File:Novelty Weaving Suggestions, Jiffy-Loom Patterns, Original Ideas (1937) (page 1 crop).jpg|Woven patterns on the cover of a
1937 pattern-book File:The Loomette Handbook; New weaves, vogues, and suggestions; 1938 (page 13 crop; "Warmee" coat).jpg|Coat from
a 1938 patternbook. Seams between squares can be seen. Note rectangular garment construction, with underarm
gussets made from squares folded on the diagonal, and
tarikubi collar. File:The Loomette Handbook; New weaves, vogues, and suggestions; 1938 (page 14 crop to "Little Princess Baby Set" baby blanket).jpg|Textured-weave baby blanket from the same pattern book. Seams between squares are used decoratively. Weave-It Book Number 2 (1936), pin-weaving pattens (page 14 crop to shoulder-buttoned sweater).jpg|A shoulder-buttoned sweater, made with full-sized and quartered-sized squares (1936 pattern). Knit waist and cuffs. Weave-It Book Number 2 (1936), pin-weaving pattens (page 17 crop to shoulder-buttoned sweater pattern).jpg|Pattern for the sweater in the previous image, showing rectangular construction. File:The Loomette Handbook; New weaves, vogues, and suggestions; 1938 (page 3 crop to sub-squares).jpg|Some commercial looms have bars used to make fractional-sized squares. Weave-It Book Number 3 (1937), pin-weaving pattens (page 4 crop to evening cape with eased horizontal seams).jpg|Eased horizontal seams in a pattern for an evening cape, 1937. The Loomette Handbook; New weaves, vogues, and suggestions; 1938 (page 3 crop to layout and cutting).jpg|Cutting curved pattern-pieces Many
sewing patterns designed for pinweaving use rectangular construction, with all seams lying on selvage edges. This eliminates waste. Others use non-rectangular construction, cutting curve-edged pattern pieces out of a piece of cloth formed by sewing together the squares. Garments can be cut
on the bias or on the grain with similar amounts of waste. Seams joing the squares may be eased; that is, there are more squares on one side of the join than on the other. The extra length is distributed evenly along the seam, creating fullness without discrete
pleats. ==Similar methods==