Measure shrinkage or plan your pre-wash cut size — with fabric benchmarks and quality ratings
Fabric shrinkage is one of the most common — and most frustrating — surprises in sewing, garment manufacturing, and textile production. You cut a perfectly sized piece of fabric, wash it once, and suddenly your garment is too small, a seam no longer lines up, or a pattern repeat is shifted. Understanding exactly how much your fabric will shrink, and planning your cuts accordingly, is the difference between a professional result and a costly mistake. Our Fabric Shrinkage Calculator offers two powerful modes. In Measure Shrinkage mode, you enter the fabric dimensions before and after washing — for both the length (warp direction) and width (weft direction) — and the tool instantly calculates the exact shrinkage or growth percentage in each direction. In Plan Cut Size mode, you enter the finished dimensions you need and the expected shrinkage percentage, and the calculator tells you exactly how large to cut the fabric before washing so that it finishes at your target size. Both modes support centimeters, millimeters, and inches, and work with all common fabric types including cotton, linen, wool, denim, silk, rayon, jersey knit, polyester, nylon, acrylic, and modal. A fabric type selector auto-populates typical shrinkage ranges for planning mode and shows how your measured result compares to industry benchmarks — helping you quickly identify whether your batch of fabric behaves normally or unusually. The tool uses the industry-standard shrinkage formula: Shrinkage % = ((Before – After) / Before) × 100. A positive result means the fabric shrank; a negative result means it grew or extended (common in stretch fabrics or loosely knit materials during the first wash). For reverse cut-size planning, the precise formula is: Required Cut Size = Desired Finished Size ÷ (1 – Shrinkage% ÷ 100). This exact formula — rather than the common approximation of multiplying by (1 + shrinkage%) — ensures you never cut too small. Quality ratings are based on industry-accepted thresholds: Excellent (less than 1%), Good (1–3%), Acceptable (3–5%), Poor (5–8%), and Reject (greater than 8%). For woven fabrics, an acceptable shrinkage is generally 3% or below. For knit fabrics, up to 5% is typically tolerable. Shrinkage above 7–8% in any direction typically warrants preshrinking the fabric before cutting rather than compensating through pattern adjustments. Whether you are a home sewer testing a new bolt of cotton, a fashion designer sampling a fabric for production, or a textile QA professional verifying compliance with AATCC TM135, ISO 6330, or ASTM D4974 standards, this tool gives you the precise numbers and context you need to make the right decisions about your fabric.
Understanding Fabric Shrinkage
What Is Fabric Shrinkage?
Fabric shrinkage is the reduction in dimensions — length, width, or both — that occurs when a fabric is washed, dried, or otherwise processed with moisture and heat. Shrinkage happens because textile fibers absorb water and swell, causing the yarns to crimp and pull shorter. Heat from washing and drying accelerates and sets this process. There are three main types of shrinkage: relaxation shrinkage (fibers returning to their natural state after being stretched during manufacturing), consolidation shrinkage (fiber swelling packs yarns more tightly together), and felting shrinkage (fiber scales interlock permanently — primarily in wool). A fabric may also experience growth or extension rather than shrinkage, particularly in weft-stretch fabrics or loosely woven materials during initial wet processing.
How Is Shrinkage Calculated?
The standard shrinkage formula is: Shrinkage % = ((Before Wash Size – After Wash Size) / Before Wash Size) × 100. A positive result means the fabric shrank; a negative result indicates growth. Length (warp) and width (weft) are measured separately because fabric behaves differently in each direction. The industry-standard test method uses a 100×100 cm reference square marked on a larger 110×110 cm cut sample (per AATCC TM135 and ISO 6330). Home sewers commonly use 18"×18" or 20"×20" samples. For cut-size planning, the precise reverse formula is: Required Cut Size = Desired Finished Size ÷ (1 – Shrinkage% ÷ 100). This avoids the slight underestimate of the simpler approximation Cut Size = Finished × (1 + Shrinkage%).
Why Does Shrinkage Matter?
Incorrect shrinkage accounting leads to garments that are too small after the first wash, wasted fabric from over-cutting, production defects in garment manufacturing, and customer returns in retail. In professional garment manufacturing, shrinkage data is mandatory for pattern grading and fabric consumption calculations. Even a 3% error in a 150 cm wide fabric means 4.5 cm of unexpected loss per meter. Over a production run of hundreds of meters, this translates into significant material waste or undersized finished goods. For home sewers, understanding shrinkage prevents the common frustration of a perfectly fitting muslin becoming too small in the real fabric. Preshrinking fabric — washing and drying before cutting — is the most reliable solution when shrinkage exceeds acceptable thresholds.
Limitations and Best Practices
Fabric shrinkage varies significantly within the same bolt of fabric, between dye lots, and depending on wash temperature, agitation level, and drying method. A single test sample may not represent the entire bolt. Professional textile testing uses multiple sample points (top, middle, and bottom of the roll) and multiple wash cycles (AATCC recommends 3 cycles; some standards require 5) to get statistically valid averages. Home testing conditions — water temperature, spin speed, dryer heat — vary widely from lab conditions, so measured results should be treated as estimates for the specific wash method used. Also, fabrics may continue to shrink slightly over subsequent washings, though most shrinkage occurs in the first one or two cycles. Always test before cutting critical garment pieces.
How to Use the Fabric Shrinkage Calculator
Scegli la tua modalità
Select 'Measure Shrinkage' if you have already washed a test swatch and want to find the shrinkage percentage. Select 'Plan Cut Size' if you know the finished size you need and want to calculate how large to cut before washing.
Select Unit and Fabric Type
Choose your preferred unit (cm, mm, or inches). Optionally select your fabric type — cotton, wool, linen, denim, etc. — to see typical shrinkage benchmarks and, in Plan mode, to auto-fill expected shrinkage percentages.
Inserisci le tue Misurazioni
In Measure mode, enter the length and width of your fabric swatch before and after washing. Use a consistent 100×100 cm or 18"×18" test square for best accuracy. In Plan mode, enter your desired finished dimensions and the expected shrinkage percentage per direction.
Review Results and Act
Check your shrinkage percentages, the quality rating (Excellent to Reject), and the comparison against your fabric type benchmark. Use the recommendation to decide whether to preshrink your fabric, adjust your pattern pieces, or proceed with cutting at the calculated pre-wash dimensions.
Domande Frequenti
What is an acceptable fabric shrinkage percentage?
Industry standards differ by fabric construction. For woven fabrics such as cotton, linen, and denim, shrinkage up to 3% is generally considered acceptable for garment production. For knit fabrics like jersey, up to 5% is the typical tolerance. Shrinkage between 5–8% is considered poor and may require pattern adjustments or preshrinking before cutting. Any shrinkage above 8% is generally classified as reject-level and almost always requires preshrinking the fabric before production. These thresholds are referenced in standards including AATCC TM135 and ISO 6330.
Why does fabric shrink more in one direction than the other?
Fabric is woven from yarns running in two perpendicular directions: warp (along the length of the bolt) and weft (across the width). During manufacturing, warp yarns are held under tension on the loom, which stretches them. When moisture and heat are applied during washing, these yarns relax and contract — often more so in the length direction. Weft yarns, being woven across rather than under continuous tension, may behave differently. In knit fabrics, the looped structure shrinks differently in each direction too. This is why it is important to measure and track shrinkage separately for length and width.
How do I perform a fabric shrinkage test at home?
Cut a square test swatch — 20" × 20" (50 × 50 cm) is a practical home sewing size, though 18" × 18" is also common. Use a permanent marker or chalk to mark a precise inner reference square (e.g., 18" × 18" or 100 × 100 mm) within the cut piece to exclude frayed edges from your measurement. Wash and dry the swatch exactly as you would the finished garment. After drying, measure the inner reference marks in both directions and enter the before and after dimensions into this calculator. Use these results to adjust your cutting dimensions for the full project.
Which fabrics shrink the most?
Natural fibers shrink the most. Wool can shrink 5–10% in both directions and is particularly prone to felting shrinkage if agitated in hot water. Linen shrinks 5–10% in length and 4–8% in width. Cotton flannel typically shrinks 5–10%. Regular woven cotton shrinks 3–5% in length. Rayon and viscose are highly sensitive to heat and moisture and can shrink 5–10%. Denim typically shrinks 2–5%. Synthetic fibers shrink very little: polyester and nylon shrink 0–1%, and acrylic shrinks 0–2%. Blended fabrics shrink somewhere between their fiber components.
What is the formula for reverse cut-size calculation?
The exact formula for calculating the pre-wash cut size needed to achieve a specific finished size is: Required Cut Size = Desired Finished Size ÷ (1 − Shrinkage% ÷ 100). For example, if you need a finished length of 100 cm and your fabric shrinks 5%, the calculation is: 100 ÷ (1 − 0.05) = 100 ÷ 0.95 = 105.26 cm. A simpler approximation — Finished × (1 + Shrinkage%) — gives 105 cm, which is slightly smaller than the exact answer and may result in a finished piece that is very slightly undersized. The exact formula used in this calculator's Plan Cut Size mode is the more accurate method.
Should I preshrink fabric before cutting?
Preshrinking (also called pre-washing) is recommended whenever your fabric shrinks more than 3% for wovens or 5% for knits, or whenever the finished garment will be machine-washed by the end user. To preshrink, wash and dry the fabric exactly as you will care for the finished item before cutting any pattern pieces. This eliminates most shrinkage from future washes. For fabrics with very high shrinkage (above 7–8%), simple pattern size adjustments are not enough to compensate — preshrinking is the only reliable solution. Note that some fashion fabrics such as dry-clean-only silks and wool crepes should not be preshrunk with water; follow the fabric manufacturer's care recommendations.