How to Calculate the Weight of Fabric from Count, EPI, PPI and Width
One very common practical question in fabric sourcing is:
“If I know the yarn count, fabric width, ends per inch and picks per inch, can I estimate how much warp and weft yarn is required for 100 metres of fabric?”
The answer is yes. We can estimate it quite reasonably, especially for cotton woven fabrics, provided we understand the assumptions behind the calculation.
This calculation is useful for merchandisers, fabric buyers, converters, traders and small fabric suppliers because yarn prices change frequently. If the yarn price increases, the fabric price should also move logically. Without a basic calculation, it becomes difficult to judge whether the quoted fabric price is reasonable or inflated.
Information Required
To calculate the approximate fabric weight, we need the following details:
- Warp yarn count
- Weft yarn count
- Ends per inch, also called EPI or reed
- Picks per inch, also called PPI
- Fabric width in inches
- Warp crimp percentage
- Weft crimp percentage
For a quick practical estimate, we may assume:
| Parameter | Assumed Value |
|---|---|
| Warp crimp | 10% |
| Weft crimp | 3% |
| 1 metre | 1.0936 yards |
| 1 pound | 453.59 grams |
| Cotton count basis | 840 yards per hank |
The Basic Cotton Count Formula
In the English cotton count system:
Therefore:
This is the foundation of the fabric weight calculation.
Warp Weight per Metre
The warp weight per running metre can be calculated as:
Where:
For 10% warp crimp:
Weft Weight per Metre
The weft weight per running metre can be calculated as:
For 3% weft crimp:
Total Fabric Weight per Running Metre
The total fabric weight per running metre is:
This gives the approximate weight of one running metre of fabric.
To calculate the yarn required for 100 metres:
Worked Example
Let us take a cotton fabric with the following construction:
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Warp count | 40s cotton |
| Weft count | 40s cotton |
| Ends per inch | 80 |
| Picks per inch | 72 |
| Width | 47 inches |
| Warp crimp | 10% |
| Weft crimp | 3% |
Step 1: Warp Weight
Step 2: Weft Weight
Step 3: Total Fabric Weight
So, the approximate fabric weight is:
For 100 metres:
Therefore, approximately:
How to Calculate GSM from This
Many people confuse grams per metre with GSM.
Grams per metre tells us the weight of one running metre of fabric.
GSM means grams per square metre.
For 47 inches width:
Therefore:
So this fabric is approximately:
Practical Formula in One Line
For quick calculation:
This gives fabric weight in grams per running metre.
For 100 metres:
Important Practical Notes
1. This is an estimate, not the final invoice weight
The formula gives the theoretical yarn weight in the fabric. In real production, the final weight may change due to sizing, desizing, bleaching, dyeing, finishing, shrinkage and moisture regain.
2. Crimp must be adjusted for fabric type
A plain fabric, twill fabric, satin fabric, dobby fabric and heavy canvas will not have the same crimp. Warp crimp and weft crimp should ideally be measured from the actual sample.
3. Width matters
The formula uses fabric width in inches. If the width increases from 47 inches to 60 inches, the yarn requirement increases proportionately.
4. Count system matters
This formula is for cotton count or English count. It should not be directly used for denier, tex or metric count without conversion.
5. Add process wastage separately
If you are calculating yarn purchase requirement, add suitable wastage.
If 3% wastage is assumed:
So, for production planning, you may require approximately 11.6 kg instead of only 11.25 kg.
Corrected Understanding of the Original Formula
The earlier formula was fundamentally sound:
But it can be made more accurate as:
The difference is small, but the corrected version is technically cleaner because it uses more accurate conversion constants.
Final Rule of Thumb
To estimate woven cotton fabric weight:
Finer yarn means lower weight.
Higher EPI or PPI means higher weight.
Greater width means higher running-metre weight.
Higher crimp means more yarn consumption.
Once this logic is understood, fabric costing becomes much more transparent.
General Disclaimer
The calculations and explanations in this article are intended for educational and practical estimation purposes. Actual fabric weight may vary depending on yarn quality, weave structure, crimp, sizing, finishing, moisture content, shrinkage and testing conditions. For commercial costing, production planning or quality approval, calculations should be verified with actual sample testing and mill-specific data.
Goyal, P. How to calculate the weight of Fabric. My Textile Notes. Available at: https://mytextilenotes.blogspot.com/2011/01/how-to-calculate-weight-of-fabric.html
If you have a question related to this topic, you are welcome to ask it in the My Textile Notes Discussion Forum.
Students, merchandisers, designers, researchers and textile professionals are welcome to participate.
Sir,
ReplyDeleteis this weight calculated is of one square meter i.e GSM or is it the weight of 1 meter irrespective of width??
What is 840 which is multiplied by warp count??
ReplyDeleteFrom where that 840 came?
840 for cotton yarn
ReplyDeleteLength in yard/840 ×weight in lb.
What is 1.09 and 2.2. Is it a norm. What is the formula for canvas gray fabric?
ReplyDeleteI need to understand how many Kgs of yarn is required to weave 1 Kg of fabric. I understand that it depends on yarn count, PPI and EPI. Could you please explain through one example.
ReplyDeleteDear it is very difficult method I can teach you simple method
DeleteEnd+pic*width/768/half ACOUNT+10%/2.2046=
It will be weight of 1 MTR fabric
can someone plz help me with my experiment, i need a weight of 2x2cm cotton, rayon, and wool fabric. i have no idea about the measurements used in textile industry but need readings for my experiments
ReplyDeleteIf any here so please tell me how to find maximum PPI in fabric while given epi,count
ReplyDeleteI want to know weight if fabric from GSM IN weaving fabric
ReplyDeleteWhat is the GSM of fabric weights 120grams per metre?
ReplyDeleteLength=30 meter ,thread count=10000 weight=1kg350grms.
ReplyDeleteSo,
What is the weight for,
Length=75 meter,thread count=10600
Weight=?
Please tell anyone
what is the thread weight of weaving one metre of rayon in 63 reed 30x30 counts 60 pick 48" width?
ReplyDeleteHai Sir these are my details of cloth i have been using weft -6 Count 64 pick count wrap-10 and Ends 2720 width is 38 inch what will be the approx weight of cloth and how is the strength
ReplyDeleteI need basic textile formulas
ReplyDeleteWhat is one and half warp?
ReplyDelete