Drapery Hooks Per Panel Calculator | Hook Count Guide

🛏 Drapery Hooks Per Panel Calculator

Find the right hook count, pitch, and edge offset for every drapery panel.

📌 Quick presets

Panel inputs

Measure the full span you want the panels to cover.
The calculator splits the finished width evenly.
Classic pencil pleats with regular hook spacing.
Higher fullness creates deeper gathers and more hooks.
The calculator rounds up to the next whole hook slot.
Keep first and last hooks inboard from the hems.
Adds a little overlap when the set uses multiple panels.
Extra length for turn-in and heading tape coverage.
Medium drapery usually matches the style pitch closely.
Adds a small purchase cushion for extras and spares.
Results update instantly as you change the panel settings.
Hooks per panel
--
Rounded from the usable span.
Total hooks
--
All panels in the set.
Working pitch
--
Between hooks on the usable top.
Finished panel width
--
After fullness and joins.

📊 Style reference

Pencil pleat
4 in
Tight, tidy folds with regular hooks.
Pinch pleat
5 in
Balanced spacing for classic drapery.
Ripple fold
5.5 in
Soft waves with smoother spacing.
Blackout lined
4.5 in
Closer spacing supports heavier tops.

📋 Common panel widths

Panel widthSuggested pitchHooks per panelBest use
36-48 in3.5-4 in7-9Cafe or small
48-60 in4-4.5 in8-10Bedroom pair
60-84 in4.5-5 in9-12Living room
84-108 in5-6 in12-16Wide wall set

How the count works

The calculator takes the finished panel width, subtracts the edge offsets, divides the usable span by the working pitch, and rounds up so you never end up short.

Why weight matters

Heavier drapery usually hangs better with slightly closer hook spacing. Lighter fabric can tolerate a softer pitch without losing shape.

💡 Tip: Keep the first and last hook a little inboard from the side hems. That small gap helps the panel hang straight, especially on long windows and tall ceilings.
💡 Tip: If your drapery tape or pleat tape has fixed pockets, use the closest pocket spacing the calculator suggests and round up. The extra hook almost always looks cleaner than a stretched gap.

Drapery hooks are little parts that bind curtain panels to rods or tracks so that you can move and hang them. Well chosen and well placed hooks make curtains hang equally, preserve their folds and work well. They work for various curtains and hanging systems

Hooks help to create nice folds or pleats in curtains. They give a room an elegant or fancy look. For windows that seem clean, elegant and well arranged, drapery hooks are a good solutoin.

How to Use Drapery Hooks

Drapes usually hang with drapery hooks, or called drapery pins, while regular curtains hang directly on the rod with a pocket, back tab or grommet.

Drapery pin hooks keep pinch-pleated drapes on rods, gliders and rings. From nickel-covered stainless steel, they are strong and do not rust. Classic two-prong drapery hooks work for curtains with multiway header or gathering tape.

Some hooks have a needle or pointed end for flat panels. The pointed end enters the fabric, and the other goes in the hole of drapery rings.

For pinch-pleated drapes put the hooks directly in the pleat, not between them. The length of the drapery you control by how high you lay the pin, within one or two inches. Because the pin is shorter than the header, it does knot poke the visible side of the panel.

The pin will not slip up, unless you put it at the very top, which would leave the hook part visible.

Drapery hooks are a good idea for renters who want to hang curtains without removing blind hardware. Alligator clips on hooks can hold fabric and hook in already existing rod holes. It works well for rental systems.

Some hooks from stainless steel work for bathrooms, because they handle humidity. Certain hooks bear seven pounds, so for heavy curtains you need more rugged ones. Velvet curtains are tricky with drapery hooks and rings, but strong hooks that bear the weight and are well spaced help the fabric hang flat.

IKEA RITVA curtains you can convert into pinch-pleated styles. After making the pleats, you add drapery hooks to the back of the panel. Later you hang and measure the panels, and use iron-on tape to hem them to the right length.

Ironing the pleats adds more structure. IKEA RIKTIG curtain hooks work for curtains with gathering tape and make hanging them easy. Some IKEA hooks wipe easily with a dry cloth and are possible to separatefor recycling.

Drapery Hooks Per Panel Calculator | Hook Count Guide

Leave a Comment