Full Circle Skirt Pattern {& Free Sewing Tutorial) - SewGuide (original) (raw)

I just love the flowing lines of a circle skirt. They look good on most girls with their full folds of fabric and and neat silhouette near the waist and hips. They have the required fullness of a gathered skirt without any of its bulk at the top. So, what I mean is, do not hesitate to make one – it is easy to make and nice to wear. Win win.

The real circle skirt is a full one piece doughnut shaped fabric shaped into a full-skirt. That is the skirt I am going to make here.

There is one limitation to making this skirt – if you want a long skirt you will have to join extra fabric. This is because, the circle you make is limited by the width of the fabric piece you have (which is usually 45 inches or 60 inches). With a 45 inch wide fabric piece, you can get an 18 inch long circle skirt which sits above the knee. Many would call it a short length skirt, depending on their fashion sensibilities and length preferences.

Related post : Circle skirt formula calculator.

Free sewing pattern for Circle skirt

If you just want to go and stitch your circle skirt, do the calculation in this tool. Or else go on to read the math explained below. I would do both.


Step 1. Measure and decide on the cutting of the fabric

Measurement needed for making this skirt:

Waist round and Skirt length (with normal width fabrics (45″) you are limited to 18 inch or lower length skirts)

Fabric for your circle skirt :

Choose a lightweight to medium-weight fabric like cotton, satin, or tulle.

Here is a video on how to cut the fabric for sewing the full circle skirt:

Related post: If you are not sure about whether a circle skirt would suit you or not, you can check out this post on Choose a skirt design suited to your height and figure and then proceed.

Calculating how much to cut for the circle shape

Formula for circumference = 2πr.

Here, the waist measurement is the circumference.

so waist round ( waist round on the body plus 1 inch extra) = 2πr.

You have to isolate the r (radius) now from this.

Measure your waist. Add 1 inch for comfort (ease).
Example: 25″ (Waist) + 1″ (Ease) = 26″ Total.
Now, divide your Total by 6.28 to find your radius (r). 26/6.28 = r
26 / 6.28 = 4.14

Fold the fabric for cutting

Step 2. Cut out a 45 inch square fabric from your fabric. (If you have a 60 inch wide fabric, cut a 60 inch fabric square and now you will get a longer skirt)

Fold the fabric once by the middle. Now, again fold the fabric by the middle. You get the fabric into 4 layers, like this.

folding and cutting fabric for the full circle skirt

Mark the measurement you got as r ( in this case 4.1 inches) from the corner. Mark up 1/2 inches up from this. This is the cutting line. (red line c in the picture above)

Important Note: Because circle skirts are cut on a curve, the fabric stretches a lot. To prevent the waist from becoming too large, I move the marking 1/2 inch UP (closer to the corner) and cut there.

Mark the length of the skirt from the radius. Cut it out.

When you open the fabric it will look like this

the round donut shape for the full circle skirt

Step 3. Cut open the circle

Now, you need to add an opening. For this, you have to cut open the circle shape.

cut open one seam

It will look like this.

one seam for the circle skirt

Step 4. Cut waistband fabric

Cut a 4.5 inch wide fabric which equals the waist round plus 1 inch in length.

waistband edge

If your fabric is rigid and not stretchy, add 1″ extra for ease. Mine is stretchy so I skipped this.

Step 5. Sew the side seams now.

You have to sew the opening you have just now cut open – just leave a 4 or 5 inch opening at the top

sew sides leaving 4 inch opening

Step 6. Sew the waistband to the top edge of the skirt

sew waistband to the skirt

Step 7. Sew the zipper

Keep one edge of the zipper face down. With a hand sewing needle and thread sew the zipper edge in place.

zipper face down

Baste stitch the zipper to the other edge of the opening too. Curve the top edge of the zipper to the outside as in the picture.

baste stitch

Use a zipper foot (preferably an invisible zipper foot) to sew the zipper in place.

sew onvisible zipper

Close the zipper and see that everything is aligned.

close the zipper and try it

Step 8. Sew the waistband

Fold the waistband top edge to the back from the top of the zipper. Fold the edge at the back over the waistband seam allowance( ie tuck the edges to the inside). Baste stitch everything in place. (This stitching is optional but highly recommended if you want the front to look nice)

Top stitch the waistband from the top.

fold waistband edge to the back

Step 9. Hem the circle skirt

Make a baby hem. For this, first fold the bottom edge to the inside and sew along the fold. Cut the extra fabric outside of this stitching line.

fold hem

Fold the fabric edge once more and sew in place.

sew hem

Hemming a curved edge is quite challenging in my experience but when done this way, it somewhat behaves.

circle skirt

Make a pull on circle skirt -with less flare following this tutorial.

Checkout this post about How to hem with a sewing machine or 16 ways to hand hem. A narrow hem is the best choice for this skirt.

skirt length

Related posts : Sew a half circle skirt tutorial; Skirt hems

flounce hem skirt

maxi skirt and dress patterns

free skirt patterns

shirt skirt

Related post: Maxi dress free patterns