How to Print and Assemble a Tiled PDF Sewing Pattern at Home
What Is a Tiled PDF Sewing Pattern?
A tiled PDF pattern is a full-size sewing pattern that has been split into sections (called tiles) that each fit on a standard sheet of printer paper. You print all the pages on your home printer, trim the overlapping edges, and tape the tiles together to reconstruct the full-size pattern.
Most home sewists use tiled PDFs because they do not require any special equipment. If you have a regular inkjet or laser printer and some tape, you are all set.
Every pattern from People's Patterns comes with tiled PDF files for both US Letter (8.5 x 11 inches) and A4 paper, plus a scale verification page so you can confirm accuracy before cutting into your fabric.
What You Need to Print a Tiled PDF Pattern
- A home printer - inkjet or laser, either works fine
- Standard printer paper - US Letter or A4, depending on your region
- Scissors or a rotary cutter and ruler - for trimming the tile edges
- Clear tape or low-tack tape - washi tape works well and is easy to reposition
- A ruler - to verify the scale on your test print
- Adobe Acrobat Reader (free) - this is important, and here is why: browser PDF viewers (Chrome, Edge, Safari) often silently rescale documents to fit the printable area. That rescaling can shrink your pattern by 2 to 5 percent, which does not sound like much but is enough to throw off the fit of a garment. Adobe Acrobat Reader respects your print settings and prints at true 100% scale.
Step 1: Set Your Print Settings Correctly
This is the single most important step in the entire process. If your print settings are wrong, every page will be the wrong size and the pattern will not fit together correctly.
Open your pattern PDF in Adobe Acrobat Reader (not your web browser). Go to File, then Print, and look for the page sizing or scaling settings.
- Set the scale to Actual Size or 100%
- Make sure "Fit to Page" is off
- Make sure "Shrink to Printable Area" is off
- Make sure "Auto-Rotate and Center" is off if that option appears
- If your printer has a "borderless" printing option, leave it off as well. The margins contain alignment marks that you need for assembly.
Before printing the full pattern, print only page 2. This is the scale verification page.
Step 2: Verify Your Print Scale
Page 2 of every People's Patterns PDF contains a 2 x 2 inch test square. After printing this single page, grab a ruler and measure that square.
If it measures exactly 2 inches on each side, your scale is correct and you can print the rest of the pattern with confidence.
If the square does not measure 2 inches, do not proceed. Go back to your print settings and double-check that no scaling is being applied. Common culprits include:
- A "Fit to printable area" checkbox that re-enabled itself
- Your printer driver applying its own scaling independently of Acrobat
- Printing from a browser instead of Adobe Acrobat Reader
Reprint the test page after each adjustment until the square measures exactly right. This two-minute check saves you from wasting paper and time on a pattern that is the wrong scale.
Step 3: Print All Pattern Pages
Once scale is verified, print all the remaining pages in the PDF. A few tips:
- Double-sided printing is fine if your printer supports it. The pattern content is only on one side, so printing on both sides just saves paper without affecting anything.
- You do not need to print on heavy paper. Standard 20 lb copy paper works perfectly.
- If your printer occasionally jams or smudges, consider printing an extra copy of any pages that are hard to reprint later.
Step 4: Cut the Tile Edges
Each tile page has trim lines along the edges. These are the marked dashed lines that show where to cut so the tiles can butt up against each other cleanly.
- Cut along the marked trim lines on the edges that will overlap with an adjacent tile.
- You only need to trim one side of each join. The adjacent tile provides the matching edge.
- A rotary cutter and a straight ruler give the cleanest, most accurate cuts. Scissors work fine too, but take your time to keep the line straight.
- Do not cut off the crosshair alignment marks. You need those for the next step.
Step 5: Assemble the Tiles Into the Full Pattern
Page 1 of your PDF includes a numbered tile map that shows how all the pages fit together. Think of it as a visual guide, like a puzzle box lid.
Each tile has small crosshair registration marks at the corners. Here is how to assemble:
- Lay out the tiles for row 1 from left to right, matching the tile numbers on the map.
- Take the first two adjacent tiles, overlap them so the crosshairs align perfectly, and tape them together from the back.
- Continue across the row until all tiles in row 1 are connected.
- Repeat for row 2, row 3, and so on.
- Finally, tape the completed rows together top to bottom, again using the crosshairs to align them.
Use clear tape on the back side of the pages so you can still see the pattern lines on the front. Low-tack tape (like washi tape) is great because you can reposition it if you do not get the alignment right on the first try.
Step 6: Verify and Use Your Assembled Pattern
Once all tiles are taped together, take a quick look at the pattern lines where tiles meet. The lines should flow smoothly across the seams without any jumps or offsets. If you see a gap or overlap, one of the tiles may have been trimmed slightly off or shifted during taping. It is usually easy to re-tape that one join.
Before cutting into your fabric, we recommend tracing the pattern pieces onto pattern paper or tracing paper. This preserves the original so you can reuse it if your measurements change or if you want to make the same garment again later.
Label each piece with the garment name, piece name (front panel, back panel, waistband, etc.), and the grainline direction. People's Patterns prints grainline arrows directly on each piece to make this easy.
The A0 Copy Shop Alternative: No Tiling Required
If you would rather skip the cutting and taping entirely, there is a faster option. People's Patterns offers an A0 / copy shop file with pattern downloads. This is a single large-format file designed to be printed on one big sheet (about 33 x 47 inches) at a copy shop or print center.
Places like FedEx Office, Staples, and most local print shops can handle A0 or wide-format printing. The typical cost is between $3 and $8 depending on your location and the shop's pricing.
You walk in, hand them the file on a USB drive or send it from your phone, and walk out with a full-size pattern on a single sheet. No tiling, no taping, no alignment work. For sewists who make patterns regularly, this can be a real time saver.
Common Tiled PDF Printing Mistakes and How to Fix Them
My pattern pieces are the wrong size
This is almost always a scaling issue. Reprint the scale verification page (page 2) and measure the test square. If it is not exactly 2 inches, your print settings need adjusting. Go back to Step 1 and work through the checklist. Once the test square is right, reprint the entire pattern.
My tiles do not line up at the seams
First, check that all pages were printed at the same scale. If even one page was printed with different settings, the tiles will not match. Second, make sure you trimmed the correct edges. The tile map on page 1 shows which edges overlap. Third, double-check your crosshair alignment. If a tile is off by even a millimeter, the pattern lines will not flow smoothly across the join.
The pattern looks wrong when I print from my browser
Use Adobe Acrobat Reader instead. Browser PDF viewers (Chrome, Edge, Safari, Firefox) frequently apply their own scaling to make the document fit the printable area of your paper. This scaling is often silent, meaning there is no warning that the document was resized. Acrobat Reader prints at true 100% when you set it to Actual Size.
Frequently Asked Questions About Printing Tiled PDF Patterns
What paper size should I use for printing sewing patterns?
US Letter (8.5 x 11 inches) is the standard for most printers in the United States. A4 is the standard for most international printers. People's Patterns includes both versions in every download, so use whichever matches your printer and your paper.
How many pages will my tiled PDF pattern be?
It depends on the garment and your body measurements. A simple top might be 8 to 12 pages. Pants are typically 10 to 16 pages. More complex garments with additional pieces (like a jacket with pockets and a collar) may be more. The page count is shown before you download so there are no surprises.
Can I re-download the pattern if I mess up printing?
Yes. Every pattern you purchase from People's Patterns is available for unlimited re-downloads from your account at any time. If you mess up the print, just download the file again and try once more. There is no limit and no extra charge. Learn more about what is included with every pattern.
Can I use a different PDF reader instead of Adobe Acrobat?
You can, but we specifically recommend Adobe Acrobat Reader because it consistently respects the "Actual Size" print setting across all operating systems. Other PDF readers may work fine, but if your test square does not measure 2 inches, switch to Acrobat before troubleshooting anything else.