Rag Quilt Size Calculator – Plan Your Quilt Right

🧵 Rag Quilt Size Calculator

Calculate fabric yards, block count, batting, and flannel needed for your rag quilt project

Quick Presets
⚙️ Quilt Settings
✅ Your Rag Quilt Results
🧵 Fabric Type Reference
Flannel
Best fringe, soft, 44in wide
Cotton
Crisp fringe, 42–44in wide
Fleece
No-fray option, 58–60in wide
Denim
Heavy, durable, vintage look
Minky
Ultra soft, 58–60in wide
Wool
Warm, luxurious, felts well
Homespun
Rustic look, 44in wide
Jersey
Stretchy, use stabilizer
📏 Block Count by Quilt Size
Quilt Size 6-in Block Count 8-in Block Count 10-in Block Count Finished Dimensions
Baby30 blocks (5x6)20 blocks (4x5)12 blocks (3x4)~36 x 45 in
Lap56 blocks (7x8)30 blocks (5x6)20 blocks (4x5)~45 x 60 in
Throw80 blocks (8x10)48 blocks (6x8)30 blocks (5x6)~50 x 65 in
Twin120 blocks (10x12)80 blocks (8x10)48 blocks (6x8)~60 x 80 in
Full180 blocks (12x15)120 blocks (10x12)72 blocks (8x9)~80 x 90 in
Queen252 blocks (14x18)168 blocks (12x14)108 blocks (9x12)~90 x 108 in
King324 blocks (18x18)196 blocks (14x14)130 blocks (11x12)~108 x 108 in
📐 Fabric Yards Needed (2 Layers, 44-in Bolt, 6-in Blocks)
Quilt Name Total Blocks Fabric Yds (no buffer) Fabric Yds (+10%) Batting Yds
Mini 24x30202.5 yds2.75 yds0.75 yds
Baby 36x45303.5 yds3.9 yds1.5 yds
Lap 45x60566.2 yds6.8 yds2.5 yds
Throw 50x65808.8 yds9.7 yds3.25 yds
Twin 60x8012013.2 yds14.5 yds4.75 yds
Full 80x9018019.8 yds21.8 yds6.75 yds
Queen 90x10825227.7 yds30.5 yds9.5 yds
King 108x10832435.6 yds39.2 yds12.0 yds
✂️ Blocks Cut Per Yard of Fabric (44-in Wide Bolt)
Block Size Blocks per Row Rows per Yard Blocks per Yard Cut Size (w/ seam)
4 in block11999 blocks5 in sq
5 in block8756 blocks6 in sq
6 in block7642 blocks7 in sq
7 in block6530 blocks8 in sq
8 in block5420 blocks9 in sq
9 in block4416 blocks10 in sq
10 in block4312 blocks11 in sq
💡 Tip 1 — Cut Size vs Finished Size: For rag quilts, your cut block size equals the finished block size plus 1 inch (two seam allowances of 1/2 inch each). A 6-inch finished block requires cutting 7-inch squares. The seam allowance creates the fringe when clipped.
💡 Tip 2 — Fabric Calculations: Always buy at least 10% extra fabric. Flannel and cotton shrink 3–5% when pre-washed. Cutting on grain and squaring up your fabric also reduces usable yardage. For scrappy quilts using multiple prints, divide your total yardage across however many fabrics you want.

Do Rag Quilt are funny, simple and quite a lot cheap. The results look genuinely nice. Between the most pleasant parts of Rag Quilt are the little need of planning.

It likes more to create good taste than obey strict recipe. Even so reach the right size require attention, especially if you prepare it for a certain bed or folk.

How to Measure and Cut a Rag Quilt

Before starting, you must measure the bed and expected overhang. For single beds, the usual cover size is 55 x 47 inches, what matches around 140 x 120 cm. Cover for queen size usually measures 90 x 108 inches.

For royal bed, many favour that the cover cover everything entirely, what requires even more squares.

The most common squares for Rag Quilt are cut between 5 and 10 inches. The ended size of all squares end in 1 to 1.5 inches more small than the original slice, because of the sewing allowance. For instance, square cut in 8 inches end in 7 inches after sewing with half-inch allowance.

Cover with 8 rows across and 9 rows down, using such sqaures, result around 56 x 63 inches, what answers for gift or round table.

Throw-size Rag Quilt commonly measures around 46 x 60 inches. You can alter the number and size of squares to adapt the cover to bigger or more small. There are charts for Rag Quilt sizes and square slices, that simplify this calculation.

Simply point the wanted cover size, choose the block size, and the chart points how many squares to cut.

The lining should be cut around 2 inches more small than the fabric squares. So, if the fabric squares are 10 inches, the lining will be about 8 inches. Cut the lining too near the fabric size can create troubles, because it risks pulling from the sewing allowance.

Use bigger sewing allowance delivers more fabric for the fray, what gives fluffy ragged look. Three-quarter inch or one-inch allowance works well for much fraying. Even so, recall that bigger allowance shrinks the final size of the cover.

After sewing, the edges trim all half inches, in half inch depth.

Flannel answer well for Rag Quilt and 9-inch flannel squares give three rows from won yard of fabric. Some cover uses denim and cotton up and below, with flannel in the centre. Picking fabric that frays well are important, because the frayed seams create the unique Rag Quilt look.

Sew big X through the centre of every block is common method for setting the layers together. The walking foot on the sewing machine help also during the sewing.

For double bed, share the bed width by the square size help to count how many squares require for one row. 54-inch broad bed divided by 5-inch squares give around 11 squares across and 15 down, what totals 165 squares. That same amount isneeded for the backing layer and any middle batting layer.

Rag Quilt Size Calculator – Plan Your Quilt Right

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