March 21, 2025 4 Comments
In Part One, we talked about all the background for starting the 113 Japanese Kimono -- sizing, yardages, fabric, etc. Now we can start sewing! Find our 113 Japanese Kimono sewing pattern here and join along!
Cutting out the Pattern and Fabric
The first thing to do after deciding on your size and fabric is to cut out the pattern. You will cut the whole pattern. You will not cut your particular size (other than one end of the overlap where do you cut down to your size on the slanted end).
The front and the back of the kimono are cut as one piece (with no shoulder seam). To get this very long piece, you must tape the front and back pattern pieces together at the shoulder line. This pattern piece could not be printed as one long piece (too long for any printer), so the pattern piece must be taped together at the shoulder to create the long front/back piece.









































July 11, 2025
So glad I found this post! I was given some (vintage, from the 70s or 80s) Japanese yukata fabric last year, and have been itching to try making one! I found the Folkwear pattern, which seemed easier than just making it from measurements. I have it all cut out now, and am ready to start sewing. Some of the bits—around the neckline, for example—seem a bit tricky, so reading this post was so helpful. I am going to be very careful about marking everything, as you were. The fabric you used is beautiful, too; very inspiring.
March 24, 2025
I love the kimono and how detailed you shoe it. But… the down part of the front I couldn’t see it well. Maybe it’s me. Did you combine that part with the linen material?or…
Thanks
From Ghana 🇬🇭
March 21, 2025
Wow! It sounds straightforward but one has to concentrate to not miss any of those intricate steps.
I plan to make one.
Thanks for the tutorial
Samantha Benton
May 27, 2026
I still use my 1977 version, although I don’t use the same size-lines as I used to. One suggestion: a lot of (later-20th-century) kimono have angled seam allowances for the shoulder/sleeve, from the chest through the shoulder and the upper back, so that the seam allowance is only a half-inch or so at the top of the shoulder, and the seam falls a few inches down on the arm putting the bottom/cuff of the sleeve closer to the wrist. This is a better match to the fit of kimono in just about every photo I’ve seen, including geisha and brides as well as yukata. I have to lengthen sleeves on almost every pattern I use, so learning this trick was a game-changer for me.
If you look at Japanese retailers, new yukata have a sleeve “drop” (width) close to 19 inches, which is almost as long as the “formal sleeve” included in the pattern. The “casual” sleeve is still fine for under-kimono or bath-house type robes.
Also, modern kimono-fabric weavers are making wider fabrics (15-16 inches versus 13-14), since newer generations of Japanese are taller than their grandparents. If the newest version of this pattern doesn’t already offer cutting lines for wider fabrics, tape a strip of paper along the straight edge of the sleeve from the fold to the corner, transfer the markings and use as directed.