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CreateMe, Avalo and Laguna Fabrics launch AI-powered apparel manufacturing ecosystem

Industry News, News | July 17, 2026 | By:

Stylized "CreateMe" logo featuring bold black text with an iridescent gradient effect on the "Me" portion.
Image: CreateMe

CreateMe Technologies, an AI robotics company, announced strategic partnerships with Avalo and Laguna Fabrics to introduce Seed to System, an initiative connecting domestic cotton textile manufacturing and robotic garment assembly into a single AI-assisted ecosystem.

Seed to System will initially launch as a pilot designed to demonstrate how a fully integrated apparel manufacturing system can work in practice. The assembly process begins in Texas, with Avalo’s AI-assisted climate-smart cotton innovation, which is then spun into fabric in California with Laguna Fabrics’ knitting and dyeing capabilities. Finally, CreateMe’s commercial-grade automated robotic assembly platform, MeRA and Pixel, produces the finished garments at its Newark, Calif.-based facility.

“At CreateMe, we believe the future of apparel manufacturing depends on building connected systems across material innovation, textile development and advanced automation,” says Cam Myers, founder and CEO of CreateMe. “This partnership is not about recreating legacy supply chains. It is about building a new foundation for apparel manufacturing, one powered by technical innovation, AI-assisted development and closer collaboration between next-generation partners. Together with Avalo and Laguna Fabrics, we are demonstrating how brands can unlock greater speed, resilience and responsiveness through a more connected manufacturing ecosystem.”

“Avalo leverages AI to naturally evolve cotton genetics to create more efficient and sustainable raw material production, while maintaining quality,” says Tricia Carey, COO of Avalo. “This technology creates much-needed resilience on the farm, and we are excited to partner with innovators that are using AI to deliver the same climate-smart efficiency to the rest of the supply chain.” 

“Laguna Fabrics is proud to help connect material innovation to scalable textile development,” says David Roshan, president of Laguna Fabrics. “Building a better apparel system requires practical infrastructure, and this partnership demonstrates how knitting, dyeing and manufacturing can work together in a more transparent and responsive way.”

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