{"title":"How to Cut Quilt Fabric Straight (Rotary Cutter Skills)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/quilting/how-to-cut-quilt-fabric","category":{"slug":"quilting","name":"Quilting"},"creator":{"name":"Just Get it Done Quilts","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQt_y4kqMQlG1id0n975DVg","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j2f82V8g0qs"},"tldr":"Learn how to cut quilt fabric straight with a rotary cutter, ruler, and mat. Karen Brown's 7-step skills tutorial covers tools, body position, and safety.","totalDurationSeconds":631,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["45mm rotary cutter","Self-healing cutting mat (24x36 inch)","Acrylic quilting ruler (6x24 inch)","Fabric scissors","Iron","Spray bottle"],"materials":["Quilting cotton fabric","Replacement rotary blades","Quilters spray starch"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Gather Your Four Cutting Tools","text":"Karen is direct about the gear: you need exactly four things to cut quilt fabric accurately, and they all have to be quality. A sharp rotary cutter - the 45mm OLFA is the workhorse most quilters reach for. A self-healing cutting mat at least 24 inches on its longest side so you can cut a full width of fabric without repositioning. A clear acrylic quilting ruler with eighth-inch markings (6x24 is the standard). And a fresh spare blade in a drawer for when the current one starts to skip.The fifth item that isn't on the list but matters just as much: a steady flat table at the right height. Karen tests her countertop by giving it a shake - if it moves, the cuts move with it. More on that in the next step."},{"number":2,"title":"Build a Steady Cutting Station with Trusted Brands","text":"Before any fabric touches the mat, test the table. Karen literally grabs hers and shakes it. If it moves, tighten the screws, add a leg support, or push it against a wall. A table that's steady front-to-back but wobbles side-to-side is just as bad - the wobble is what makes your blade drift.Brand matters on the ruler and mat too. Karen sticks with OLFA, Fiskars, Creative Grids, or Omnigrid because they built their reputations on measurement accuracy. No-name rulers from Wish or Amazon are fine for paper crafts, but for quilting you need lines that actually match - a sixteenth-inch difference between brands compounds over a whole quilt."},{"number":3,"title":"Press the Fabric Flat and Fold Selvage-to-Selvage","text":"Press your fabric flat with an iron first. Wrinkles and creases are the most common reason quilt strips end up curved or wavy after cutting. A wrinkle near the fold lifts the fabric a fraction of an inch off the mat, and that fraction becomes a visible curve when you cut a 22-inch strip.Then fold the fabric selvage-to-selvage so the long printed edges line up. Take your time on this fold - if it's off by even a quarter inch, every strip you cut will have a V-shape in it the moment you unfold it. Smooth the fabric flat on the mat with both hands before the ruler comes near it."},{"number":4,"title":"Straighten the First Edge Before You Measure Anything","text":"The selvage end of a fresh cut of fabric is almost never square. If you start measuring strips from that ragged edge, every strip is off. So the first cut is always a throwaway square-up cut.Lay the fold along a horizontal grid line on the mat. Set the ruler across the fabric so it crosses at a true 90 degrees from the fold. Trim off the ragged end with one clean pass of the rotary cutter. That fresh straight edge is now your reference - every strip width measures from there."},{"number":5,"title":"Measure and Cut Strips with Your Body Squared to the Ruler","text":"Measure strip width on the ruler, not on the mat. Place the ruler so the strip-width line sits exactly on the freshly-straightened edge. Anchor the ruler with your non-cutting hand - palm flat, pressing straight down from above, not from the side. Roll the blade away from your body in one continuous pass.Karen is firm on the body mechanics: roll your shoulders back, engage your core, put one foot slightly in front of the other, and stand to one side so the ruler aligns with your shoulder. The power comes from your arm, not your wrist. Your hand on the cutter is just guiding the blade along the ruler edge."},{"number":6,"title":"Manage Long Cuts with Walking Fingers or a Weight","text":"A 24-inch cut is longer than most hands can hold a ruler still for. Karen's trick is to walk her fingers up the ruler mid-cut. Stop the blade where your fingertips reach, keep pressure on the ruler so it doesn't shift, slide your hand higher on the ruler, press down again, then keep cutting from where you stopped.The easier alternative is a small weight on the far end of the ruler - Karen uses a five-pound dumbbell. The ruler stays put on its own and you just cut. If your ruler isn't long enough for the full cut, line up a second ruler edge-to-edge with the first instead of repositioning the fabric."},{"number":7,"title":"Cross-Cut Strips and Keep the Blade Safe","text":"Once your strips are cut, cross-cut them into squares or rectangles using the same rules: ruler measurement on the strip's straight edge, blade rolling away from your body, fingers safe behind the ruler.If the blade starts to skip or drag through fabric, replace it. A dull blade makes you push harder, which makes you clench, which messes up your form and pulls the fabric forward into a wave. Sharp blades cut straight on their own. And close the blade between cuts - an open rotary blade in the path of a sleeve is exactly how fingers and forearms get cut."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-24T16:46:05.302Z","published":"2026-05-24T16:45:50.395Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}