic formal wear manufacturing cluster, particularly in Surat. When garment manufacturers and interlining suppliers use the term, they are referring to one specific specification:
- 140 GSM — the fabric weight
- Woven base construction — threads interlocked in two directions, not bonded fibres
- PA double-dot coating — polyamide adhesive applied in a raised dot pattern
- 50-metre rolls — standard packing for this product
- 100% polyester — the base material
- Available in white, black and grey — the standard colour options
- 150 cm width — the standard width for cutting large front panels
That is the complete specification. When your production unit orders 111 quality from us, we supply exactly this, every time, with consistent quality across batches.
The name has survived because precision in trade communication has practical value. In a high-volume market where buyers and suppliers transact fast, a two-syllable reference that encodes an entire specification saves time and eliminates ambiguity. It also functions as a quality benchmark. Experienced manufacturers know what a properly fused 111 quality panel should feel like, structured, clean, consistent. If a roll does not perform to that standard, it is immediately recognisable.
Our woven fusible interlining carries OEKO-TEX Standard 100 certification, relevant if your production supplies garment brands or export markets that require certified inputs at every stage.
Why 140 GSM Became the Standard for Ethnic Formal Wear
To understand why 111 quality settled at 140 GSM, you need to understand what the outer fabrics in Indian ethnic formal wear demand from their interlining layer.
Sherwanis, bandhgalas, achkans and heavy occasion wear use outer fabrics that are significantly heavier than what Western formalwear uses. Brocade, raw silk, heavy polyester jacquard, embroidered surfaces, these carry weight. A light fusing cloth in the 40–80 GSM range, designed for shirts and lightweight jackets, simply disappears under that density. When you switch to the right weight, 111 quality fusing cloth at 140 GSM, the difference in your finished garment is immediate. It adds no meaningful structure. Your garment loses its front fall, its chest definition collapses, and the button stand goes soft.
140 GSM at woven construction holds because it matches the weight class of the outer fabric. It has enough density to resist the pull of heavy material without being overpowered by it.
Here is what 140 GSM delivers that lighter weights cannot:
- Holds the front body panel flat against heavy outer fabric, maintaining chest definition across the full length of a sherwani
- Keeps the button stand clean and consistent throughout the day
- Prevents drape collapse at the shoulder-to-hem transition, a common failure point on lighter-fused ethnic wear
- Maintains structure through professional dry-cleaning cycles, where lighter interlinings often delaminate or soften
- Supports embroidered and embellished surfaces without buckling under the additional surface weight
Below 140 GSM, say 120 GSM, your sherwani holds its shape initially but softens after the first dry-clean. The heavy outer fabric slowly overpowers a lighter interlining layer over time. Above 140 GSM, towards 150 GSM, the garment gains rigidity but loses the natural fall that makes woven construction the right choice over a sew-in canvas. 140 GSM is the balance point, where structure and wearability hold together.
PA double-dot coating: why it matters for your production
The coating on our body fusing is PA (Polyamide) double-dot, adhesive applied in tiny raised dots across the interlining surface rather than as a continuous film. For your production floor, this means:
- Faster fusing time under your press — more pieces per hour
- Cleaner finish on the face fabric — no adhesive bleed-through to the visible surface
- More uniform bond across the full front panel — reducing bubbling and lifting at stress points
- Bond integrity through dry-cleaning — PA holds through solvent cleaning, critical for sherwanis and bandhgalas cleaned professionally
Verified fusing parameters for our 111 quality woven interlining:
| Parameter | Specification |
| Temperature | 125°C – 145°C |
| Pressure | 1.5 – 2.5 kg/cm² |
| Time | 18 – 25 seconds |
| Care after fusing | Machine wash at 40°C / Dry clean |
Always run a sample fuse with your specific outer fabric at these settings before starting a full production run. Different outer fabrics, especially embroidered or coated surfaces, respond slightly differently under the press.

Where 111 Quality Is Used, Garment by Garment
Our buyers use 111 quality across a consistent set of garment applications. Here is where it works, and why:
- Sherwanis and achkans
The front body of a sherwani carries the silhouette of the entire garment. Getting the body fusing specification right here determines everything, front fall, chest definition, shape retention. It needs maximum body, dimensional stability, and resistance to the weight of heavy outer fabrics. 140 GSM woven construction holds that front fall through a full wedding day, standing, sitting, bending, without the panel shifting or softening. This is the single largest application for 111 quality in your production.
- Bandhgalas and Nehru jackets
A bandhgala’s defining feature is its clean, structured front, a precise vertical line from the chest down. Your lapels need to lie flat, your button band needs to hold without curling, and your chest definition needs to stay consistent from the first fitting to the hundredth wear. 111 quality at 140 GSM delivers that. The button-band of a bandhgala in particular benefits from the rigidity that woven construction provides at this GSM.
- Formal blazers and suit jackets
For any suit manufacturer application, whether Western cut, Indo-Western, or safari suit, the chest piece, front panel and lapels need woven construction. The 80–130 GSM range covers most blazer applications, but if your outer fabric is heavy, thick suiting fabric, heavy poly-wool blends, 140 GSM gives you the additional body that prevents the front panel from softening over time. Many interlining suit manufacturer buyers producing premium branded suits specify 111 quality as a standard input across their full jacket range.
- Heavy ethnic occasion wear
For wedding sherwanis, ceremonial achkans, and heavy brocade occasion pieces, where the outer fabric is at its heaviest and the wearing occasion is at its longest, 111 quality is the correct and only practical specification. No lighter weight holds through a full wedding day under a heavy brocade outer fabric.
What 111 quality is not used for:
Lighter Indo-Western jackets and casual formal wear — 80–100 GSM woven covers these applications without over-specifying
Shirt collars and cuffs — these need non-woven in the 30–60 GSM range, which is softer and more flexible
Shirt plackets — lighter non-woven handles this application correctly
Full GSM Reference, Which Weight for Which Garment
Our woven interlining range covers 22 GSM to 150 GSM — and the interlining fabric you choose from this range should directly match your outer fabric weight. Here is the practical reference our buyers use to match GSM to garment type:
| GSM Range | Recommended Application |
| 22–60 GSM | Collar interlinings, cuffs, kurta fronts, lightweight applications |
| 70–90 GSM | Light blazers, summer suits, structured kurtas, medium-weight formal jackets |
| 100–120 GSM | Men’s suits, structured blazers, lighter sherwanis, polyester outer fabrics |
| 130–140 GSM, 111 quality | Heavy sherwanis, bandhgalas, achkans, brocade outer garments, ceremonial ethnic formal wear |
| 150 GSM | Maximum structure, very heavy ceremonial wear |
If your production runs primarily sherwanis and heavy ethnic formal wear, 111 quality at 140 GSM covers the majority of your interlining requirement. For lighter garments in the same production, collars, cuffs, lighter jacket fronts, you need non-woven in the 30–60 GSM range. We supply both, which means you can consolidate your full interlining sourcing with us.
A practical note on GSM selection:
Your interlining GSM should relate to the weight of your outer fabric. A general starting point: your interlining should be at least 60–70% of your outer fabric GSM as a baseline, then adjusted up or down based on the structure level you want. For heavy brocade sherwani fabric, this calculation will consistently land you at 130–140 GSM.
If you are currently using 100–120 GSM for your sherwani production and your garments are losing their front fall after the first dry-clean, the fix is straightforward, move to 111 quality. That single specification change will resolve the issue.

How to Verify Quality Before You Order in Bulk
111 quality is a specification. Two rolls from different suppliers stating the same GSM can perform differently depending on base fabric consistency, coating quality, and roll-to-roll uniformity. Before you commit to a bulk order, whether with us or with any supplier, verify these four things:
- Dot uniformity
Hold the interlining fabric up to a light source. The adhesive dots should be evenly distributed across the full width, consistent density, no bare patches, no clustering. Uneven dots produce an uneven bond, which means soft spots on your fused panel that only become visible when your garment comes back from dry-cleaning.
- Peel strength
Fuse a test swatch at your standard press settings, 125–145°C, 1.5–2.5 kg/cm², 18–25 seconds. After cooling, attempt to peel the interlining from the outer fabric by hand. A properly bonded 140 GSM panel should resist clean separation. If it peels easily, the coating quality is substandard regardless of the stated GSM.
- Roll length accuracy
Each roll should measure 50 metres. Short-measure rolls are a known issue in the interlining supply market, a roll 1–2 metres short on a 6-roll-per-bale order compounds into material loss across large orders. Measure the first few rolls of any new shipment from any supplier.
- Dry-clean stability
Run one dry-clean cycle on a fused test piece before your production starts. Bond failure, delamination, bubbling, or panel softening, will show up here before it shows up on a finished garment returned from your customer. PA-coated 140 GSM should hold cleanly through the first cycle with no visible change.
Ordering 111 Quality From Us
We supply 111 quality, 140 GSM fusible interlining, in bulk to garment manufacturers, production houses and wholesalers across India. If you are sourcing fusible interlining wholesale India for sherwani, bandhgala, blazer or suit production, here is what your order looks like with us:
- GSM: 140 GSM (111 quality)
- Material: 100% Polyester
- Width: 150 cm
- Colours: White, Black, Grey
- Coating: PA Double-Dot
- Packing: 50 metres per roll, 6 rolls per bale
- MOQ: 1,000 metres per SKU
- Certification: OEKO-TEX Standard 100
- Supply cities: Surat, Ludhiana, Delhi, Kolkata, Chandigarh, Amritsar and across India
We supply wholesale only, no single-metre or retail orders.
If you are switching from a current supplier and want to test our 111 quality before committing to a bulk order, reach out to us directly. We can arrange a sample so you can fuse it against your outer fabric and verify the bond strength, surface finish and drape before you place your first order.
Link of related Articles
- Lightweight Interlining vs. Heavyweight Interlining
- A Beginner’s Guide to Interlining
- Choosing the Right Interlining

