Sourcing is where you tell Mesh where the blanks are coming from.

Do this right and the job moves fast.
Do it wrong and everything slows down.

The goal

For every order, Mesh needs to know:

You’ll do this on the Sourcing page.


Suppliers & Purchase Orders

Add the supplier + PO that covers the blanks for this job. If you haven't already, you can setup frequently used vendors on the settings page so they are easily accessible.

What matters most:


Where blanks ship from

This is how we keep receiving clean.

When you designate a supplier and PO we always know “Where blanks ship from” so we always know what to expect when UPS shows up. We match up the PO you give us in mesh, to the PO you designate with your vendor. This is how we locate your drop shipped garments.


Start simple: one part, one PO

Best case:

That’s the cleanest workflow.

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But shirt happens, and sometimes different parts have to ship from different suppliers, or one part has to split between different sources. Mesh will account either situation.


Split shipments

Use Split shipments when blanks for the same order arrive in more than one shipment.

Common reasons:

When you split shipments, you’ll assign sizes to each shipment (Mesh calls these assigned sizes).

Keep it simple:

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Submitting from Sourcing

Most of the time you’ll:

  1. Build the draft (parts, styles, sizes, files)
  2. Go to Sourcing
  3. Add supplier + PO(s)
  4. Split shipments if needed (hopefully not)
  5. Submit the order

Common mistakes (and how to avoid them)

Mixing multiple shipments without splitting
If blanks arrive in waves, use Split shipments.

Putting “everything” on one PO when it isn’t true
If two suppliers are involved, split it. Clean sourcing beats cleanup later.

Submitting without enough sourcing info
If we can’t tell what’s arriving and when, the job will usually hit a hold.


Quick checklist

Before you submit: