Can I use this template for shirts and dresses?
Yes. Rename the columns and keep only the measurements that matter for that product type.
Best for sellers who need a reusable apparel measurement table.
Use a ready-made clothing size chart template as a starting point for shirts, dresses, outerwear, or marketplace listings.
Choose a common standard, edit only what you need, then export a chart for product pages.
Click any heading or cell to edit the table.
Choose a standard template, then refine the measurements for the exact product before publishing.
A useful clothing chart should include size labels, bust or chest, waist, hip, length, and any category-specific measurements such as shoulder width or sleeve length. The chart should also identify whether measurements are body or garment dimensions. This one detail prevents a large share of customer confusion.
Start with the default rows, rename columns for your product, and remove measurements that do not apply. A dress chart may need bust, waist, hip, and length, while a hoodie chart may need chest, shoulder, sleeve, and body length. Keep the final table short enough to scan on a phone.
Marketplace product pages often compress images and rich text, so clarity matters. Use plain labels, avoid tiny type, and include both inches and centimeters when possible. If you export a PNG, check that the chart remains readable on mobile thumbnails and does not rely on color alone.
Once a template works, keep the same measurement vocabulary across your catalog. Consistency helps shoppers compare products and helps support teams answer questions. For larger stores, create product-specific templates for tops, bottoms, dresses, shoes, jewelry, and accessories rather than forcing one chart into every category.
A strong apparel template starts with size label, unit, and measurement type. For tops, include chest or bust, shoulder, sleeve, and length. For bottoms, include waist, hip, rise, inseam, and outseam if relevant. For dresses, include bust, waist, hip, and length. The template should not force every product into the same columns because unnecessary measurements make the chart harder to scan on mobile.
Templates work best when they become a small sizing system for the store. Use consistent labels across similar products, keep units visible, and add short fit notes such as relaxed fit, stretch fabric, narrow cut, or size up if between sizes. When a template is reused across many listings, update the measurements from the actual product rather than copying an old chart blindly.
Continue with closely related tools instead of jumping through an unrelated directory.
Best for merchants who need a product-page size chart quickly.
Best for Shopify merchants who need a quick product-page size guide.
Best for explaining the difference between body measurements and apparel labels.
Best for stores outside Shopify that still need product-page sizing assets.
Best for understanding how band and cup references work together.
Best for comparing cup letter systems after a band size is already known.
Yes. Rename the columns and keep only the measurements that matter for that product type.
Either can work, but the chart must clearly label which measurement type it uses.
Yes. The generator can export a PNG for product media or support documents.
Yes. Copy the HTML table and paste it into a CMS or ecommerce content field that allows HTML.