Practical sewing guide

Curtain Fullness, Cut Drop, and Pattern Matching

Calculate flat panel width, usable panel width, cut drop, vertical-repeat rounding, and fabric length while keeping hardware outside the estimate.

Reviewed by Sew Measure editorial review on .

Curtain fabric planning combines a horizontal fullness calculation with a vertical cut-drop calculation. The track or finished coverage width controls how much flat panel width is required. Fabric width and side hems control how many panels provide that flat width. Finished drop, header allowance, bottom hem, and pattern repeat control the length of every panel. Keeping these directions separate prevents a fullness ratio from being applied to drop or a hem from being mistaken for hardware clearance.

Measure the installed or confirmed finished track span according to the project method. Choose a fullness ratio suitable for the heading, fabric, and pattern instructions. Required flat width equals track width multiplied by fullness ratio. This ratio is a user choice or pattern input; the calculator does not recommend a universal heading fullness.

Panel count and cut drop

Usable panel width equals fabric width minus two side hems. Panel count equals required flat width divided by usable panel width, rounded upward to a whole panel. If side hems consume the entire width, the geometry is invalid. The calculation assumes panels are cut along the fabric length rather than railroaded. Use a different tested plan when fabric direction or project instructions permit another construction.

Raw cut drop equals finished drop plus header allowance plus bottom hem allowance. If a vertical pattern repeat must match, round each raw drop upward to a whole repeat. Total cut length equals matched cut drop multiplied by panel count. Apply shrinkage, explicit waste, and seller increment afterward.

Worked example

A track is 80 inches wide and the chosen fullness ratio is 2×, so required flat width is 160 inches. Fabric is 54 inches wide with 2-inch side hems on each edge. Usable panel width is 54 - 4, or 50 inches. Divide 160 by 50 to obtain 3.2 and round upward: four panels are needed.

Finished drop is 80 inches, header allowance is 4 inches, and bottom hem allowance is 8 inches. Raw cut drop is 92 inches. With no matched repeat, four panels require 368 inches before purchase adjustments. If the vertical repeat is 16 inches, 92 inches rounds upward to 96 inches. Four matched drops require 384 inches, adding 16 inches in total before other adjustments.

Flat width chooses panels; drop chooses lengthAn original planning sketch comparing track fullness, usable panel, matched drop.track fullnessusable panelmatched drop
Flat width chooses panels; drop chooses length. Written dimensions and the verification checklist control.

Pattern placement and panel sequence

Repeat rounding aligns panel starting phases, but it does not center a motif or decide which seams deserve matching. Mark the top and sequence of each panel. Plan whether left and right curtains mirror or share a motif position. A large design may require another repeat for intentional placement. Test the first cut position with a full-size paper window over the actual fabric.

Panel count can produce more flat width than the exact ratio because it is rounded upward. The actual achieved ratio is total usable panel width divided by track width. Review whether the excess is acceptable under the heading method. Do not trim usable panel width or alter construction without reconciling side hems, seams, and pattern placement.

Caution

This calculation estimates fabric only. It does not advise on tracks, rods, anchors, brackets, wall structure, load-bearing hardware, fire requirements, child safety, installation, or suitable curtain construction. Obtain appropriate product and installation guidance for those decisions. Follow tested pattern or workroom instructions when they specify panels, seams, headings, or repeats.

Verification checklist

  • Measure the confirmed finished track span and desired drop.
  • Choose fullness ratio from the project method or a tested sample.
  • Subtract both side hems from fabric width.
  • Round panel count upward to a whole number.
  • Add complete header and bottom-hem allowances to each drop.
  • Round each matched drop upward to the vertical repeat.
  • Label top, side, and sequence on every panel.
  • Keep hardware and installation decisions outside the fabric result.

Sources and derivation

The formulas use ceiling division and repeat rounding documented by Sew Measure. Reproduce the example with the curtain fabric calculator. Common width examples are qualified in the fabric width reference chart. For motif measurement, read how pattern repeat changes fabric yardage.