Cutaway, Tear-Away or Water-Soluble? A Stabilizer Guide
The stabilizer under your fabric decides whether a design stitches out crisp or puckered. How to match cutaway, tear-away and water-soluble stabilizer to your fabric.
Ask an experienced embroiderer why a stitch-out failed and their first question is never about the machine — it’s “what stabilizer did you use?” The layer under your fabric carries the design. Here’s how to choose it.
Cutaway: the workhorse
Cutaway stabilizer stays in the garment permanently; after stitching you trim it back to about half a centimeter around the design.
Use it for: knits, t-shirts, sweatshirts, anything stretchy, and any design that’s dense or will be washed often. Why: it keeps supporting the stitches through wearing and washing, so the design doesn’t distort or sag over time.
A medium-weight (75–80 g/m²) cutaway handles most home projects. For lightweight knits, a soft “no-show mesh” cutaway avoids a visible shadow through the fabric.
Tear-away: fast and clean
Tear-away rips off in one satisfying motion once the design is done.
Use it for: stable woven fabrics — quilting cotton, canvas, denim, towels, linen. Why: no trimming, nothing left behind, and the back of the work stays soft.
Don’t use it on knits: the stitching perforates it like a stamp sheet, and once it tears away, nothing supports the design.
Water-soluble: for the special cases
Water-soluble stabilizer (fine film or fabric-like sheets) dissolves completely in water.
Use it as a topping on towels and fleece so stitches don’t sink into the pile, and as the base for freestanding lace (FSL), where the stabilizer is the fabric until you rinse it away.
Quick reference
| Fabric | Stabilizer |
|---|---|
| T-shirt, knits | Medium cutaway / no-show mesh |
| Quilting cotton, denim | Tear-away |
| Towels, fleece | Tear-away below + water-soluble topping |
| Freestanding lace | Water-soluble only (two layers) |
| Caps, canvas | Firm tear-away |
One habit that fixes most problems
Hoop the stabilizer together with the fabric, drum-tight. Most “my design puckered” stories end with fabric hooped alone and a sheet of stabilizer floating loose underneath. The sandwich is the point.