Kids Socks Manufacturer
Children's sock production for brands and retailers. Soft skin-friendly yarns, accurate size grading, safe construction, fun designs. OEM and private label.
Children's socks have requirements adults' socks do not: skin-friendly yarns, careful size grading across narrow age bands, secure but gentle fit, and constructions that hold up to active wear and frequent washing. Designs lean playful, and safety and softness sit at the front of the brief. For childrenswear brands, retailers and gift ranges, the manufacturer needs to handle small sizes accurately and choose materials suited to young skin. EGE SOCKS produces kids' socks from its factory in Türkiye on private label and OEM bases.
This page is for childrenswear and baby brands, family retailers, and buyers building children's sock ranges or gift sets.
What kids' socks need
The priorities are softness against the skin, a fit that stays up without pinching, durability through play and washing, and accurate sizing across age bands. Designs are usually bright and patterned, but the construction underneath has to be gentle and reliable. Avoiding bulky seams and harsh elastic is part of getting kids' socks right.
Sizing and grading
Children's sizing is unforgiving because feet change quickly and ranges are split into many small bands (for example by age or shoe size). Accurate grading across these bands is essential so every size fits as intended. The size set and grading rules should be specified clearly in the tech pack, since a kids' range often carries more sizes than an adult range.
Materials and yarn
Soft, skin-friendly yarns lead here. Combed cotton is gentler and stronger than carded; bamboo viscose is prized for softness; a small amount of polyamide and elastane gives the stretch needed to stay up without a tight band. Skin contact and comfort guide the blend more than in adult ranges. EGE SOCKS works with combed cotton, bamboo, polyester, polyamide, elastane and blends, and references OEKO-TEX standards relevant to skin-contact textiles.
Construction and comfort
Comfort details matter more for children: a smooth or hand-linked toe avoids a seam that rubs little toes, a gentle ribbed cuff stays up without leaving marks, and reinforced heel and toe handle active wear. Needle count (156 or 200 needle on the machines used here) is chosen for the look and feel — finer gauge for smoother patterned socks, with cushioning where wanted.
Designs and branding
Kids' ranges are design-led: bright colours, characters of your own design, motifs and patterns knitted in. Branding is usually on packaging, with knitted or embroidered marks where suitable. (We do not reproduce third-party licensed characters; designs should be your own or properly licensed by you.)
Packaging
Children's socks are commonly sold in fun header cards, multipack bands, gift boxes and polybags, with bright printed artwork, barcodes and export labelling. Multipacks of mixed designs are popular.
MOQ, sampling and lead time
Kids' ranges carry many sizes and often many designs, so plan MOQ per colour and design with sizing in mind. Samples are usually ready in about 5–7 days once designs, colours and sizes are set. Bulk production usually runs around 3–4 weeks, depending on the number of sizes and designs, quantity and packaging.
Quality control
Quality control for kids' socks pays special attention to safe, comfortable construction: smooth toe seams, gentle elastic that recovers without being tight, no loose ends, accurate sizing to the grade, colour match to lab dips, yarn inspection and final packing. OEKO-TEX references are particularly relevant for skin-contact children's products. ISO 9001 standards apply to the production environment.
Export and B2B considerations
Confirm Incoterms (EXW or FOB are common), arrange export documentation, note HS code classification, and add transit time to port. Be aware that some markets have specific labelling or safety expectations for children's products; confirm your destination's requirements.
Preparing your inquiry
Provide: the full size set and grading rules, design artwork (your own or licensed), Pantone/TPX colours, preferred soft yarn, packaging artwork, and quantities per size, colour and design. Clear grading and a complete size set prevent fit problems later.
Technical Specification Table
| Specification | Typical options |
|---|---|
| Product type | Children's / baby socks |
| Sizing | Multiple age/shoe-size bands with accurate grading |
| Yarns | Combed cotton, bamboo, polyamide, elastane, blends |
| Needle count | 156 or 200 needle |
| Construction | Smooth/hand-linked toe, gentle ribbed cuff, reinforced heel/toe |
| Designs | Bright colours, motifs, your own characters |
| Branding | Packaging-led, optional knitted/embroidered mark |
| Packaging | Header card, multipack band, gift box, polybag |
| Sampling | Usually ~5–7 days |
| Bulk lead time | Usually ~3–4 weeks |
- What yarn is best for children's skin?
- Soft combed cotton and bamboo blends are common, with a little elastane for stretch. OEKO-TEX references are relevant for skin-contact products.
- How do you handle the many sizes in a kids' range?
- We work to the size set and grading rules in your tech pack; clear grading is essential because kids' ranges carry many narrow bands.
- Will the cuff be too tight?
- A gentle ribbed cuff with measured elastane stays up without pinching; we confirm the fit on the sample.
- Can you make socks with our own characters?
- Yes, with your own or properly licensed artwork. We do not reproduce third-party licensed characters.
- Do you produce mixed-design multipacks?
- Yes — mixed-design multipacks in bands or boxes are popular for children's ranges.
- Are there special requirements for selling kids' socks abroad?
- Some markets have specific labelling or safety expectations for children's products; confirm your destination's requirements when planning.
Start a sock production inquiry
Send a reference, a rough quantity, or a question. You will get a reply within one business day with indicative pricing, lead times, and the next step toward a sample.
