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Heavy Drapey Woven Stretch Scuba Fabric — Substantial Body With High Stretch for Structured-but-Flowing Garments
Heavy Drapey Woven Stretch Scuba is a substantial, medium-weight woven stretch fabric sold by the yard — a smooth, scuba-faced woven with real body and high spandex give. With a clean matte face, weighty drape, and generous 12% stretch, it sews into structured dresses, tailored trousers, blazers, and jackets that want both hold and movement — heavier and more sculpting than our lighter drapey scuba, while still falling in soft folds rather than standing stiff. All from a single, deeply stocked bolt.
It's the heavyweight of our drapey woven scuba range: more body for tailoring, with the same fluid stretch.
What This Heavy Woven Stretch Scuba Fabric Is Used For
Apparel & accessories:
- Structured dresses & sheath dresses — body holds the silhouette with give
- Tailored trousers & wide-leg pants — clean drape with comfortable stretch
- Blazers & soft-tailored jackets — weight for shape, stretch for comfort
- Midi & A-line skirts — substantial fall and movement
- Jumpsuits & culottes — structured but easy to wear
- Ponte-style suiting separates — a woven alternative with more drape
- Capes & statement outerwear (light) — weight gives a graceful hang
- Costume & cosplay pieces — structured panels with stretch
Events & décor (sold by the yard for makers — not as finished items):
- Draped backdrops & fuller swags — weight gives a richer fall under lighting
- Soft-draped table and stage styling — for fuller, non-fitted looks (for tight fitted covers, our Scuba Stretch Knit is firmer)
At a Glance
- Fiber content: 88% Polyester, 12% Spandex
- Construction: Woven (twill-based) stretch — smooth matte face, with body
- Weight: 250 g/m² (~7.4 oz/yd²) — medium-weight, substantial hand
- Width: 60 inches
- Stretch: High — 12% spandex, comfortable with recovery
- Country of origin: China
- Format: Sold by the continuous yard
Why Choose Heavy Drapey Woven Stretch Scuba
- Body plus drape. Heavier than our standard drapey scuba, it holds a tailored shape while still falling in soft folds — the middle ground between sculpting knit and fluid woven.
- High stretch. At 12% spandex it moves with the body, so structured trousers, dresses, and jackets stay comfortable all day.
- Smooth scuba face. A clean, matte, substantial surface that reads polished and tailored.
- Wide 60" width. Efficient cutting and fewer seams for trousers, dresses, and outerwear.
- Deep color range. A broad selection for coordinated tailoring and collections.
- Low-maintenance poly/spandex. Wrinkle-resistant, color-stable, and easy to care for.
Is This the Same as Neoprene?
No. Heavy Drapey Woven Stretch Scuba is not neoprene. "Scuba" describes a smooth, neoprene-like face — but this is a polyester/spandex woven fabric, not the closed-cell rubber foam used in wetsuits, and not a bonded double-knit. It's a sewable, washable apparel fabric for tailored, drapey garments. If you want a substantial stretch woven with a clean scuba face, this is it; if you need real neoprene for diving, this isn't that.
What to Know Before You Buy
Honest guidance so this is the right fabric for your project:
- It has body — by design. Heavier and more structured than our standard Drapey Woven Stretch Scuba (210 gsm). For the lightest, most fluid drape, choose that one instead.
- It's still drapey, not rigid. It won't hold an architectural shape like a bonded scuba or duchess fabric — it falls in soft folds.
- It's a woven, not a knit. Cut edges fray, so finish seams (serge, zig-zag, or French seams).
- It runs warm. Polyester has low breathability and the weight holds heat — better for fall, winter, and transitional wear than summer.
- It's heat-sensitive. The synthetic base will glaze or melt under a hot iron — use low heat and a press cloth.
- It is not neoprene — don't use it for wetsuits, water sports, or as protective gear.
- Order a swatch first when matching a color across a collection.
Suitability at a Glance
| Application | Suitability | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Structured / sheath dresses | Excellent | Body holds the silhouette with give |
| Tailored & wide-leg trousers | Excellent | Clean drape with comfortable stretch |
| Blazers & soft-tailored jackets | Excellent | Weight for shape, stretch for comfort |
| Midi & A-line skirts | Excellent | Substantial fall and movement |
| Ponte-style suiting separates | Very Good | Woven alternative with more drape |
| Jumpsuits & culottes | Very Good | Structured but easy to wear |
| Light capes & statement outerwear | Very Good | Weight gives a graceful hang |
| Draped backdrops & fuller swags | Good | Richer fall under lighting |
| Costume & cosplay panels | Good | Structured with stretch |
| Tight fitted chair/table covers | Poor | Drapey, not firm — see Scuba Stretch Knit |
| Sheer / very fluid garments | Poor | Too substantial — see lighter Drapey Woven Scuba |
| Wetsuits / water sports | Not recommended | Not neoprene |
| Upholstery | Not recommended | Wrong build for structural wear |
How Heavy Drapey Woven Stretch Scuba Compares to Other Scuba Fabrics
| Property | Heavy Drapey Woven Stretch Scuba (this fabric) | Drapey Woven Stretch Scuba | Scuba Stretch Knit | Scuba Crepe | Scuba Stretch Suede |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weight | 250 gsm (medium, substantial) | 210 gsm (light-medium) | 280 gsm (medium) | 280 gsm (medium) | 260 gsm (medium) |
| Construction | Woven twill | Woven twill | Double-knit | Crepe double-knit | Woven, suede face |
| Stretch | High (12% spandex) | High (12% spandex) | Moderate (5%) | Moderate (4%) | Moderate (6%) |
| Drape | Fuller, more body | Fluid, lighter | Structured, firm | Structured, slight fluidity | Structured, soft |
| Best for | Structured-but-flowing tailoring | Fluid dresses, soft garments | Bodycon & fitted covers | Softer bodycon, craft | Suede-look fashion |
How to Sew Woven Stretch Scuba: Tips for Working With This Fabric
- Needle & stitch. Use a stretch or ballpoint needle (75/11 or 80/12) and a stretch stitch or narrow zig-zag so seams give with the fabric.
- Finish your seams. As a woven, cut edges fray — serge, zig-zag, or use French seams.
- Respect the stretch. Cut with the stretch running around the body, and avoid stretching the fabric as you feed it.
- Press cool. Low heat with a press cloth only — high heat will glaze or distort the surface.
- Let it hang. Hang finished garments before final hemming so the heavier drape settles.
How to Care for Woven Stretch Scuba Fabric
- Washing: Machine wash cold on gentle with mild detergent; avoid bleach.
- Drying: Hang or lay flat to dry, or tumble dry low. It dries fast and resists wrinkling.
- Ironing: Low heat (polyester setting) with a press cloth, or steam. Never apply high heat directly.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is heavy drapey woven stretch scuba fabric? A substantial, medium-weight (250 gsm) polyester/spandex woven with a smooth scuba-like face and high 12% stretch. It has more body than our standard drapey scuba and is used for structured dresses, tailored trousers, blazers, and jackets. Sold by the yard.
Is this for scuba diving, or is it neoprene? Neither. "Scuba" describes the fabric's smooth, neoprene-like face, not diving or wetsuit foam. It's an apparel woven, not diving gear or protective equipment.
Is this a knit or a woven? A woven (twill-based) stretch fabric — not a double-knit. That gives it drape with body. Because it's woven, finish the seams to control fraying.
What is it made of? 88% polyester, 12% spandex. Woven, 250 gsm, 60" wide. Origin: China.
How is it different from the regular Drapey Woven Stretch Scuba? This is the heavier one (250 gsm vs 210 gsm), with more body for tailored, structured garments. The lighter version drapes more fluidly for soft dresses and blouses.
Is it stretchy? Yes — at 12% spandex it has high give with comfortable recovery, ideal for tailored garments that still need to move.
Is it good for trousers and blazers? Yes — the weight and stretch make it a strong pick for tailored trousers, blazers, structured dresses, and ponte-style suiting with extra drape.
Is it breathable? What season is it for? Breathability is moderate and the weight holds heat, so it's best for fall, winter, and transitional seasons.
How do I care for it? Machine wash cold gentle, mild detergent. Hang or lay flat, or tumble low. Low iron with a press cloth, or steam.
Who should buy it? Designers and home sewers making structured dresses, tailored trousers, blazers, jackets, and ponte-style separates — anyone who wants a stretchy woven with body and drape.
Order Heavy Drapey Woven Stretch Scuba by the Yard
Whether you're sewing a structured dress, tailored trousers, or a soft blazer, Heavy Drapey Woven Stretch Scuba delivers substantial drape with high stretch in the exact shade and yardage your project needs — backed by deep, consistent inventory. Choose your color, enter your yardage, and add a swatch to confirm your match.
Machine Wash, Cold; Gentle Detergent, No Bleach. Tumble Dry, Low Heat. Do not wring.






