Accordion Accordion pleats or knife pleats are a form of tight pleating which allows the garment to expand its shape when moving. Accordion pleating is also used for some dress sleeves, such as pleating the end of the elbow, with the fullness of the pleat gathered closely at the cuff. This form of pleating inspired the "skirt dancing" of
Loie Fuller. Accordion pleats may also be used in hand fans.
Box Box pleats are knife pleats back-to-back, and have a tendency to spring out from the waistline. They have the same 3:1 ratio as knife pleats, and may also be stacked to form "stacked-" or "double-box pleats". These stacked box pleats create more fullness and have a 5:1 ratio. They also create a bulkier seam. Inverted box pleats have the "box" on the inside rather than the outside. This pleat was 'invented' in 1984 by Hana Havelova-Vanek (immigrant from Prague, CZ) for use in women's golf and tennis wear (and sold worldwide under the labels Hanasport & Golf Couture). Contrasting colors and fabrics can be hidden by a box pleat that create accents and highlights during movement of the garment.
Cartridge Cartridge pleats are used to gather a large amount of fabric into a small waistband or armscye without adding bulk to the seam. This type of pleating also allows the fabric of the skirt or sleeve to spring out from the seam. During the 15th and 16th centuries, this form of pleating was popular in the garments of men and women. Fabric is evenly gathered using two or more lengths of basting stitches, and the top of each pleat is whipstitched onto the waistband or armscye. Cartridge pleating was resurrected in
1840s fashion to attach the increasingly full bell-shaped skirts to the fashionable narrow waist.
Fluted Fluted pleats or "flutings" are very small, rounded or pressed pleats used as
trimmings. The name comes from their resemblance to a
pan flute.
Fortuny Fortuny pleats are crisp pleats set in silk fabrics by designer
Mariano Fortuny in the early 20th century, using a secret pleat-setting process which is still not understood.
Honeycomb Honeycomb pleats are narrow, rolled pleats used as a foundation for
smocking.
Kick Kick pleats are short pleats leading upwards from the bottom hem of garments such as skirts or coats, usually at the back. They allow the garment to drape straight down when stationary while also allowing freedom of movement.
Kingussie Kingussie pleats, named after
the town in Scotland, are a very rarely seen type of pleat used in some Scottish
kilts. They consist of a single centrally located box pleat in the rear of the kilt with knife pleats fanning out on either side.
Knife Knife pleats are used for basic gathering purposes, and form a smooth line rather than springing away from the seam they have been gathered to. The pleats have a 3:1 ratio–three inches of fabric will create one inch of finished pleat. Knife pleats can be recognized by the way that they overlap in the seam. suggests that these are made by inserting one or more
gores into a panel of fabric.
Plissé Plissé pleats are narrow pleats made by gathering fabric with stitches, wetting the fabric, and "setting" the pleats by allowing the wet fabric to dry under weight or tension.
Linen chemises or smocks pleated with this technique have been found in the tenth century
Viking graves in
Birka.
Rolled Rolled pleats create tubular pleats which run the length of the fabric from top to bottom. A piece of the fabric to be pleated is pinched and then rolled until it is flat against the rest of the fabric, forming a tube. A variation on the rolled pleat is the stacked pleat, which is rolled similarly and requires at least five inches of fabric per finished pleat. Both types of pleating create a bulky seam.
Watteau Watteau pleats are one or two box pleats found at the back neckline of
18th century sack-back gowns and some late
19th century tea gowns in imitation of these. The term is not contemporary, but is used by costume historians in reference to these styles as portrayed in the paintings of
Antoine Watteau. File:Knife pleat.jpg|The knife pleat is the basic pleat used in sewing. File:Pleats with seam.jpg|Knife pleats with the construction and seam stitches shown. File:Box pleats 1.jpg|Box pleats for a skirt. ==Modern usage==