Of course you can buy piping. It comes in different colors and sizes. But it's still limited, and many times, you just want to stomp your feet like a two-year-old and shout, "Don't like it!" Wouldn't it be much nicer to have exactly what you want instead of "close enough." It takes a little practice, but making your own piping is really kind of fun.
How much fabric do I need?
Depends on what you're making. Do you want piping around the edge of a pillow? Then measure the perimeter of the pillow. Are you thinking of using piping to accent the hem on a set of curtains? Then measure the length of the hem. Whatever you're working on, measure the total length of the seam you want to accent, and then add a few extra inches for safety. For most simple projects, like a pillow, you should be able to get away with about ½ to 1 yard of 45" wide fabric. You'll be cutting it into long strips.
How much piping cord do I need?
You'll need as much cord as you need fabric length. For example, if you are going around the edge of an 18" pillow, you need 18" x 4 sides for 72" plus a few inches for safety, say 75" total. That's just a little over two yards. Get 2¼ yards. Piping comes in various widths: ¾", ½", ¼", etc. The thicker the cord, the more prominent your piping will be. You get to decide.
How wide do I make my fabric strips?
There's a formula you can use that depends on the width of your piping. You'll have to go back into your fourth grade brain cells and remember how to add fractions. The formula is double the width of your cord plus double the width of your seam allowance. Say we have ½" cord and we're using a standard ½" seam allowance. Your formula would be (½" x 2) + (½" x 2) or 1" + 1" which equals 2". Go to the head of the class and make your fabric strips 2" wide.
Can I start cutting now?
Almost. First you need to draw some nice straight lines to cut on. Lay your fabric out flat on your cutting surface right side up with the selvage running along one side.
The selvage is the woven edge of your fabric where is was originally attached to the loom. The fabric's pattern does not continue onto the selvage, but there is likely to be some information printed there that identifies the manufacturer or designer.
- Fold the fabric back diagonally so a straight edge is parallel to the selvage.
- Press the fold and use this crease as a guide to mark your parallel lines.
- Use a straight edge to make continuous parallel lines at the width you figured above.
- Cut along these lines with good, sharp scissors or a rotary cutter and straight edge.
Joining the strips
- Take two of your strips and place them right sides together at right angles to each other.
- Stitch straight across
- Lay flat, press the seam open and trim off the overlapping edges.
- Repeat until you have one long fabric strip. You just made your own bias tape.
Inserting the cord
- Place your nice long fabric strip, right side down on a large flat surface.
- Lay the cord in the center.
- Fold the fabric over the cord, keeping the cord centered and matching the raw edges of the fabric.
- Pin to hold in place.
- Carefully move to your sewing machine and adjust the piping so the raw edges line up on your seam allowance marking (½" in our model) and the cord pokes out to the left of your foot.
NOTE: We highly recommend using a zipper foot so your can get as close to the cord as possible.
- Stitch slowly, staying close to the cord and keeping your seam allowance consistent. Remember to remove your pins as you go so you don't sew over them.
Attaching Piping
You now have your own beautiful handmade piping. Better attach it to something!
Remember you always sew your piping to just one layer of fabric before joining together the two final layers that will enclose the piping. This helps prevent any shifting that can can result in an uneven edge.
Straight edge
- Pin piping to the right side of your fabric, matching raw edges. Make sure you start with enough to leave an approximate 1" tail free at the end.
- Start stitching about ¼" - ½" from the raw end of the piping (to facilitate the clean finish outlined below).
- To turn a corner, clip the seam allowance on the piping up to, but not through, the piping's line of stitching.
- This gives you the flexibility you need to turn the corner. We call this "easing" around the corner.
- Pin in place.
- Stitch along your seam allowance, removing the pins as you go. Again, we highly recommend the zipper foot for this application.
Curved edge
- Place piping on the right side of your fabric, matching raw edges. Again, make sure you start with enough to leave an approximate 1" tail free at the end.
- Pin in place, clipping the seam allowance as you go to make the fabric lay flat. Clip up to the line of stitching, but not through it. Clip as you go, making as many clips as you need to make a smooth curve. This is called "give" – the little cuts give the otherwise rigid line the flexibility to curve.

- As above, start stitching about ¼" - ½" from the raw end of the piping (to facilitate the clean finish outlined below).
- Stitch along your seam allowance, removing the pins as you go. Again, we highly recommend the zipper foot for this application.
Finishing
- Continue sewing your piping in place until you are back to where you started. Using that "tail" you accounted for at the beginning, cut off any excess piping so you have about 1" to work with.
- With a seam ripper, peel back the fabric to expose the cording underneath.

- Trim the end of cording tail so it exactly meets the end of the sewn-down cording. Fold under the end of the loose fabric to create a clean edge. Lift up that little bit of the start of the piping you left loose at the beginning and wrap this folded end under and around, overlapping about ½".
- Stitch in place, matching your seam line.








How To Make And Attach Your Own Piping









Hi:
I am making an upholstered bench from a coffee table and want to attach piping to the fabric. The table is 50 inches long and 20 inches wide with sort of an angled 2" edge on each corner. I have figured out how much cording I need but can't quite figure out how much fabric I need to cover the cording. I also need to figure out how many strips of fabirc are needed. The fabric is pretty expensive so I want to be sure that I have enough but not a lot of extra.
@ Cecelia - we address fabric amounts above and so that is your best path to follow. We don't do custom measurements for folks because there are simply too many variable; we'd hate to guess wrong on something long distance and give you bad advice. In addition to this tutorial, take a look at our bias binding tutorial, there is additional "how to figure fabric" information there and between the two, I think you'll have everything you need. Here is the link:
http://www.sew4home.com/tips-resources/sewing-tips-tricks/bias-binding-f...
estou atraz um tempao de um tutorial deste pingente ,,,por favor ensina pra nós,,,desde ja muito obrigado que lindo este site agradecidíssima;;;
I kinda know how to do piping,but, have only done it once.I am making a cushion cover for one of the local businesses, and wanted to make sure I had it right. Thank you ever so much for a good refresser tutorial.By the way, I love your sight! Iamon afixedincome, andcan't always afford to purchase patterns. You have a marvelous selection of just about everything. They are all easy to follow. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
OMG! - thank you so much! - I had no idea how much time was needed. My project is to recover the cushions of my deck chairs. We're talking yards and yards of piping here. I'm thinking I may just tuck some cording into a bit of extra seam allowance and see how it works... I'll let you know.
I've made piping and attached it to various projects throughout the years. I'm wondering, though, if there's a great technique for connecting the cording inside the piping when it just isn't long enough to finish making the piping for my project. The cording I usually purchase for making piping is not strands so it cannot be woven together as you would a decorative cording or braid. Rather, this cording which I place inside my bias strips as I sewing together the piping is made from long fibers held roughly together by a few thin threads. I've tried using fabric glue to connect the cording ends inside the bias. I've considereed leaving tape on the joining ends, but I'm afraid that tape will disconnect in the wash leaving the cording inside my piping to potentially separate. The pillow covers I'm attaching my piping to will definitely be washed numerous times throughout their useful lives. Would you have any suggestions for this dilemma? Or is it best not to worry about the cording becoming disconnected and disheveled inside the bias? Thanks for any ideas you may have!
@ Nadia Nunziato - I've not worked with cording as you've described. The cord we use does ravel slighty, but the ends are tightly butted together so it is not a problem. I'm not sure what you mean when you say the piping isn't long enough. That sounds like something to address upfront rather than at the finishing point. You should make the bias binding and the piping that goes inside it at least 4-6" longer than the perimeter of your finished project. Then, you can cut the ends so they butt together tightly - if done like this, we've not seen problems with the ends coming apart. If you are very worried about it, you could glue the ends with fabric glue, sew them together with a heavy button thread, or wrap them together with a floss or yarn... just be careful not to make a bump that could show through your fabric covering.
Thanks so much, Liz. I just had several feet of cording left from a previous pillow project. That length, however, wasn't enough to make the length of piping necessary for my next pillow. Instead of throwing away the remnant cording, I did as you suggested and carefully hand-stitched the cording end to my new piece of cording then wrapped them with thread as well. Essentially, the cording will be joined at this spotand at the end once attached to my pillow cover, but it should be secure enough to withstand machine washing on a delicate cycle. Thank you for taking time to respond and thank you so much for your suggestions!
Whoa. I have no idea where all that extra data came from. My typed message is only at the end. So sorry about that
I'm going to make an 18X18 pillow. I've already purchased ready made decorative piping so I will not have to cover piping with my fabric. I was told I only needed 2 yards of material and the same for the ready made piping. I took the clerks word for it since I very rarely sew. I guess I've already gone off the deep end thinking how hard could it be? How do I join the two ends once I've gone around the pillow?
@ Kat Farrelly - the finishing instructions are shown above at the end of the article - you peel back the covering, cut the ends so they butt together flush to fit, recover and stitch (that's the summary version - the steps are in more detail above). However, you may not have enough piping. You really need at least 6-7" extra inches to give you extra length to turn each corner and enough at the end to work with to get a good fit. For an 18 x 18 pillow, you need to measure each side and add that extra. 72" - two yards - is just the extact measurement of the pillow (18 x 4) so no extra. 2 -1/3 to 2-1/2 yards would have been better. So.... you could make a smaller pillow (if you haven't also gotten the pillow form) or you should probablty get additional piping.
Hi Liz
I think this is a brilliant way of explaining piping. Would you mind if I did use this to explain my Students how to make piping cord?
I teach soft furnishings at a London College. I would of course mention where I have this from.
Thank you
Antje
@ Antje - we actually recently updated our article. You can find the updated post here: http://sew4home.com/tips-resources/sewing-tips-tricks/pillow-personality...
Regarding your request, I'm afraid it is against our copyright policy. You can certainly direct your students to the articles online, but we don't allow reprinting or republishing - it is much the same as useage from a book. We do appreciate you asking. It can be very hard to protect your brand on the internet. You can read our full Copyright and Use policy in our About Us section: https://sew4home.com/about-us
Thank you for your understanding.
I've been making piped pillows for years, and it's simple to figure out bias strip yardage for a small project. Years ago I cut out a magazine tip about the trick of starting with a square of fabric, cutting it on the diagonal and pinning the straight edges right sides together while extending one edge the width of the desired bias cut. You then sew the straight edge and end up with a tube of fabric. Cut the extended piece in a continuous strip the determined width and you have an easy way of making lots of bias without sewing all the individual pieces together. My question is do you know any formulas for determing the size of the square to start with and arriving at many yards of bias when working on a large project. I'm sure professionals must have a solution. Thanks!!
Hi Betty, I have been making my continuous bias binding for years and the following method is used to calculate the size of the square needed.
1) Multiply the total length required, making sure you have allowed a few extra inches more than the exact length of each side of the cushion' by the width of the strip. So, for a 20" square cushion that would be 83" multipled by 1.5" if you were using 1/4" cord. This gives a total fabric area of 124.5 square inches.
2) Now you need to find the square root of that number. If you don't have a calculater there are plenty online. Just Google Square Root Calculater. The answer will be 11.???????.! Take this up to the next whole number - 12". That is the size square you will need.
Believe me, it sounds too simple to be true....but it is. I always make sure I add extra and if the square root is above .75, I add on another extra whole digit to be on the safe side. For example....12.7965.. I would make my square 14"
Hope mthis helps. Happy sewing.
@ Betty T -- We just updated this article; you can find the new post here:
http://sew4home.com/tips-resources/sewing-tips-tricks/pillow-personality...
The trick here is calculating fabric yardage, and more importantly, super accurate cutting. It's just a bit of a brain strain. We use one of those laminated charts that tells you how much you need, how big the square should be, etc. There are plenty of these available in stores or online. To determine the yardage, the math is the same as we provided in our piping tutorial. As for the size of the square, it depends on the width of the binding itself 1-1/2", 2", 2 1/2", etc. Here's a tutorial that seems to explain the math for determining the actual square size http://quilting.about.com/od/bindingaquilt/ss/binding_strips_4.htm . In addition, we will have some additional S4H tutorials coming up in the next month that address making bias binding in general as well as tricks for the continuous binding you describe... so stay tuned.
Thanks for the quick reply and link. The math steps were the same way I was going about it, but I was glad to know that someone does make a chart.
Hi! I'm new to the website and plan on attempting to create my own piping for the first time tomorrow. Just wondering if I can use a long strip of solid fabric or is there a specific reason to cut and join strips of fabric.
Thanks so much!
@ eval325 - it depends on two things: 1) how much piping you need and 2) if you are going along a straight edge or a curve. If the edge along which you want to use piping isn't very long, then your piping strip doesn't have to be very long - one strip of fabric will be fine. When working with a straight edge, you are seaming together strips simply to get additional length. If you are piping on a curve, you should cut bias strips. This traditionally takes more fabric because you are cutting on the diagonal, so most of the time bias strips are seamed together in order to give you enought length to work with. Have fun!
Thanks so much Liz! I'm planning on making a bench cushion for my daughters "tween" room upgrade. We have an old bookshelf from IKEA. I was browsing through a decorating magazine and saw that they had taken something similar, turned it sideways, added short legs and a custom cushion for the top. I'm at the point of sewing the top cushion (it 12"x 60") and was hoping to get away with using strips of my super wide fabric to create the piping.
One more question...What is the benefit of bias cut material? Is it additional stretchiness?
@eval325 - bias is a diagonal line in comparison to the up-and-down and side-to-side weave of a fabric, so because you cutting at an angle, it allows the fabric to bend around a curve... so, yeah, kind of stretchiness in that you can curve it. If the piece is cut on the straight grain, it does NOT want to curve ;-).
I just finished making a pillow for my mom, but I really want to add some piping to the edge. Does it matter that I've already sewn the edges together? Her birthday is coming up soon, and I wanted to make her something myself to add to her family room decorating. Thanks for the great DIY instructions!
@ Daria Darcy - You would have to take the seams apart to add the piping. It would look odd sewn to the outside.
thanks for the awesome tute! i really needed the "width of fabric strips" calculation....ty
Thank you for such clear instructions, I had done piping before but couldnt remember how to go around corners ,This was so clear,and helpful.
Thank you for putting up such a clear and informative set of instructions for making and attaching piping. I really appreciate the effort and time involved.
I am making a cover for a serger and the pattern calls for piping.
Aloha
Thanks for the tutorial. I have a pillow that has needed something like this to finish it and I've just been putting it off since I didn't want to ruin it while figuring out the process.
Paige
This truly has been a God sent and will pass it on to my sewing friends.
Namaste, Lisa
http://sew4home.com/projects/pillows-cushions/506-nature-brights-kitchen...
http://sew4home.com/projects/bed-linens/602-fathers-day-pendleton-wool-c...
http://sew4home.com/projects/furniture-covers/558-turquoise-2010-ottoman...
thanks
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