Resize sewing, knitting, and crochet patterns with exact scale factors and printer percentages
Resizing a pattern is one of the most common tasks in any craft room, and getting it right matters. Whether you are a home sewer scaling a commercial pattern from a size 10 to a size 16, a knitter adapting a sweater pattern to a different yarn weight, or a crocheter enlarging an amigurumi to twice its original size, you need precise numbers — not guesswork. Our Pattern Scaling Calculator eliminates the arithmetic and gives you an instant, accurate answer for any resize job in any craft. For sewing patterns, the calculator computes the exact scale factor between your original pattern dimensions and your target finished dimensions, then converts that factor directly into the percentage you enter on your printer, photocopier, or cutting plotter. No more mental math at the copy shop. If you are grading non-proportionally — for example, enlarging a bodice more across the bust than the length — you can switch to independent width and height scaling to get two separate printer percentages or grading amounts. The seam allowance feature lets you exclude the seam allowances from the scaling math so your finished garment, not the cutting lines, hits your target measurement. For knitting and crochet patterns, the calculator goes further because yarn craft sizing depends on gauge as much as physical dimensions. When you change yarn weights, needle sizes, or hook sizes, your stitches per inch change — and that changes how many stitches you need to cast on or chain, even if the finished dimensions stay the same. Enter both your original pattern gauge and your new gauge and the calculator handles the math automatically. It outputs your new stitch count and row count, optionally rounded to the nearest stitch pattern repeat so your texture or colorwork tiles correctly. Yardage is another headache the calculator solves. If you scale a blanket from a 36-inch square to a 48-inch square, the area grows by 78 percent, not 33 percent — meaning you need far more yarn than a naive size increase would suggest. The calculator computes the correct area ratio and multiplies your original yardage by that ratio. You can also add a safety buffer percentage (we suggest 10–15 percent) so you buy enough for swatching, repairs, and any gauge variation. The multi-mode design means one tool handles every craft scenario without making you switch between different calculators. Choose sewing mode for fabric pattern pieces, knitting mode for garments and accessories, or crochet mode for garments, blankets, and amigurumi. Switch between inches and centimeters at any time. Toggle between proportional scaling — where width and height scale by the same factor — and independent scaling — where you grade each axis separately for a custom fit. The visual bar chart in the results panel gives you an immediate sense of how much the pattern is growing or shrinking. The prominent printer percentage display is designed to be the one number you need when you walk up to the copier. And the copy-to-clipboard button lets you paste your scaling summary directly into a project notebook or shared with a crafting group. Whether you are a professional pattern maker, a hobbyist sewer, or someone following your first knitting pattern with a substituted yarn, this tool has you covered.
Understanding Pattern Scaling
What Is Pattern Scaling?
Pattern scaling is the process of mathematically resizing all the measurements in a craft pattern by a consistent ratio so the finished item is larger or smaller than the original. In sewing, this typically means enlarging or reducing paper pattern pieces before cutting fabric. In knitting and crochet, it means adjusting stitch counts, row counts, and yarn quantities to produce a different finished size. The scale factor — also called the scaling ratio — is the single number that describes how much bigger or smaller the new version is compared to the original. A scale factor of 1.5 means the new version is 50 percent larger in every linear dimension. A scale factor of 0.75 means the new version is 25 percent smaller. When expressed as a percentage and entered on a photocopier or printer, this factor lets you physically resize a paper pattern at the press of a button.
How Is the Scale Factor Calculated?
For sewing patterns, the scale factor is simply the target dimension divided by the original dimension: Scale Factor = Target ÷ Original. If your pattern piece is 20 inches wide and you want it to be 26 inches wide, the scale factor is 26 ÷ 20 = 1.30, meaning you set your printer to 130 percent. For knitting and crochet, gauge changes add a second layer. The gauge stitch scale is Target Stitches per Inch ÷ Original Stitches per Inch. The new stitch count is then: Original Stitches × (Target Width ÷ Original Width) × Gauge Stitch Scale. A similar formula applies for rows and height. Yarn yardage is scaled by the area ratio: (New Stitch Count × New Row Count) ÷ (Original Stitch Count × Original Row Count). If a stitch pattern repeat is specified, the new stitch count is rounded to the nearest multiple of the repeat number so the pattern tiles correctly.
Why Does Accurate Scaling Matter?
Cutting a pattern piece even one inch too small means ripping out seams or discarding fabric you cannot recover. Knitting an entire sweater only to find it is two sizes too small represents weeks of wasted work. Accurate pattern scaling prevents both disasters. The printer percentage is especially important in sewing: entering 129 percent instead of the correct 130 percent shifts every measurement by nearly a percent, which across a large pattern piece adds up to a noticeable fit problem. In knitting, using the wrong stitch count means the stitch pattern will not line up at seams, a colorwork motif will not center correctly, or the finished width will be off by several inches. Getting the math right before you cut or cast on is always easier than fixing problems afterward.
限界と重要な注意点
Pattern scaling works well for simple geometric shapes but becomes less precise for complex fitted garments. A commercial sewing pattern graded for size uses carefully designed curves at the armhole, neckline, and crotch that a uniform scale factor does not replicate correctly — those areas need manual adjustment after scaling. Similarly, waist and hip measurements do not always scale proportionally to bust measurements in fitted clothing. For knitting, gauge swatching after calculating new stitch counts is essential: your actual gauge may differ from the stated gauge, especially after washing and blocking. The yarn yardage estimate assumes uniform density throughout the project; textured stitches, cables, or colorwork can use significantly more yarn per stitch. Always add a safety buffer and buy an extra skein when substituting yarn. Finally, printers and photocopiers can have slight accuracy variations — always measure a test printout against the pattern's stated measurement line before cutting fabric.
この計算機の使い方
Select Your Craft and Units
Choose Sewing, Knitting, or Crochet from the craft type buttons — this shows the right inputs for your project. Then select Inches or Centimeters to match your pattern.
Enter Original and Target Dimensions
Type the width and height of your original pattern piece or project into the Original fields, then enter the dimensions you want to achieve in the Target fields. In Proportional mode you can enter just one target dimension and the other will be calculated for you.
For Knitting/Crochet — Add Gauge and Counts
Enter your original pattern gauge and your new gauge (stitches and rows per 4 inches or 10 cm). Add your original stitch count, row count, and yarn yardage to get accurate new stitch counts and an adjusted yarn estimate. Set a stitch pattern repeat if your stitch texture needs alignment.
Read the Results and Apply
The large number at the top of the results panel is your printer or photocopier percentage — enter it exactly on the machine. For knitting and crochet, use the new stitch and row counts directly in your pattern. Copy the full summary to your clipboard or print it to keep at your work station.
よくある質問
What printer percentage do I use to scale a sewing pattern?
The printer percentage is simply the scale factor multiplied by 100. If your scale factor is 1.30 — meaning the pattern needs to be 30 percent larger — you enter 130% on the photocopier. The calculator displays this number prominently at the top of your results. Always print a test page first and measure the pattern's built-in ruler or measurement line to confirm the copy came out at the right size before printing all your pattern pieces. Printer accuracy can vary slightly between machines, and paper feed can introduce small distortions, so a test measurement is always worth the extra minute.
How do I scale a knitting pattern to a different yarn weight?
Scaling for a different yarn weight requires accounting for the gauge difference, not just the size difference. Enter your original pattern's gauge (stitches per 4 inches from the pattern) and your new yarn's gauge (stitches per 4 inches from your actual swatch after blocking). The calculator multiplies your original stitch count by both the dimension scale factor and the gauge ratio to produce your new cast-on number. For example, if the pattern calls for 20 stitches per 4 inches but your bulky yarn gives 12 stitches per 4 inches, you need significantly fewer stitches to reach the same finished width. Always swatch and block before trusting any gauge number.
What does the seam allowance correction do?
Most commercial sewing patterns include seam allowance inside the cutting lines — typically 5/8 inch (1.6 cm) in US patterns, 1 cm in European patterns. If you scale the full pattern piece including the seam allowance, the seam allowance itself gets scaled and ends up too wide or too narrow. The seam allowance correction subtracts the allowance from all sides before calculating the scale factor, then adds it back after. This ensures your finished, sewn garment hits the target size rather than the cutting line. Enable this option and enter your pattern's seam allowance amount; the calculator does the rest.
How does stitch pattern repeat rounding work?
Many stitch patterns — lace, cables, ribbing, colorwork — have a defined repeat unit: a number of stitches that must be worked as a whole to keep the pattern aligned. If your new stitch count does not divide evenly by the repeat, the pattern will not line up at the end of each row. Enter your pattern's repeat number (for example, 6 for a 3×1 rib or a 6-stitch lace motif) and the calculator rounds your new stitch count to the nearest multiple of that repeat. It may add or remove a few stitches from the mathematically precise number, so check that the resulting size change is acceptable for your project.
Why is the yarn yardage adjustment based on area rather than a simple scale factor?
Yarn quantity is determined by how many stitches are in the whole project, which is proportional to the area of the fabric — width multiplied by height. If you scale a project to be 1.5 times wider and 1.5 times taller, the area grows by 1.5 × 1.5 = 2.25 times, so you need 2.25 times as much yarn, not just 1.5 times. Using a simple linear scale factor would leave you drastically short. The calculator computes the true area ratio from your stitch and row counts and applies it to your original yardage. Always add a safety buffer of at least 10 percent because tension differences, blocked fabric, and swatching all consume extra yarn.
Can I scale a pattern non-proportionally for different width and height ratios?
Yes — switch to Independent mode to set separate scale factors for width and height. This is useful for sewing pattern grading where a size change adds more circumference to the bust than to the shoulder, or for crochet blankets where you want a different aspect ratio than the original. In Independent mode, the results show a separate scale percentage for each axis. For sewing, you may need to print the pattern twice at different orientations, or use a large-format plotter that supports separate X and Y scaling. For knitting and crochet, the stitch count and row count are each scaled independently using their respective width and height factors.