Bias Tape Yardage Calculator
Calculate how much fabric you need to cut bias tape or bias binding for a project.
Enter the total tape length needed and finished tape width.
Why bias tape exists
Woven fabric has three grain directions:
- Straight grain (lengthwise): parallel to selvage, strongest, no stretch
- Cross grain: perpendicular to selvage, slight stretch
- Bias grain: 45° to the selvage, maximum stretch
When fabric is cut on the bias (at 45° to the warp/weft), it gains the ability to stretch and curve. This is why bias-cut dresses drape so beautifully and why bias-cut tape can bend around curves without puckering.
Bias tape is fabric strip cut at 45° to grain, then folded with edges turned in. It’s used wherever a finished, durable, bendable edge is needed — quilt binding, neckline finishing, armhole bindings, decorative trim, button loops, piping casings.
Standard sizes and applications
Pre-made bias tape comes in standard widths:
| Tape size | Finished width | Cut width | Use case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Extra narrow | 1/4" | 1" | Doll clothes, miniatures |
| Narrow / “single-fold” | 1/4" | 1" | Decorative trim, casings |
| Standard single-fold | 1/2" | 2" | Casings, facings, hems |
| Extra wide single-fold | 7/8" | 3 1/2" | Wide facings, ties |
| Standard double-fold | 1/4" | 1 7/8" | Most binding |
| Wide double-fold | 1/2" | 2 1/2" | Quilt binding, edge finishing |
| Extra wide double-fold | 7/8" | 4" | Hat bands, decorative bindings |
| Maxi-binding | 1" - 2" | 5" - 9" | Bag handles, structured bindings |
Single-fold vs double-fold
Single-fold bias tape: long edges folded in to the center. Used flat against fabric (e.g., as a facing). When you open it up, you see three sections — two narrow side folds and a center flat section.
Double-fold bias tape: long edges folded in, then the tape is folded in half lengthwise. The result is a tape that “encloses” the fabric edge when wrapped around it. The most common type — used for quilt binding, neckline bindings, hem finishing.
Cutting width formula
For both types, the cut strip width is 4x the finished width:
Cut width = Finished width × 4
This accounts for:
- Two folds of the long edges (1/4 + 1/4)
- The final fold in half (for double-fold)
- A tiny seam allowance for joining
So:
- 1/4" finished = 1" cut strip
- 1/2" finished = 2" cut strip
- 3/4" finished = 3" cut strip
- 1" finished = 4" cut strip
For very narrow bias (1/8"), cut 1/2" strips and use a bias tape maker tool to fold accurately.
Three methods to make continuous bias strip
Method 1: Cut individual strips Mark 45° lines across fabric, cut individual strips, join end-to-end with diagonal seams.
- Pros: simple, predictable
- Cons: wastes fabric, many seams in long bindings
Method 2: Continuous bias from a square Cut a square, mark bias lines on both edges offset by one strip width, sew the offset edges together to form a tube, then cut along the marked spiral. Produces one very long continuous strip from a small fabric square.
- Pros: minimal seams, efficient use of fabric
- Cons: requires visualization, easy to make geometry mistakes
Method 3: Bias tape maker tool Cut strips, feed through bias tape maker (small metal funnel) while ironing. Produces single-fold tape in one pass.
- Pros: easy, consistent
- Cons: requires tool ($5-20), doesn’t make double-fold (separate step)
Fabric quantity formulas
For a continuous bias strip from a square:
Strip length ≈ (Square side²) ÷ Strip width
For a 15" square cutting 2"-wide strips:
- 15 × 15 = 225 square inches
- 225 ÷ 2 = 112.5 inches of bias tape (3.125 yards)
For 1 yard (36") of bias tape at 2" cut width:
- Need 36 × 2 = 72 square inches of fabric
- A 9" × 8" rectangle works (72 sq in)
For 5 yards (180") at 2" cut width:
- Need 180 × 2 = 360 sq inches
- Need a ~19" square (361 sq in)
Always add 10-15% for joining and waste.
Why bias stretches
Plain weave fabric is rigid in both grain directions because warp and weft threads can’t slide. But at 45°, the threads form diagonals that can shift past each other when pulled. This produces:
- Stretch: 5-15% in lightweight cottons, more in loose weaves
- Drape: the fabric falls in curves rather than straight lines
- Curve ability: can be eased around inside and outside curves
This property makes bias tape uniquely suited for:
- Curved necklines
- Armholes
- Curved quilt edges
- Round table linens
- Curved bag openings
For a straight edge, you don’t need bias — straight-grain strips work fine and waste less fabric.
Joining bias strips
Always join with a diagonal seam, never a straight seam:
- Place two strips right sides together at 90° angles (forming an L)
- The overlap forms a small square at the corner
- Sew diagonally across the square from inner corner to outer corner
- Trim seam to 1/4"
- Press seam open
The diagonal join distributes seam bulk across the binding, making it less visible. A straight join would create a thick bump.
Applying double-fold bias to fabric edge
The classic quilt binding application:
- Trim quilt edges square
- Starting on a straight edge, lay bias tape with its raw edges aligned to quilt raw edge
- Sew along the inner fold of the tape (forming the seam)
- At corners, fold tape up 45°, then back down to form mitered corner
- Continue around all four sides
- Join the ends with diagonal seam
- Fold tape over to back side, press
- Hand-stitch or machine-stitch to back
Properly applied, double-fold bias gives a clean, durable edge that looks intentional from both sides.
Bias tape pitfalls
- Wrong cut width: forgetting the 4x rule produces tape that’s too narrow when folded
- Stretching while sewing: bias stretches under sewing machine tension; use gentle handling
- Square join (not diagonal): creates visible bulk at the join
- Direction mismatches: if fabric has a print direction, bias-cut tape may show the print at unexpected angles
- Insufficient pre-press: tape that isn’t well-pressed bunches when applied
- Pulling at corners: bias tape can stretch at corners; pin first
Stripe and plaid considerations
Bias-cut tape from striped fabric creates a chevron pattern (diagonal stripes). This can be:
- Decorative: deliberate visual element
- Distracting: clashes with the garment’s main fabric stripes
For matched looks, use:
- Solid color tape for striped/plaid garments
- Coordinating tape pattern (intentional diagonal)
- Same-fabric tape for “blends in” effect
Tools that help
- Bias tape maker: Clover sells 1/4", 1/2", 3/4", and 1" sizes ($5-15 each)
- 45° ruler: for accurate bias cutting
- Rotary cutter and mat: for clean, straight bias strips
- Hera marker: marks fabric without ink
- Wonder clips: hold tape in place better than pins
- Iron with steam: essential for crisp folds
Pre-made vs handmade bias tape
Pre-made bias tape (Wright’s, Dritz, Clover) comes in 100% cotton, polyester blends, and satin. Pros and cons:
Pre-made advantages:
- Saves time
- Consistent quality
- Wide color range
- Inexpensive for small projects
Handmade advantages:
- Match your fabric exactly
- Use leftover fabric
- Custom widths
- Higher quality bindings for heirloom projects
- Color match impossible to find commercially
For quilts and special projects, handmade bias from leftover fabric is standard. For utility sewing, pre-made saves time.
Bottom line
Bias tape is fabric cut at 45° to grain, capable of stretching and bending around curves. Cut width = 4x finished width for both single-fold and double-fold types. Continuous bias from a square: length ≈ side² ÷ strip width. Always join with diagonal seams pressed open, never straight seams. Add 10-15% extra for joining waste. Pre-made bias works for utility sewing; handmade matches your fabric for special projects. Essential applications: quilt binding, curved necklines, armholes, decorative edging.