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Fabriclore is a tech-enabled fabric sourcing platform based in Jaipur, India, that provides customization, printing, and dyeing services for fashion businesses and private labels. The company transitioned from a direct-to-consumer retail model to a business-to-business focus in 2023 to address supply chain inefficiencies within the broader $20 billion fabric market. Operating with 82 employees, the platform manages a catalog of 10,000 stock-keeping units sourced from over 550 suppliers. Fabriclore has raised $1.6 million in total funding from lead investors including PeerCapital and Regal Group, under the direction of managing director Raju Shroff, following an appearance on Shark Tank India. The enterprise currently serves more than 250 business clients globally, building upon a historical user base of over 300,000 retail customers. Fabriclore was founded in 2016 by Vijay Sharma, Anupam Deo Arya, and Sandeep Sharma.
Fabriclore has raised $2.5M across 3 funding rounds.
Fabriclore has raised $2.5M in total across 3 funding rounds.
Fabriclore has raised $2.5M across 3 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $1.6M Other Equity in July 2024.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jul 3, 2024 | $1.6M Venture Round | PeerCapital, Regal Fabrics | — | Announced |
| Dec 1, 2021 | $660K Seed | — | Agility Ventures | Announced |
| Sep 1, 2021 | $240K Seed | — | Agility Ventures | Announced |
Fabriclore has raised $2.5M in total across 3 funding rounds.
Fabriclore's investors include PeerCapital, Regal Fabrics, Agility Ventures.
Fabriclore is a tech-enabled B2B platform specializing in custom fabric sourcing, design, printing, and processing for fashion brands, particularly small and mid-sized labels globally.[1][2][3][4] Founded in 2016 in Jaipur, Rajasthan, India, it integrates over 50 mills, printers, and dyers into a one-stop solution offering 300+ fabric varieties with low minimum order quantities (MoQs), AI-driven processes, and in-house quality inspection, serving over 500 fashion businesses worldwide after pivoting to B2B in 2023.[1][2][4] The platform solves supply chain inefficiencies by enabling made-to-order fabrics at wholesale prices, reducing delays by 20% and rejections by 33%, with strong growth evidenced by ₹22.59 Cr in funding, 55 employees, and a 10,000 sqft fulfillment center.[1][2]
Fabriclore began in 2016 as an experiment by three colleagues—Vijay Sharma, Sandeep Sharma, and Anupam Arya—with no prior fashion industry experience, testing if fabrics could be sold online from Jaipur, India.[1][3] Over three years, they built India's largest online fabric portfolio, attracting 3 lakhs+ customers and establishing a digital-first brand.[3] A pivotal pivot to B2B in 2023 addressed the unmet needs of fashion businesses for simplified, low-MoQ sourcing, leveraging their accumulated expertise in textiles, leading to onboarding over 400 private labels and expansion into physical Fabric Experience Studios.[1][3]
Fabriclore rides the wave of digital transformation in textiles, addressing fragmented supply chains in India's $200B+ industry by tech-enabling sourcing for a rising global demand in sustainable, customizable fashion amid fast fashion's decline.[1][2] Timing aligns with post-2023 B2B pivot capitalizing on e-commerce growth and low-MoQ needs for D2C brands, amplified by India's textile export push and AI/automation trends reducing inefficiencies.[1][3] It influences the ecosystem by democratizing access to high-quality, artisanal fabrics for indie designers, fostering innovation in sustainable apparel while bridging traditional mills with modern fashion hubs domestically and internationally.[1][4]
Fabriclore is poised for scaled global expansion, replicating its Fabric Experience Studio model in key hubs and enhancing AI for predictive sourcing, potentially capturing more of the underserved small-brand segment amid rising sustainable fashion demand.[1][3] Trends like supply chain resilience, eco-fabrics, and digital printing will propel growth, evolving its influence from India-centric innovator to a pivotal global B2B enabler for agile fashion businesses. This positions it to weave deeper into the fabric of tech-disrupted textiles, empowering creators without scale barriers—just as its 2016 experiment proved fabrics belong in the digital age.[3]