{"title":"How to Make Half-Square Triangles: 6 Easy HST Methods","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/quilting/how-to-make-half-square-triangles","category":{"slug":"quilting","name":"Quilting"},"creator":{"name":"Just Get it Done Quilts","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQt_y4kqMQlG1id0n975DVg","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kB4gzrRlLsM"},"tldr":"Six ways to make half-square triangles, from 2-at-a-time to Magic 8. Compare methods and pick the right one for your next quilt block project.","totalDurationSeconds":784,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["Rotary cutter","Self-healing cutting mat","Acrylic ruler (6.5 inch)","Sewing machine","Iron"],"materials":["Coordinating fabric squares (2 colors)","Thread","Water-soluble marking pen","Triangle paper (optional)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Method 1: Classic 1-at-a-Time","text":"The most direct method. Cut a square the finished size of your HST plus seven-eighths of an inch, then slice it diagonally corner to corner. Two right triangles. Sew them back together along the long bias edge with a quarter-inch seam.This is the right pick when you only need one or two HSTs, or when you want maximum variety in fabric pairings. The trade-off is the bias edge stretches easily under the presser foot, so keep your seam slow and steady. Karen recommends cutting an inch larger than seven-eighths and trimming back, since the bias makes squaring up a near guarantee."},{"number":2,"title":"Method 2: The Workhorse 2-at-a-Time","text":"Stack two squares right sides together. Mark the diagonal across the top square with a water-soluble pen or use a half-inch ruler to mark both stitching lines. Stitch a scant quarter inch down one side of the diagonal, pivot at the corner, and stitch back up the other side. Cut between the two seam lines and you have two matching HSTs.Because the fabric stays in one piece while you sew, it doesn't stretch the way method one does. This is the go-to method for everyday quilting and what most quilters use as their default."},{"number":3,"title":"Method 3: Sew On the Line for Pre-Cuts","text":"Made for charm packs, mini charms, and any pre-cut you don't want to recut. Stack two squares right sides together, mark the diagonal, and sew directly on the line. Trim the waste a quarter inch from the seam.The finished HST stays the same size as your original square, which is why this method shines for fussy-cutting - if you cut a charm square around a specific motif, that motif lands in your block. The trade-off is one HST per square plus a triangle of waste. Karen makes a bonus HST by sewing a second line over a half-inch from the first, banking a smaller HST for another project."},{"number":4,"title":"Method 4: Magic 8 for Bulk Production","text":"When you need eight identical HSTs at once. Stack two squares right sides together with both squares cut four times larger than your finished HST size. Mark both diagonals on the top fabric. Stitch a scant quarter inch on each side of both diagonal lines.Press to set the seams, then square the piece on your cutting mat. Cut horizontally through the centre, vertically through the centre, then along both diagonals. Eight HSTs from one stitched square. The math is fussy and the long bias seams are harder to keep straight, but for bulk-identical blocks nothing beats the speed."},{"number":5,"title":"Method 5: Easy Angle Ruler for Jelly Roll Strips","text":"The Easy Angle is a specialty triangle ruler designed for strip cutting. Lay a fabric strip flat and align the ruler so its height matches the strip width. Cut along the diagonal edge. Flip the ruler over, align the new diagonal to the cut you just made, and cut the next triangle.This is the method to reach for when you're working from jelly rolls or any pre-cut strip. The triangles come off the strip already trimmed to the right size, so there's no squaring up afterward. Same bias caveat as method one - be gentle while you sew the pairs together."},{"number":6,"title":"Method 6: Triangle Paper for Precision","text":"Triangle paper has the stitching lines and cutting lines printed on it. Pin a sheet to two stacked fabric squares, right sides together. Stitch directly on the printed dashed lines through paper and fabric. Then cut along the solid lines, which gives you a stack of pre-sized HSTs.Accuracy is the selling point. If you're making a precision block where every HST needs to be identical to the eighth of an inch, the paper guarantees the math. The downside is removing the paper afterward - a slow, tedious step. Buy paper in the exact HST size you need; multiple sizes mean multiple boxes."},{"number":7,"title":"Which Method Goes With Which Project","text":"Pick by project, not by habit. For everyday quilt blocks where you need two matching HSTs, the 2-at-a-time method is the right default. For bulk-identical blocks across a whole quilt top, the Magic 8 cuts your work in half.If you're piecing charm packs or fussy-cutting a specific motif, sew on the line so your finished HST keeps the same size as your starting square. For jelly roll strips, the Easy Angle ruler matches the cut size to the strip height. When precision is non-negotiable - a complicated sampler block where every angle has to line up - triangle paper is worth the tear-away time. And keep the classic 1-at-a-time in your back pocket for one-off blocks or scrappy variety.A universal rule from Karen: cut every starting square a half-inch larger than the formula calls for and trim back after sewing. Your HSTs will be perfect every time."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-22T18:31:19.709Z","published":"2026-05-22T18:31:01.899Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}