{"title":"How to Fold a Sweater: 3 Methods for Drawers, Shelves, and Hangers","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/lifestyle/how-to-fold-a-sweater","category":{"slug":"lifestyle","name":"Lifestyle"},"creator":{"name":"Tor from Organizing TV","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTokh0S05ZBTOHzLvUoIlQw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TnQPDPGqSlU"},"tldr":"Three sweater folds that save drawer space. Cardigan shelf-stack, hoodie roll for travel, military roll for the tightest cylinder, and a KonMari file-fold.","totalDurationSeconds":444,"difficulty":"easy","tools":[],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Method 1: Lay the Cardigan Face-Down and Quarter-Fold the Body","text":"Cardigans are the trickiest sweater to fold neatly because the open front never wants to stay closed on its own. Start by laying the cardigan flat on a table with the front buttons facing down. Smooth out wrinkles, especially at the shoulders.Visually split the body into four equal vertical sections. Take the left edge and fold it inward one quarter of the way toward the center. Repeat on the right side. The two panels should meet near the middle of the back. This narrow strip is the foundation for the shelf-stack fold and works on any open-front sweater - cardigans, button-downs, even unzipped fleeces."},{"number":2,"title":"Method 1: Fold the Sleeves Down and Bring the Body Into Thirds","text":"With the body in a strip, take each sleeve and fold it straight down along the side seam. The cuff should sit at the bottom hem. If a sleeve runs long, fold it back up on itself so nothing hangs over the edge.Now split the length into three equal sections. Start at the bottom hem and fold up one third, then bring the top third down over that. You end up with a neat rectangle roughly the size of a folded T-shirt. It stacks cleanly on a shelf without unraveling. This is the cleanest fold for shelf storage, especially if you stack four or five sweaters in a column inside a fabric storage bin."},{"number":3,"title":"Method 2: Set Up the Hoodie Face-Up and Fold the Sleeves Across","text":"For the hoodie, flip the orientation. Lay the hoodie face-up with the hood at the top of your work surface. Smooth out any bunching at the shoulders and across the chest.Fold each sleeve across the body toward the opposite side, laying them flat on top of the front. If the sleeves run long enough to hang off the other edge, fold them back down at the elbow so they sit flush. Then bring the left and right sides of the body in one third of the way each, so the whole hoodie forms a long narrow strip from the hood at the top to the hem at the bottom. This is the setup for the roll that finishes the fold and locks itself."},{"number":4,"title":"Method 2: Roll From the Hem and Tuck the Hood to Lock It","text":"Starting at the bottom hem of the long strip, roll the hoodie upward toward the hood. A tighter roll saves more drawer or suitcase space but creates more wrinkles. If you're packing for tomorrow, ease up on the tension. If it's a hoodie you won't wear for a month, roll it tight.When the roll reaches the hood, pull the hood up and over the entire bundle. Tuck the edges around so the hood wraps the roll like an envelope. This locks the whole thing in place - no rubber bands, no ties, nothing slipping. It also doubles as a perfectly serviceable travel pillow. Stuff one in your carry-on instead of a neck pillow."},{"number":5,"title":"Method 3: Military Roll a Regular Sweater for Maximum Compactness","text":"The military roll is Tor's personal favorite and the tightest cylinder you can get from a regular crewneck sweater. Start with the sweater face-down. Lift the bottom hem and fold it back over the body about seven centimeters (three inches) - pulling that small section inside-out. This creates a pocket at the bottom that becomes the lock at the end.Now fold the sleeves over the body the same way as the hoodie, then bring each side in one third. Flip the sweater so the pocket is at the top. Roll tightly from the top down toward where the pocket sits. When you reach the bottom, pull the inside-out pocket over the entire roll. The pocket flips outside-in and wraps the cylinder. No ties needed - it holds its shape on its own and stays locked even when shaken."},{"number":6,"title":"Method 3 Variation: Skip the Pocket Lock and Use an IKEA Drawer Box","text":"The full military roll is great for travel but harsh on fabric over weeks. The locking pocket stretches the fibers, and pure wool or cashmere doesn't bounce back from sitting under that tension for months. Tor's better long-term version: do the setup the same way - sleeves in, sides folded one third - but skip the inside-out pocket entirely.Just roll the sweater up loosely without locking anything. It will want to unravel once you let go. Drop the unsecured roll into an IKEA SKUBB drawer box or any small fabric storage bin. The walls of the box hold the rolls upright next to each other. Pull one out and the rest stay in place. Almost the same space savings as the military roll, far easier on the fabric, and noticeably faster to fold."},{"number":7,"title":"Method 4: KonMari File-Fold for Vertical Drawer Storage","text":"The KonMari file-fold finishes the set. It's not a roll - it's a compact rectangle that stands on its own edge. Lay the sweater flat, fold the sides in one third on each side, then fold the sleeves down so they sit inside the strip. Fold the sweater in half lengthwise (bottom up to top), then fold it once more so the final shape is a small block roughly the size of a paperback book.Stand the blocks upright in a drawer side-by-side, like books on a shelf. Every sweater is visible at a glance, and pulling one out doesn't disturb its neighbors. The file-fold works best on cotton blends and lighter knits that hold a crease. Pure wool tends to flop over - pair wool sweaters with a drawer divider or pack them tighter so they brace each other."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-26T15:49:55.654Z","published":"2026-05-26T15:49:42.842Z","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."}