Project Report for Shawls, Stoles, Scarves & Wraps

A well-written project report is crucial to proving business viability and obtaining bank loan clearance if you’re launching a shawl and stole manufacturing company. A project report for shawl and stole manufacturing is a CA-certified financial document required by banks and schemes like PMEGP, MUDRA, National Handloom Development Programme, and CGTMSE to sanction loans for shawl, stole, scarf, and wrap production units. At Sharda Associates, these reports start at ₹2,999 and are delivered in 24–48 hours.

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The Market That Your Project Report Needs to Establish Correctly

Traditional workmanship, evolving fashion trends, and growing domestic and international demand all contribute to India’s shawl and stole business. Products like silk stoles, woolen wraps, designer scarves, and pashmina shawls are frequently bought for everyday use, special events, business gifts, and exports. The target market, product line, and consumer segments that your company plans to cater to should all be explained in detail in a project report.

The growing demand from international buyers, fashion retailers, boutiques, wholesalers, and e-commerce platforms must also be highlighted in the report. Manufacturers who offer distinctive designs, superior fabrics, and consistent quality have a lot of chances due to the growing consumer preference for handcrafted, sustainable, and premium-quality textiles. The project’s commercial feasibility is strengthened by identifying these demand factors. 

A thorough market analysis encompassing competitors, price strategy, production capacity, and possible sales channels should be included in your project report. It should show how your company will set itself apart through branding, quality, customization, prompt delivery, or economical manufacture. This aids lenders in comprehending your planned unit’s competitive advantage. Lastly, the study should provide reasonable demand forecasts, revenue estimations, and growth prospects to bolster the market evaluation. 

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Product Range and Buyer Channels

Product

Fabric

Production Method

Target Market

Price Range

Acrylic printed stole

Acrylic blends

Power loom or knitting machine

Fast fashion, retail, export

₹120–350

Viscose fashion scarf

Viscose or modal

Power loom + digital print

Boutiques, online

₹300–900

Wool/acrylic winter shawl

Wool blend

Power loom

Mass retail, institutional gifting

₹400–1,200

Pure wool Kullu shawl

Pure wool

Handloom

Premium retail, export

₹1,500–5,000

Pashmina blend stole

Pashmina/wool

Handloom

Luxury retail, export

₹3,000–15,000

Silk/cotton wrap

Silk blend

Power loom or handloom

Boutiques, wedding market

₹800–3,500

Digital print beach wrap

Lightweight polyester

Screen/digital print

Export, resort retail

₹200–600

Manufacturing Process

Fabric procurement is the cornerstone of a company that makes shawls and stoles. Textile mills or traders—Surat for synthetic and blended fabrics, Ludhiana for woolen fabrics, and Varanasi for silk fabrics—provide rolls of fabric for a power loom or clothing manufacturing facility. Retail approval of the final product is determined by the drape, color fastness, and fabric quality. 

Design and pattern development determines the color scheme, fringe or border requirements, printed patterns or woven motifs, and stole proportions for every collection. Seasonal design development is the most significant competitive difference for a unit that focuses on fashion. 

Fabric spreading and cutting minimizes wastage in the cutting plan by laying fabric in many plies on the cutting table in accordance with the stole proportions, which are normally 70 x 200 cm for a conventional stole and 55 x 180 cm for a scarf. A band knife or straight knife may cut through several layers at once. 

Edge finishing is the most labor-intensive and crucial stage in the production of stoles. Options include overlock finishing, machine hemming (the quickest and least expensive method), hand-rolled hemming (premium feel, ideal for silk and fine wool), or fringe production (cutting the cloth at regular intervals and either tying or leaving the threads as decorative fringe). Retail price perception is greatly impacted by fringe quality, which is a visible premium indication. 

What Your Sharda Associates Project Report Will Cover

Each shawl and stole manufacturing project report is constructed around your particular market sector, such as a handloom artisan cooperative, fashion stole production, or mass market clothing unit, with the proper financial framework for each. Your product line, production capacity, target channel, and credit requirements are all determined in the executive summary. India’s fashion accessories market, export routes via clothing buying houses, and prospects for handloom promotion schemes are all covered by market analysis. 

The fabric cost per piece (usually 40–55% of manufacturing costs), the cost of cutting and stitching, the cost of printing and embellishment when necessary, the selling price through wholesale, retail, and export channels, and the net profitability over a five-year period are all included in the financial predictions. The paper is completed with a break-even analysis, a loan repayment plan with DSCR, and a compliance checklist. 

Investment and Financial Overview

₹15–50 lakh is needed for a small power loom-based stole and scarf manufacturing facility with 5–15 machines that can produce 300–800 pieces daily. It costs ₹10–35 lakh for a handloom artisan unit with 10–20 weavers to produce high-quality stoles. Including the fabric printer, a digital print-focused manufacturing business needs between ₹20 to 60 lakh. 

Depending on the product tier, gross margins might vary from 25% to 55%. The yield of mass-market acrylic stoles is 22–28%. 30–42% are produced by midmarket fashion stoles. 40–60% of premium handlooms and pashmina are produced. 30–45% is the yield from export supplies. 

PMEGP covers units up to ₹50 lakh with 15–35% subsidy. National Handloom Development Programme (NHDP) provides specific support for handloom shawl and stole manufacturers — subsidized yarn, design inputs, and marketing support. MUDRA Tarun covers ₹10–50 lakh without collateral. CGTMSE provides guarantee up to ₹2 crore.

Why Choose Sharda Associates

  1. Segment-Specific Financial Structure — Mass market, fashion, and handloom have completely different cost structures and margin profiles. We model your segment correctly.
  2. Handloom Scheme Documentation — NHDP, handloom mark, and GI tag benefits are documented for eligible artisan and handloom units.
  3. CA-Certified, Bank-Accepted — Accepted by SBI, PNB, Bank of Baroda, and all major banks.
  4. 45,500+ Reports Delivered — Including garment, textile, and handloom manufacturing units.
  5. 24–48 Hour Delivery — ₹2,999 onwards, free revision if your bank requests changes.
  6. Export Channel Revenue Modelled — Buying house export pricing for stoles and scarves is significantly above domestic wholesale and we model it correctly.
  7. Starting at ₹2,999 • Delivery in 24–48 Hours. +91 89899 77769.

Frequently Asked Questions

A CA-certified document covering manufacturing process, fabric sourcing, cutting and finishing, investment cost, financial projections, and loan documentation for PMEGP, MUDRA, and NHDP applications for shawl, stole, scarf, and wrap manufacturing units.

Sharda Associates prepares project reports for both — power loom-based mass and mid-market stole units and handloom artisan shawl units. Each has a different financial structure, government scheme eligibility, and project report format.

 Power loom unit with 5–15 machines: ₹15–50 lakh. Handloom artisan unit with 10–20 weavers: ₹10–35 lakh. Digital print-focused stole business: ₹20–60 lakh.

 Yes, as a manufacturing unit with project cost up to ₹50 lakh and 15–35% non-repayable subsidy.

The National Handloom Development Programme provides subsidized yarn, design input support, weaver training, and marketing assistance for handloom manufacturers. Handloom mark certification and GI tag for regional varieties (Kullu, Kashmiri, Chanderi) enable premium pricing in domestic and export markets.

22–28% gross for mass market acrylic stoles. 30–42% for mid-market fashion stoles. 40–60% for premium handloom and pashmina. Export supply 30–45%.

 Yes, actively. India is a major global exporter of wool, pashmina, and silk stoles and shawls — particularly to Europe, the US, Japan, and the Middle East. Export requires Import Export Code and AEPC registration.

 Factory licence, Udyam/MSME registration, GST registration, AEPC (Apparel Export Promotion Council) registration for export, handloom mark certification for handloom products, and IEC.