Polka dot fabric has been a staple in dressmaking for well over a century and it's not hard to see why. The pattern is bold enough to be noticed but structured enough to work with almost anything. A spot print in the right scale can feel playful and retro, or clean and graphic, depending on how it's made up. It's one of those prints that never quite goes out of fashion.
At Croft Mill, our dots and spots collection brings together polka dot and spot prints across a range of fabric types and fibres. Whether you're looking for something lightweight for summer dressing or a stable cotton for crafts and home projects, you'll find it here.
Fabric types in this collection
Polka dot cotton fabric is the most searched-for option, and for good reason. Cotton poplin with a spot print is crisp, easy to cut, and reliable for dressmaking. It works well for blouses, shirts, children's clothes, and craft projects. Cotton lawn is a finer option: lightweight and slightly translucent, it's ideal for floaty summer dresses and delicate blouses where a softer drape is needed.
Viscose spot fabric brings fluidity to the dot print. Viscose drapes beautifully and is a popular choice for wrap dresses, tiered skirts, and summer blouses. It moves with the body in a way cotton doesn't, so it's worth considering if you're making something fitted or floaty rather than structured.
Jersey with a spot print is less common but very wearable. A polka dot cotton or poly jersey is comfortable, has a little stretch, and works well for t-shirt dresses, fitted tops, and casual separates.
What to make with polka dot fabric.
Polka dot fabric suits a wide range of projects. For dressmaking, it works especially well for 1950s-inspired full-skirted dresses, collared blouses, gathered midi skirts, and children's party dresses. The pattern aligns neatly at seams when cut carefully, which gives a clean finish without requiring pattern matching in the way a stripe or check would.
For home sewing, spot fabric is a classic choice for bunting, cushion covers, and fabric storage baskets. It photographs well, which makes it a popular pick for craft projects that end up on social media.
A note on scale and colour
Dot scale makes a significant difference to how the finished project looks. Small pin dots read almost as a texture from a distance and suit structured garments and shirts. Medium dots are the most versatile, recognisable as a polka dot print from across the room but not dominant. Large spot prints make more of a statement and work well when the pattern repeat is a design feature in its own right.
Classic navy and white or black and white combinations are always reliable, but spot prints in unexpected colourways - sage green, burnt orange, dusty pink - can be just as wearable and slightly more original.