Helpful Toolbox

Flying Geese Calculator

Type your finished flying geese size and instantly get the exact squares to cut for the no-waste, four-at-a-time method.

๐Ÿ“– How it works & FAQ

What the no-waste method does

The four-at-a-time (or "no-waste") flying geese method builds four identical geese from a single large square and four small squares โ€” no trimmed-off triangles thrown away. You draw a diagonal line on the small squares, stitch a quarter inch on each side of it, cut apart, and press. It is faster and more accurate than sewing individual triangles because you never handle a cut bias edge until the very end.

The math behind the cut sizes

A flying goose is measured by its finished size โ€” the width and height it will be inside the quilt, after seams disappear. Most geese are a 2:1 ratio (a 4" × 2" finished goose is common). For the no-waste method the formulas are fixed: the large square = finished width + 1¼" and the small squares = finished height + ⅞". One large square plus four small squares always yields four geese. These are cutting math results, not sewing advice โ€” always test one set before cutting a whole quilt's worth.

How to use it

  1. Enter the finished width of one goose (the long dimension).
  2. Enter the finished height (usually half the width).
  3. Enter how many geese your pattern needs โ€” it rounds up to full sets of four.
  4. Cut the large squares and small squares at the sizes shown, then sew the no-waste way.

FAQ

What ratio should my geese be?
The classic flying goose is twice as wide as it is tall (2:1), such as 3" × 1½" or 4" × 2" finished. This tool works for any ratio you enter.
Why add 1¼" and ⅞"?
Those constants build in the quarter-inch seam allowances on all sides for the four-at-a-time geometry. They are the standard no-waste numbers used across quilting references.
Do I get exactly four geese?
Yes โ€” every large square paired with four small squares yields four geese. Ask for six and it cuts two sets (eight), rounding up to the nearest four.
Should I still trim the finished units?
A light trim to the unfinished size (finished + ½" each way) keeps points crisp. The unfinished size is shown in the results.