Fabric Weight Categories
Matching fabric weight to your pattern is crucial for the right drape and structure:
- **Lightweight** (voile, chiffon, silk): Flowy dresses, blouses, scarves. Needs careful handling.
- **Medium-weight** (cotton poplin, linen, chambray): T-shirts, button-downs, A-line skirts. Most versatile.
- **Medium-heavy** (denim, canvas, twill): Trousers, jackets, structured skirts. Holds shape well.
- **Heavy** (wool coating, melton): Coats, blazers. Needs sturdy needles and pressing.
Pattern-Specific Recommendations
•A-Line Skirt: Cotton poplin, linen, light denim — needs body but not too stiff
•T-Shirt: Jersey knit (cotton or cotton-modal blend) — must have stretch
•Button-Down Shirt: Cotton poplin, chambray, linen — crisp and breathable
•Wrap Dress: Rayon, viscose, crepe — needs drape for the wrap to flow
•Tailored Blazer: Wool suiting, ponte knit — structured with some give
•Wide-Leg Trousers: Crepe, linen, light wool — drapes but holds the wide leg shape
Fabric Preparation
1**Pre-wash**: Always wash fabric before cutting (shrinkage happens!)
2**Press**: Iron smooth before laying out pattern pieces
3**Check grain**: The selvage (factory edge) should be straight. Pull diagonally if needed to straighten grain
4**Right side**: Mark the right side with chalk or tape before cutting — some fabrics look identical on both sides
💡 Tip: Buy 10-15% more fabric than the pattern requires — it gives you room for matching prints and fixing mistakes.