Ticket and item numbering
Give the order and each required item a usable identity from the counter.
Keep the customer order and every garment connected through labels, item identity, production status, exceptions, assembly and final release.
The purpose of garment tracking is not simply to scan a barcode. It is to prevent the ticket from becoming separated from the physical items, show where work is held up, record exceptions and ensure every garment returns to the correct customer order.
DCME connects the practical steps that happen across a garment-care business rather than treating every order as a simple retail sale.
Give the order and each required item a usable identity from the counter.
Use the identification method that matches the service, material and production environment.
See received, cleaning, finishing, quality, re-clean, assembly, ready and collected states.
Record missing, damaged, delayed, re-clean or clarification items without losing the customer link.
Match garments back to the correct ticket before bagging and completion.
Add RFID garment identification and automated assembly where the hardware and operation justify it.
Each stage keeps the customer, ticket, items, payment and operational status connected.
Generate the ticket and item references used by the counter and factory.
Apply tags, labels, barcodes or configured RFID identifiers.
Record the meaningful production stage rather than allowing garments to disappear between departments.
Hold the item in a visible exception or re-clean process with notes and responsibility.
Confirm all items, complete the order and release only to the correct customer or route.
The system can be configured around the services, people, locations and reporting requirements of the business.
Choose the correct level of control.
Know the meaningful status.
Reduce avoidable loss and error.
DCME can support a single operation, a plant with agencies, or a connected multi-store group without forcing every business into the same operating model.
Use ticket and item identification to keep orders controlled from drop-off to pickup.
Add department and assembly visibility across a larger production process.
Connect item identity to auto assembly, slick rails, conveyors and production equipment.
Clear software decisions come from clear questions. These answers describe DCME’s current product direction and commercial terms.
View all FAQsNo. Ticket, tag, label and barcode workflows can provide effective control. RFID is an optional pathway for operations that need greater automation.
Yes. Re-clean and exception states can remain attached to the item and ticket.
Yes. Assembly and completion workflows are designed to confirm garments against the correct order.
Book a practical demonstration using your store type, services, terminal requirements and future technology plan.