Is this a jelly roll quilt pattern?
No. It is a planning calculator for strip area and rough coverage.
Free quilting calculator
Use this planning calculator to understand how much quilt-top area a jelly roll may cover. It is an estimate, not a pattern, because layout, seams, and trimming affect the final size.
Result
40 strips cover about 126% of a 50" × 60" throw quilt top before layout waste.
This is a planning estimate, not a pattern. Layout, seams, borders, and trimming can change the final size.
Finished strip area = finished strip width × strip length × number of strips. Compare that area with the target quilt area.
A standard jelly roll often has forty 2.5" strips. After seam allowance, the usable finished width is smaller than the cut strip width.
Results are planning estimates. Always round up when buying fabric, especially for directional prints, shrinkage, fussy cutting, or cutting mistakes.
No. It is a planning calculator for strip area and rough coverage.
Many jelly rolls include 40 strips, but always check the bundle label.
Seams reduce the visible finished width after strips are joined.
Borders are a common way to increase finished size if the strip area is not enough.