Practical sewing guide

How to Add or Remove Seam Allowance

Trace a reliable seam line, offset it by a chosen allowance, handle corners and curves, and verify adjoining pattern pieces before cutting.

Reviewed by Sew Measure editorial review on .

Adding seam allowance means drawing a cut line at a consistent perpendicular distance outside a seam line. Removing seam allowance means finding the seam line at that distance inside the cut edge. The operation sounds simple on a rectangle, but corners, curves, notches, and intersecting seam lines need care. Work from a copy of the pattern, keep the original unchanged, and confirm whether the source already includes allowances before moving any line.

Label the seam line and cut line explicitly. A ruler held at an angle does not preserve the intended offset. On straight edges, make several perpendicular marks at the chosen distance and connect them. On curves, use a seam gauge, compass, pattern tool, or many short perpendicular marks. The offset curve is not created by enlarging the shape from its center; it follows the seam line locally.

Adding allowance to a rectangle

For a rectangular piece, add the left and right allowances to finished width and the top and bottom allowances to finished height. The allowances may differ. A zipper edge might use one value while a hem uses another. Extend neighboring edge lines until they meet at the new cut corner. Transfer grainlines, labels, placement marks, and notches after the new perimeter is established.

On a shaped piece, decide how seam allowances meet at corners. A pattern may use square corners, miter-related extensions, or shaped seam allowances intended to reduce bulk. Preserve any construction-specific treatment from the instructions. Adding a uniform number without considering how seams intersect can leave a corner too short after folding.

Worked example

A self-drafted pocket is intended to finish 16 centimeters wide by 20 centimeters high. The side and bottom seams need 1 centimeter. The top will turn twice and needs a total 4-centimeter hem allowance. Enter finished width 16, left 1, and right 1, producing an 18-centimeter cut width. Enter finished height 20, top 4, and bottom 1, producing a 25-centimeter cut height.

To remove those allowances later, mark 1 centimeter inward from the left, right, and bottom cut edges and 4 centimeters inward from the top. The resulting seam or finished rectangle returns to 16 by 20 centimeters. This reversal is a useful check: adding and then removing the same named allowances should recover the original finished dimensions.

Offset each edge from the controlling finished lineAn original planning sketch comparing finished line, edge offset, new cut line.finished lineedge offsetnew cut line
Offset each edge from the controlling finished line. Written dimensions and the verification checklist control.

Curves, notches, and adjoining pieces

After offsetting a curve, “walk” the seam lines of adjoining pieces together. Start at a shared match point and follow the stitching lines, not the cut edges. Curves that sew together can have different cut-edge lengths when their allowances differ, so the seam line is the meaningful comparison. Check notches at the seam line and extend them to the new cut line without changing their matching position.

Removing allowance from an unknown pattern is riskier because the original amount may vary by edge. Look for printed seam lines, instructions, or a scale reference. Measure several locations. Do not infer a single value when a hem, fold, zipper, facing, or enclosed seam may use a different construction. If the pattern gives only a cut line and no reliable allowance statement, preserve a copy and test with paper or inexpensive fabric.

Caution

Adding or removing allowance does not grade a pattern, alter fit in a controlled way, or correct mismatched seams. It changes the distance between seam and cut lines. Avoid using this operation to resize an entire garment. For commercial patterns, follow the included allowance and alteration instructions whenever they differ from a general method.

Verification checklist

  • Work from a copy and preserve the source pattern.
  • Find the seam line and confirm whether allowance is already included.
  • Name the construction at every edge before choosing an amount.
  • Measure offsets perpendicular to straight and curved seam lines.
  • Resolve corner and hem intersections intentionally.
  • Transfer notches from their seam-line positions.
  • Walk adjoining seam lines together after the change.
  • Add and remove the recorded values as a reversal check on simple pieces.

Sources and derivation

Rectangular arithmetic is generated by the seam and hem allowance calculator and summarized in the allowance reference. Curve and corner handling follows geometric offset reasoning while deferring construction details to the pattern. Review seam allowance vs ease vs hem allowance before changing a line whose purpose is unclear.