Postpartum support design
Develop postpartum shapewear with careful attention to adjustability, soft contact areas, breathable support, and clear usage guidance. HB Shaper can help brands turn a postpartum support concept into a controlled OEM/ODM sample brief.

Develop adjustable postpartum shapewear or faja-style support garments
Avoid harsh pressure around sensitive abdominal areas
Create buyer education around correct use without making medical claims
Prepare private-label postpartum products with conservative product language
Postpartum product pages should focus on design and comfort rather than medical outcomes.
Hook-and-eye rows, wrap panels, or staged closures can help users adjust support as body measurements change.
Fabric selection, seam placement, and panel construction should reduce harsh contact around sensitive areas.
A postpartum garment often needs stability and comfort for extended wear, so moisture management and lining choices matter.
Brands should avoid recovery guarantees and advise users to follow healthcare-professional guidance after birth or surgery.
Define whether the product is a belly wrap, faja, high-waist brief, shorts, bodysuit, or binder-style garment.
Select hook-and-eye, zipper, wrap, or mixed closures according to adjustability and target retail positioning.
Confirm which claims are product-design claims and which must be avoided or reviewed for compliance.
| Design choice | Buyer reason | Risk control |
|---|---|---|
| Hook-and-eye rows | Adjustable support | Check pressure and ease of use |
| Soft abdominal panel | Sensitive-area comfort | Avoid hard seams across key contact areas |
| Zipper plus hooks | Secure faja-style closure | Check skin guard and pull comfort |
| Breathable lining | Longer wear comfort | Validate opacity and recovery after washing |
| Usage guidance | Reduce confusion | Avoid medical recovery promises |
HB Shaper can help develop garments with C-section-friendly design considerations such as softer panels, adjustable compression, and careful seam placement. Product use after surgery should follow healthcare-professional guidance.
No. Public content should focus on garment design, support, comfort, and adjustability, and avoid promising healing, faster recovery, or medical results.
Share the garment type, target market, closure preference, support level, size range, material preference, packaging needs, and claim boundaries.
Send target market, size range, compression level, closure preference, and reference photos so the sample discussion starts with production-ready details.
Share your product brief, target market, size range, and expected quantity. We will review feasibility, sample direction, MOQ, and the next practical step.