How to Sew a Button Placket (Shirt and Polo Style)
Step-by-Step Instructions:
Learn how to sew a button placket for shirts, polos, and henley tops to create a clean, professional center-front opening with crisp folded edges—perfect for beginners and advanced sewists seeking polished closures and stable button placement.
Materials Needed:
- Main fashion fabric (woven cotton, cotton-linen blend, knit jersey for polos, or chambray)
- Interfacing (lightweight to medium-weight fusible for woven plackets; lightweight knit interfacing for knit plackets)
- Buttons (flat 2-hole or 4-hole buttons, or shank buttons depending on design)
- Sewing machine and matching thread
- Buttonhole foot and chisel or seam ripper for opening buttonholes
- Fabric scissors or rotary cutter and mat
- Quilting ruler or seam gauge
- Fabric marking tool (chalk, frixion pen, or water-soluble marker)
- Pins or clips
- Iron and pressing surface
- Optional: Edge-stitching foot or blind-hem foot for precise topstitching
- Optional: Stabilizer strips (tear-away or wash-away) for buttonhole reinforcement on knits
Types of Button Plackets
- One-piece folded placket: A single strip of fabric folded twice to create the placket on the button side; common on casual shirts and polos.
- Two-piece placket: Separate underlap and overlap pieces; traditional on men’s dress shirts and tailored garments.
- Continuous bound placket: Narrow binding sewn into a slash; used on shirt cuffs and some henley necklines.
- Knit placket: Applied to jersey or knit fabrics; requires knit interfacing and gentle handling to prevent stretching.
Tips for Perfect Button Plackets
- Interface before you cut: Fuse interfacing to the wrong side of placket fabric before cutting strips or pattern pieces for stability and crisp edges.
- Grain matters: Cut placket strips on the lengthwise grain (parallel to selvage) to minimize stretch and rippling, especially on wovens.
- Press every fold: Sharp, pressed creases are the foundation of a neat placket; use steam and a pressing cloth on delicate fabrics.
- Understitch the seam: After attaching the placket, understitch the seam allowance to the placket to prevent rolling and keep edges flat.
- Mark buttonhole placement precisely: Use a ruler and marking tool to ensure evenly spaced buttonholes that align with the placket center.
- Test your buttonhole: Always sew a practice buttonhole on scrap fabric with interfacing to check stitch density, length, and opening before stitching on your garment.
- Topstitch with an edge foot: A specialized presser foot helps maintain consistent distance from the folded edge for professional results.
- Use a stabilizer on knits: Place tear-away or wash-away stabilizer under buttonholes on knit plackets to prevent tunneling and stretching.
1. Choose Your Placket Style and Cut Pieces
- Decide whether you’re making a one-piece folded placket (easiest for polos and casual shirts) or a two-piece placket (traditional dress shirts).
- For a one-piece placket: Cut a fabric strip 2–3 in wide and the length of your placket opening plus seam allowances (typically 6–10 in long depending on garment design).
- For a two-piece placket: Cut an underlap strip (1.5–2 in wide) and an overlap strip (2–2.5 in wide), both the length of the placket opening plus seam allowances.
- Add 1 in to the top and bottom of each strip for hem and neckline finishing.
2. Apply Interfacing
- Cut interfacing pieces to match the width and length of your placket strips (or follow pattern instructions if using a commercial pattern).
- For woven fabrics: Use lightweight to medium-weight fusible woven interfacing.
- For knit fabrics: Use lightweight knit fusible interfacing or tricot interfacing to preserve stretch.
- Fuse interfacing to the wrong side of each placket piece following manufacturer’s instructions; press firmly with steam and allow to cool completely.
3. Mark the Placket Opening on the Garment Front
- On the garment front (shirt or polo body), mark the center front line from the neckline down the desired placket length (common: 5–8 in for shirts, 6–10 in for polos).
- Mark a stitching box around the center line: draw parallel lines 1/4 in on either side of center, and a horizontal line across the bottom to form a narrow rectangle.
- Mark a V or triangle at the bottom point where the center line meets the horizontal line; this is your clipping guide.
4. One-Piece Placket Method – Attach and Fold
- With right sides together, center the placket strip over the marked stitching box on the garment front.
- Pin or clip in place, ensuring the strip extends evenly above the neckline and below the placket opening.
- Stitch around the marked rectangle using a short stitch length (1.5–2 mm) for strength; pivot carefully at corners and taper to a point at the bottom V.
- Carefully clip down the center line, stopping 1/8 in from the bottom point, then clip diagonally into each corner of the V without cutting the stitching.
- Pull the placket strip through the opening to the wrong side; press the seam allowances toward the placket strip.
- Fold the placket strip in half lengthwise, wrong sides together, encasing the raw edge; press.
- From the right side, the placket should lie flat with the fold creating a clean edge; pin or clip the folded edge just beyond the stitching line.
- Edgestitch or topstitch along the folded edge from the right side, securing all layers and stitching close to the edge (1/8 in).
- Topstitch a second line 1/4–3/8 in from the first for a professional finish (optional but recommended).
5. Two-Piece Placket Method – Underlap First
- Place the underlap strip right sides together with the garment front, aligning the long raw edge with one side of the marked stitching box (the button side).
- Stitch along the marked line from neckline to the bottom point, using a short stitch length.
- Clip diagonally to the bottom point without cutting stitching.
- Press the seam allowance toward the underlap strip; understitch close to the seam on the underlap side to keep it from rolling.
- Fold the underlap strip to the wrong side, encasing the raw edge, and press flat.
- From the wrong side, stitch in the ditch (in the seam) or topstitch from the right side 1/8–1/4 in from the seam to secure the underlap.
6. Two-Piece Placket Method – Overlap Second
- Place the overlap strip right sides together with the opposite side of the placket opening (the buttonhole side).
- Stitch along the marked line, pivoting at the bottom point to meet the underlap stitching; clip to the point.
- Press the seam allowance toward the overlap strip and understitch.
- Fold the overlap strip over the seam, encasing the raw edge, and press.
- The overlap should cover the underlap by 1/2–3/4 in when the placket is closed; pin in place.
- Topstitch two parallel lines on the overlap from the right side: one close to the folded edge (1/8 in) and one 1/4–3/8 in away, creating a classic double-stitched placket finish.
7. Finish the Placket Ends
- At the neckline: Trim any excess placket fabric even with the neckline seam allowance; the neckband or collar will encase the raw edge.
- At the bottom of the placket: If using a one-piece method, fold and tack the bottom edges neatly; for two-piece, the overlap may be topstitched across the bottom in a small triangle or bar tack for reinforcement.
- Press the entire placket flat, ensuring all edges are crisp and topstitching is smooth.
8. Mark and Sew Buttonholes
- On the overlap (buttonhole side), mark buttonhole placement using a ruler and fabric marker; space buttonholes evenly (typically 2.5–3.5 in apart for shirts, closer for polos).
- Position the top buttonhole 1/2–3/4 in below the neckline seam; position the bottom buttonhole 1/2–1 in above the placket bottom point.
- Mark the buttonhole length: button diameter plus thickness plus 1/8 in (e.g., 5/8 in button = 5/8 + 1/8 = 3/4 in buttonhole).
- Attach your buttonhole foot and adjust settings for buttonhole length and stitch density (test on scrap first).
- Sew each buttonhole, starting at the end closest to the placket edge; most machines sew forward, bar tack, reverse, and bar tack again automatically.
- Use a buttonhole chisel or seam ripper to carefully open each buttonhole between the rows of stitching, placing a pin across the bar tack to prevent cutting through.
9. Mark and Sew Buttons
- Try on the garment or pin the placket closed to determine exact button placement on the underlap.
- Mark button positions directly opposite the center of each buttonhole.
- Hand-sew each button securely using doubled thread; for flat buttons, create a thread shank by wrapping thread under the button several times before knotting off.
- For sew-through buttons on thick fabric, use a toothpick or matchstick between button and fabric while sewing to build in ease; remove before wrapping the shank.
- Knot thread on the wrong side or make several tiny backstitches to secure.
10. Final Press and Inspection
- Press the completed placket from the wrong side first, then from the right side with a pressing cloth if needed to avoid shine.
- Check that all topstitching is straight, buttonholes open cleanly, and buttons are secure.
- Try on the garment to confirm buttonholes and buttons align perfectly and the placket lies flat without gaping.
11. Troubleshooting Common Issues
- Placket ripples or puckers: Interfacing may be too heavy or not fused properly; ensure fabric and interfacing are compatible and press thoroughly.
- Buttonholes tunnel or stretch on knits: Use stabilizer under buttonholes and reduce stitch density slightly; test on scrap.
- Buttons pull or gap: Buttonholes may be too small; check button size and remake buttonholes if necessary, or reposition buttons closer to the edge.
- Topstitching is uneven: Use an edge foot or guide; sew slowly and watch the fabric edge, not the needle.
- Placket twists or doesn’t lie flat: Check grain direction on placket strips; press each fold immediately after stitching and understitch seam allowances.



