How to Download, Print & Assemble Fabrico Sewing Patterns in A4
Print & assembly guide

How to use your Fabrico pattern

From PDF download to ready-to-cut paper pattern — printing at the correct scale, assembling the pages, and understanding every symbol you'll see along the way.

Fabrico sewing pattern laid out for printing Assembled Fabrico paper pattern
Part 01

Printing your pattern

01

Access your pattern

Once your order is confirmed, the PDF is immediately available in your account on the Fabrico website. A copy is also sent to your registered email.

Tip Don't see the email? Check your Spam folder — sometimes it lands there.
02

Save the file to your device

Download the A4 version of the pattern. Save it somewhere easy to find — your desktop works great. Don't try to print directly from the browser; saving locally avoids most printing errors.

03

Print the test page first

Open the PDF and print only the first page — it contains a test square. In your print settings, set Pages to "1". Never print the whole document until the test square is correct.

04
Most important

Set the scale to 100%

This is the single most important setting. Get it wrong and the whole pattern will be off — and your garment won't fit.

Depending on your software, the option appears under different names:

  • Choose "Actual Size" instead of "Fit to Page"
  • If there's a scaling percentage, set it to 100%
  • If there's a "Fit content to page" checkbox — untick it
  • Make sure paper size is A4 (not Letter)
05

Measure the test square

Use a ruler to check the printed square. It should be exactly 10 cm × 10 cm (or 3.94 in × 3.94 in). If it's smaller — usually around 9 cm — your scale is below 100%. Adjust your printer settings and try again.

Test square dimensions
10 cm × 10 cm (3.94 in × 3.94 in). Always measure with a ruler before printing the full pattern.
06

Print the full pattern

Once the test square checks out, print the remaining pages with the exact same settings. Don't change scale or paper size between pages.

Part 02

Following the gluing scheme

Every sheet has a number like 2-1 — the column comes first, then the row. Lay them out in a grid and you'll see the full pattern emerge.

How to read the numbering

Each printed sheet has a code in its lower-right corner: the first digit is the column number, the second is the row number.

For example, sheet 2-1 sits in the second column of the first row. Lay out all sheets like a grid following this logic.

Once the grid is laid out:

  • Cut off the unnecessary margins around each sheet
  • Match the edges and join the pages with scotch tape or paper glue
  • Cut out your pattern pieces along the black lines
1 2 3 4 1 2 3 1-1 2-1 3-1 4-1 1-2 2-2 3-2 4-2 1-3 2-3 3-3 4-3 Column Row
Important Seam allowance is already included in all Fabrico patterns. There's no need to add anything to your pattern pieces when cutting fabric.
Part 03

Symbols & designations

A quick reference to every mark you'll find on a Fabrico pattern. Keep this handy until they become second nature.

Check square

Used to verify print scale. Its dimensions must be exactly 10 × 10 cm (3.94 × 3.94 in). If yours isn't, recheck your printer scale.

Print check square 10 cm by 10 cm

Page numbers

Found in the lower-right corner of each sheet, marked in red brackets. Use them to assemble your pages by the gluing scheme.

Page number marker shown in red brackets

Grain line

The arrow shows the direction of the common thread, which runs parallel to the edge of the fabric. Always align pattern pieces with this direction when cutting.

Grain line direction arrow

Tuck (dart)

The edges of a tuck must be stitched towards its top corner. The arrow shows which direction to press the dart when ironing.

Tuck or dart marking on a pattern

Control notches

Small marks that help align pieces during sewing. When cutting fabric, transfer every notch from the pattern to your piece — they're essential for accurate assembly.

Control notches alignment marks

Fold direction

The arrow shows which way to fold the fabric. Most often used in pleats and tucks where direction matters for the finished look.

Fold direction arrow with marker points

Button & loop markings

Shows the position of buttons or buttonholes on the pattern piece. Mark these on your fabric before sewing.

Buttons and loops markings on pattern

Button or grommet

Indicates the exact placement of a single button, snap or eyelet hole. Always transfer this mark to your fabric.

Button or grommet placement marker

Bartack

A reinforcing stitch applied at stress points like pocket corners or belt loops. The cross symbol marks where to apply it.

Bartack reinforcement stitch marker

Place on fold

The pattern shows half of a symmetrical piece. Place this edge on the fold of the fabric so the piece comes out mirrored and whole.

Place on fold line with FOLD label

Solid & dotted lines

Most pattern outlines are solid lines. A dotted line indicates an alternative element such as a size variant, an internal marking or a stitching guide.

Solid line marked LINE Center fold line with B label
Prefer to watch

Video walkthrough

Some things are easier to see than to read. Watch the full printing and assembly process step by step on our YouTube channel.

Watch on YouTube
You're set

Ready to start sewing

Accuracy at the printing and assembly stage is what makes the finished garment fit the way it should. Two minutes spent on the test square save hours of fixing seams later.

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