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Pima Cotton Wagasa Blue Dress Fabric Cud

Geometric & Abstract Print Fabric

If you're after a print that reads as considered rather than decorative, geometric and abstract prints are usually where people land. This collection covers block prints, grids and diamonds through to bolder, painterly abstracts, across cotton poplin, viscose, jersey and lining. Sold by the metre or half metre depending on the fabric, with free samples available on most.

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Geometric and abstract prints sit at the more graphic end of patterned fabric. Where a floral or animal print tends to soften a garment, a sharp geometric or a bold abstract design does the opposite, giving it a cleaner, more modern edge. The two overlap more than they differ: a geometric print is built from repeating shapes with a clear structure, while an abstract print takes a looser, less predictable approach to colour and form, but both share that same graphic quality.

A number of the designs in this collection lean on the kind of bold colour blocking and organic shape more associated with 20th-century art than traditional dressmaking prints, which makes for a genuinely distinctive range rather than a generic geometric filler category.

Types of geometric and abstract fabric

Block and grid prints on cotton poplin give a crisp, structured geometric with clean lines, well suited to shirts and tailored pieces.

Abstract art-inspired prints in viscose and cotton lawn bring a looser, more painterly quality, good for anyone after something less rigid than a strict repeat.

Geometric in fluid fabrics, viscose challis and stretch woven versions, soften a bold pattern with drape, useful for dresses and skirts where a stiff geometric might feel too severe.

Geometric and abstract lining, printed ponte jersey and polyester lining options, are a good way to bring a bold print into a jacket or coat without it being the headline fabric.

Choosing scale and placement

Bold geometric repeats generally need centring carefully on a garment, particularly at the front and any symmetrical seams, so it's worth planning pattern placement before cutting rather than after. Smaller-scale geometric prints are more forgiving and behave similarly to a plain fabric at the cutting stage.

What's the difference between a geometric print and an abstract print?

A geometric print is built from repeating shapes, stripes, grids, diamonds, with a clear, structured repeat. An abstract print takes a looser approach to colour and form, without a strict repeating pattern. Both sit in the same graphic family and are shown together in this collection.

Do geometric prints need pattern matching at the seams?

Bold, large-scale geometric prints benefit from careful placement, particularly at centre front and symmetrical seams, in the same way a stripe or check would. Smaller-scale geometric prints are far more forgiving and can generally be treated like a plain fabric when cutting.

Are these fabrics suitable for dressmaking or more for home furnishings?

This collection is dressmaking-focused, spanning cotton poplin, viscose, jersey and lining, rather than furnishing-weight fabrics. Check the individual product page for weight and suitability if you're planning a specific project.

How do I care for printed geometric and abstract fabrics?

Wash at 30 or 40 degrees on a gentle cycle, inside out where possible, unless the care label states otherwise. Avoid bleach and fabric softeners, and iron on the reverse where the print sits close to the surface.

Can I order a sample before buying?

Yes. Most fabrics in this collection are available as a free sample so you can check the print scale, colour and handle before committing to a full cut. Use the "Order Sample" option on the product page.

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