MEASUREMENTS
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We strongly recommend you have a professional take your measurements to ensure they are accurate. Below is a chart and diagram of our required measurements.
Please feel free to contact TQBT at (240) 355-8442 if you have any questions about measurements.
Please feel free to contact TQBT at (240) 355-8442 if you have any questions about measurements.

How To Take Your Measurements On Your Own:
You can measure your clothes the same way professionals do; all you need is an inexpensive seamstress tape measure! If you don’t have one of those yet, you can use measuring tape as well. The flexible tape measure will be the best option since it allows you to measure around curves more accurately.
When you are measuring a garment, lay it out on a flat surface and smooth out the bumps and wrinkles. If the back of a shirt is all bunched up underneath, then you will not get an accurate measurement. Get everything as flat as you can. Because fabric is fluid (and sometimes stretches), it can be a bit tricky to get an exact measurement, so plan on about a 1/2 inch variance. For very stretchy materials, you could also provide a measurement range. To be safe, I usually say that a measurement is “about” such-and-such a number.
Bust
The bust is probably the measurement that is asked for the most with tops. You take the measurement across the chest of the garment, from side seam to sides seam. It goes across the garment directly under the armpits, where the side seam meets the sleeve.
For sleeveless tops, the measurement would be taken across the garment right under the arm holes.
Once you have measured the garment straight across, you double that measurement for the actual bust size. For example, if a shirt measures 16″across the front, then the whole bust measurement is 32″.
And remember to state whether that measurement was taken with the top zipped or buttoned up if that applies.
Shoulders
Measure directly across the shoulders from seam to seam. Your measuring tape should stay straight and may make a line slightly under the collar of the garment.
Sleeves
Measure from the top shoulder seam to the bottom of the sleeve cuff. Remember, this is the top of the sleeve, not the bottom of the sleeve.
Length
For tops and dresses, measure length from the top of the shoulder seam (at the collar) down to the bottom hemline.
Some people take this measurement from the center of the back at the top of the collar, instead of from the shoulder seam. So just make sure you state which measurement you used for the length.
For pants and skirts, measure from the top to the bottom along one of the side seams.
Waist
For pants and skirts, this is super easy. Measure from seam to seam across the top of the skirt. Or, if there are no seams, just from one end to the other while the skirt is lying flat on the floor.
For dresses, this measurement can be a little bit tricky. It’s not quite as simple as measuring the bust because we don’t have the armpit seams for reference. Try to find the narrowest part and give the measurement across that spot for the waist.
If it’s hard to eyeball the smallest part, then stretch the tape measure across the general waist area and move the tape measure up and down until you find the smallest measurement.
Like the bust measurement, double the length across the garment for the full waist measurement.
Hips
I find this to be the trickiest measurement. It’s not necessarily the widest point because that won’t work for A-line profiles on skirts and dresses, but it’s obviously not the smallest point either because that will typically be the waist.
If you can fit into the garment, try it on and find the point where it falls on your own hips. Then measure across that point and double the number for the final measurement.
If you cannot put the garment on, then do your best to eyeball where the waist would be. This is definitely when you want to use the word “about” when you describe the measurement.
You can measure your clothes the same way professionals do; all you need is an inexpensive seamstress tape measure! If you don’t have one of those yet, you can use measuring tape as well. The flexible tape measure will be the best option since it allows you to measure around curves more accurately.
When you are measuring a garment, lay it out on a flat surface and smooth out the bumps and wrinkles. If the back of a shirt is all bunched up underneath, then you will not get an accurate measurement. Get everything as flat as you can. Because fabric is fluid (and sometimes stretches), it can be a bit tricky to get an exact measurement, so plan on about a 1/2 inch variance. For very stretchy materials, you could also provide a measurement range. To be safe, I usually say that a measurement is “about” such-and-such a number.
Bust
The bust is probably the measurement that is asked for the most with tops. You take the measurement across the chest of the garment, from side seam to sides seam. It goes across the garment directly under the armpits, where the side seam meets the sleeve.
For sleeveless tops, the measurement would be taken across the garment right under the arm holes.
Once you have measured the garment straight across, you double that measurement for the actual bust size. For example, if a shirt measures 16″across the front, then the whole bust measurement is 32″.
And remember to state whether that measurement was taken with the top zipped or buttoned up if that applies.
Shoulders
Measure directly across the shoulders from seam to seam. Your measuring tape should stay straight and may make a line slightly under the collar of the garment.
Sleeves
Measure from the top shoulder seam to the bottom of the sleeve cuff. Remember, this is the top of the sleeve, not the bottom of the sleeve.
Length
For tops and dresses, measure length from the top of the shoulder seam (at the collar) down to the bottom hemline.
Some people take this measurement from the center of the back at the top of the collar, instead of from the shoulder seam. So just make sure you state which measurement you used for the length.
For pants and skirts, measure from the top to the bottom along one of the side seams.
Waist
For pants and skirts, this is super easy. Measure from seam to seam across the top of the skirt. Or, if there are no seams, just from one end to the other while the skirt is lying flat on the floor.
For dresses, this measurement can be a little bit tricky. It’s not quite as simple as measuring the bust because we don’t have the armpit seams for reference. Try to find the narrowest part and give the measurement across that spot for the waist.
If it’s hard to eyeball the smallest part, then stretch the tape measure across the general waist area and move the tape measure up and down until you find the smallest measurement.
Like the bust measurement, double the length across the garment for the full waist measurement.
Hips
I find this to be the trickiest measurement. It’s not necessarily the widest point because that won’t work for A-line profiles on skirts and dresses, but it’s obviously not the smallest point either because that will typically be the waist.
If you can fit into the garment, try it on and find the point where it falls on your own hips. Then measure across that point and double the number for the final measurement.
If you cannot put the garment on, then do your best to eyeball where the waist would be. This is definitely when you want to use the word “about” when you describe the measurement.