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roller cutter on a latex sheet

Chapter 2

Cutting Latex

Chapter 2

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Chapter 2 - Cutting Latex

This is where form begins.

Cutting Latex is not difficult — it’s just… different.
It doesn’t fray. It doesn’t ripple. But it can stick, drag, or warp if you’re not careful. So let’s make it clean and confident:

What you will need:

The Basics
  • Rotary cutter (sharp!)
    and for little bits: a sharp pair of scissors
  • Cutting mat
    (self-healing one is the best)
  • Steel ruler
    (not plastic — it slides and can be hit by the rotary cutter)
  • Fine-point marker
    (like whiteboard markers or gel markers)
Nice to Haves
  • Pattern weights
    (no pins!)
  • A steady hand and a sharp mind
  • Something good playing in the background
Technique tips:
  • Blade sharpness is everything.
    If it feels like you’re dragging — stop. Replace the blade. Dull blades stretch latex and make your edges wavy or ragged.
  • Use smooth, continuous motions.
    Don’t saw or hack — latex prefers grace over force.
  • Press, don’t push.
    Your hand should glide, not lean. Let the blade do the cutting — your job is just to guide.
cutting a latex sheet with a roller blade
Pattern placement:
  • Use the cleanest, most even part of the sheet for tight or complex pieces (like bodices or sleeves)
  • Again this: Avoid the outer ~5 cm and the marked spots from before for critical pieces
  • Don’t forget the design — think about swirls, galaxy trails, or glitter spreads. A centered cut can make the whole outfit.

Pro Tip:

  • Left-handed? Rotate your pattern — don’t twist your wrist. Ruka does it that way as well
  • Small scissors are fine for trimming — not for main cuts
  • Bonus: If you mess up? You didn’t ruin the sheet. You made a scrap for a future detail or patch. Nothing’s wasted.

Ready for the next step?