Calculate cutting radius, fabric yardage, and pattern dimensions for full, half, 3/4, and quarter circle skirts. Includes seam and hem allowances.
A circle skirt is one of the most flattering and beginner-friendly sewing projects, but getting the math right is critical. The cutting radius depends on your waist measurement, the circle fraction (full, half, 3/4, or quarter), and allowances for seams and hems. Getting any of these wrong means wasted fabric.
This circle skirt calculator takes your waist measurement and desired length, then computes the exact waist radius and outer radius for your chosen circle type. It accounts for seam allowance at the waist and hem allowance at the bottom, giving you true cutting dimensions ready to mark directly on your fabric. That makes it easier to buy fabric once and cut with confidence instead of reworking the same circle by hand.
The fabric yardage estimate tells you exactly how much to buy, and the comparison table shows how the different circle types compare in fullness, fabric usage, and cutting dimensions. Length presets from mini to floor-length make it easy to explore different looks.
Circle skirt math involves pi and fractions that are easy to get wrong by hand. One mistake means fabric that's too small or too large, wasting material and time. This calculator gives exact cutting dimensions before you cut a single piece.
It is useful because waist size, skirt length, and circle fraction all interact. Seeing the radii and yardage together makes the pattern much easier to plan than working from the hem alone.
Waist radius = waist / (2π × circle_fraction). Outer radius = waist_radius + skirt_length. Cut dimensions include seam allowance (subtracted from waist radius) and hem allowance (added to outer radius). Fabric ≈ outer_diameter for half/full circles.
Result: Waist radius: 4.46", outer radius: 27.46", fabric: 1.60 yards
A 28" waist on a full circle (360°) gives a waist radius of 28 / (2π × 1) = 4.46". Adding 23" length gives an outer radius of 27.46". The cut radius is 3.96" (waist − 0.5" seam) to 28.46" (outer + 1" hem). You need about 1.60 yards of 45" fabric.
A circle skirt is literally a ring shape (annulus) — a large circle with a smaller circle cut from the center. The inner circle becomes the waist, and the outer edge becomes the hem. The radius formula comes from the circumference equation: if the waist is 28" and you're making a full circle, the inner circumference (2πr) must equal 28", so r = 28 / (2π) ≈ 4.46". For a half circle, only half the circumference needs to equal the waist, so the radius doubles.
Full circle (360°) creates maximum drama and movement — think 1950s poodle skirts. Three-quarter circle (270°) is nearly as full but uses less fabric. Half circle (180°) is the most popular choice for everyday wear — good drape with reasonable fabric usage. Quarter circle (90°) creates an A-line shape with minimal flare, using the least fabric but also the least dramatic.
The hardest part of a circle skirt is hemming the curved edge. Options include: narrow rolled hem (hand or serger), bias tape binding, lettuce edge on knits, or simply overlocking and turning under. Machine hemming works but may pucker on tight curves. A coverstitch machine handles circular hems best. For formal fabrics, consider a hand-stitched blind hem.
A full circle skirt (360°) has maximum drape and fullness, using the most fabric. A half circle (180°) has about half the fullness but still flows nicely and uses significantly less fabric. Full circles require 2 panels seamed together; half circles cut as one piece.
It depends on the circle type, your waist size, and skirt length. A full circle knee-length skirt typically needs 2-3 yards of 45" fabric. The calculator provides exact yardage based on your measurements. Always buy 10% extra for mistakes.
Circle skirts don't need a commercial pattern — just a compass (or string and pin) to draw the waist arc and hem arc at the calculated radii. Fold your fabric in half (half circle) or quarters (quarter circle) and draw from the folded corner.
Circle skirts are cut on the bias (diagonal grain), which causes them to stretch and hang longer at the bias points. The solution is to hang the finished skirt for 24-48 hours before hemming, letting the bias stretch settle, then trimming the hem even.
Lightweight fabrics (cotton lawn, rayon, chiffon) drape beautifully for full circles. Medium-weight fabrics (cotton poplin, linen) work well for half and quarter circles. Avoid stiff fabrics for full circles — they'll stand out rather than drape.
For elastic waist, use your hip measurement (not waist) for the radius calculation, since the skirt needs to slip over your hips. Add 2-3" ease to the hip measurement, then calculate the waist radius from that number.