| Shading Process Badminton raw frames are to be polished, such that all sands and extra glues generated from the molding process are removed and the racket surfaces are smoothed out. |
| Filling process After polishing, some portions of the racket might still be uneven or even have some small holds. The polishing process removes the portions that stick out unnecessarily, and then the filling process fills in the places that have some carbons missing. |
| Drilling process
Drilling process is to dig holes on the surface of the badminton racket. These holes will be used to place grommets and later to hold strings on the mesh. Drilling is a critical process as any mis-positioned drilling hole will render the entire racket frame useless. |
| Fixing handle process Wooden handles are sticked onto the far-end of the badminton frames in this process. |
| Painting process Colors are painted onto the polished badminton racket frames in this process. Different colors and patterns mark different brand, series and special features of the badminton racket. |
| Paint Drying Process Painted rackets need to be placed into a place to dry up with sufficient ventilation, so that the paintings will become permanent and persistent. It can take up to 35 hours for the entire drying process. Exact drying time depends on the type of painting. |
| Water marking process This process puts watermarks (pre-designed stickers or personalized stickers) onto the racket. This is also the place where Postsky Ltd. takes customers' personalized designs and put them onto the rackets. |
| Grommet process Grommets are placed into the holes on the racket's surface. Mesh strings will later go through the grommets on the frame. |