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Wool Fabric
by the yard

Wool fabric by the yard is warm, soft, and naturally insulating, making it an excellent choice for personal sewing, cozy wardrobe staples, and home projects. Its slightly textured surface and resilience suit DIY enthusiasts, family makers, and community sewing activities, offering garments that retain shape and provide comfort in cooler weather. Wool adapts well to sweaters, cardigans, jackets, and layering pieces, giving everyday outfits and handmade home accessories a luxurious, cozy feel while remaining practical and durable.

  • Fabric Types: Woven Fabric; Twill Fabric; Knit Fabric; Cable Fabric
  • Fabric Function: Heat-retaining; Soft Hand Feel; Textured
  • Fabric Application: Sweater; Cardigan; Coat; Jacket; Pants; Vest; Skirt; Blouse; Dress; Activewear

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Why Wool Fabric Belongs in Your Studio

Natural Warmth That Performs Season After Season

Wool is one of the most time-tested fibers in textile history, prized for its ability to regulate body temperature and resist moisture. Whether you're cutting yardage for a structured winter coat or a cozy cardigan, wool's natural crimp creates millions of tiny air pockets that trap warmth without adding bulk. For projects that demand serious insulation, our boiled wool fabric delivers a dense, felted hand feel that holds its shape beautifully at seams and edges. It's the kind of material that rewards careful construction with results that last for years.

A Fiber Family With Remarkable Texture Variety

Wool fabric is far from one-dimensional — the category spans everything from smooth suiting weights to richly textured boucle fabric, each with a distinct drape and hand feel suited to different applications. Cable-knit wool structures bring depth and dimension to sweaters and outerwear, while classic tweeds offer a rustic, heritage aesthetic perfect for blazers and skirts. If you're drawn to the ultra-soft end of the spectrum, angora wool fabric blends natural wool with angora fiber for an exceptionally plush result. This breadth of options means wool fits naturally into both everyday garment sewing and elevated couture-style projects.

Versatile Enough for Garments, Accessories, and More

Beyond apparel, wool fabric by the yard lends itself to a surprising range of applications — from structured cape fabric projects to warm blanket fabric creations that make thoughtful handmade gifts. Its natural resilience means it bounces back from compression and holds pressed pleats and tailored lines with minimal effort. Wool's inherent flame resistance and breathability also make it a practical choice for home accessories like cushion covers and bed runners in colder climates. When you buy wholesale by the yard, you have the flexibility to cut for multiple projects from a single bolt without sacrificing quality.

Luxurious charcoal wool draped on a wooden workbench with steel shears and a green coat in the background.

Premium Wholesale Wool Fabric Built for Serious Sewists

At Global Fabric Wholesale, our wool fabric by the yard is sourced with quality construction in mind — whether you're a small-batch garment maker, a costume designer, or a boutique owner building a cold-weather collection. Wool's natural properties make it one of the most rewarding fibers to work with: it presses crisply, drapes with authority, and improves with careful finishing techniques. If you're comparing options across the natural fiber spectrum, it's worth noting how wool's insulating warmth distinguishes it from lighter-weight choices like linen fabric or moisture-wicking options like cotton fabric — each has its season, and wool owns the cold months. Buying wholesale means you can stock up on the weights and textures your projects demand without paying retail markup on every yard.

Charcoal herringbone textiles on an oak table beside a camel wool coat in a sunlit sewing studio.

From Sweaters to Coats — Wool Works Everywhere

Wool fabric by the yard is one of the most project-versatile materials in any sewist's toolkit, spanning applications from tailored blazers and structured trousers to handcrafted capes and cozy blankets. The natural elasticity of wool fiber means finished garments recover their shape after stretching, which is why it remains the gold standard for suiting, outerwear, and knitwear construction. Whether you're working with a chunky cable-knit texture or a fine merino suiting weight, wool responds to pressing and shaping in ways that synthetic fabrics simply cannot replicate.

Our wholesale catalog includes a range of wool and wool-adjacent fabric types so you can find exactly the right hand feel and weight for your next project. Structured, dense options like boiled wool are perfect for unlined jackets and bags that need to hold their form, while softer, more fluid wool blends suit draped designs and flowing skirts. If you're building out a fabric inventory for a retail or production operation, buying wool by the yard in larger quantities gives you consistent dye lots and significant cost savings compared to purchasing cut lengths individually.

Frequently Asked Questions

What types of wool fabric are best for coats and outerwear?
For coats and structured outerwear, heavier wool weights like boiled wool, melton, and tweed are ideal choices because they provide excellent insulation and hold their shape through repeated wear. Double-face wool and wool-blend coating fabrics also work well since they eliminate the need for a separate lining in some constructions. When shopping wholesale, look for weight specifications — coating wools typically range from 14 to 24 ounces per yard. A denser weave will also help block wind and resist light moisture.
Is wool fabric suitable for beginners to sew?
Many wool fabrics are actually quite beginner-friendly because they ease into shape with steam pressing and don't fray as aggressively as some woven synthetics. Boiled wool and felted wool are especially forgiving since their edges can often be left unfinished without unraveling. That said, loosely woven tweeds and delicate fine wools benefit from stay-stitching and careful handling to prevent distortion during cutting. Starting with a medium-weight wool suiting or a stable boiled wool panel is a great way to build confidence with natural fiber sewing.
How does wool fabric compare to acrylic or polyester alternatives?
Wool outperforms synthetic alternatives like acrylic and polyester in several key areas, including natural breathability, moisture-wicking ability, and long-term durability. Unlike acrylic, which can pill heavily and trap odors, wool fibers have a natural outer scale structure that resists bacterial buildup and stays fresher between washes. Wool also responds beautifully to wet finishing techniques like blocking and steam pressing, giving sewists much greater control over the final fit and drape. While synthetics may be more affordable upfront, wool's longevity and performance often make it the better value for quality garments.
What is the difference between wool fabric and wool-blend fabric?
Pure wool fabric is made entirely from animal fiber — most commonly sheep's wool — and offers the fullest expression of wool's natural properties including warmth, breathability, and resilience. Wool-blend fabrics combine wool with fibers like polyester, nylon, or acrylic to improve durability, reduce cost, or add stretch, though this can slightly reduce breathability and the characteristic hand feel of pure wool. Blends with a high wool content (70% or more) still perform very well for most garment applications and are often easier to care for. Reading the fiber content label carefully will help you choose the right balance of performance and practicality for your specific project.
How much wool fabric do I need to make a coat or blazer?
A standard adult blazer typically requires between 2.5 and 3.5 yards of 60-inch wide wool fabric, while a full-length coat can call for anywhere from 3.5 to 5.5 yards depending on the style and the wearer's size. Patterns with large collars, wide lapels, or full skirts will push yardage requirements toward the higher end of these ranges. It's always wise to purchase an extra quarter to half yard as a buffer for pattern matching, especially with plaids or tweeds. Buying wholesale by the yard makes it easy to round up generously without significantly increasing your per-project cost.