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Understanding Our Ratings

Every material in FabricIQ is scored across 7 axes to give you a complete picture of quality, comfort, and sustainability.

Letter Grades

Each material gets an overall score from 0-100, which maps to a letter grade:

A

85-100

Excellent

B

70-84

Good

C

55-69

Average

D

40-54

Below Avg

F

0-39

Poor

The 7 Quality Axes

A single "quality" number doesn't tell you much. A winter jacket needs warmth, not breathability. Running gear needs moisture wicking, not warmth. That's why we rate every material across 7 independent axes:

Durability
85

How well does it hold up over time? Resistance to pilling, tearing, and wear. High-durability fabrics like nylon and polyester last years; delicate silks and cashmere need more care.

Comfort
90

How does it feel against your skin? Softness, drape, and lack of irritation. Cotton and modal score high; raw wool and some synthetics can feel scratchy.

Breathability
75

How well does air flow through? Critical for warm weather and active use. Linen and cotton breathe well; polyester and nylon trap heat.

Warmth
60

How well does it insulate? Important for winter and layering. Wool, cashmere, and down excel; cotton and linen provide little warmth.

Moisture Wicking
70

How well does it pull sweat away from your body? Essential for athletic wear. Merino wool and technical polyester lead; cotton absorbs and holds moisture.

Sustainability
65

Environmental impact across the lifecycle — production, use, and disposal. Organic cotton and linen score high; conventional polyester and acrylic score low.

Care Ease
80

How easy is it to wash and maintain? Machine-washable cotton is easy; dry-clean-only silk and cashmere are not.

How Blend Scoring Works

Most clothing isn't made from a single material. When you analyze a blend like "60% Cotton, 40% Polyester," we:

  1. 1. Score each material individually across all 7 axes
  2. 2. Calculate weighted averages based on percentage (60% cotton weight + 40% polyester weight)
  3. 3. Detect synergies — cotton + spandex = breathability + stretch
  4. 4. Flag conflicts — high synthetic + natural reduces biodegradability
  5. 5. Merge care instructions using the most restrictive settings across all materials

The result: a single scorecard that tells you exactly what your clothing is good at, what to watch out for, and how to care for it properly.

Other Indicators

Biodegradable

Material will naturally decompose. Cotton, wool, linen, and silk are biodegradable. Polyester, nylon, and acrylic are not.

Fast Fashion

Commonly used in low-quality, disposable clothing. Not inherently bad, but often indicates lower quality construction and shorter lifespan.

Shrinkage

Risk level from None to High. Cotton and wool shrink; polyester and nylon generally don't. Follow care instructions to minimize shrinkage.

Cost $-$$$$$

Relative price indicator. $ = budget-friendly (polyester, basic cotton). $$$$$ = premium (cashmere, mulberry silk).

Try It Yourself

Enter your clothing tag composition and see how it scores.

Analyze a Tag