Front piece
The front includes the front waist, front crotch curve, inseam, outseam, knee area, and hem edge.
Pants are built from mirrored front and back leg pieces plus a waistband. The main challenge is making the crotch, inseam, side seam, and waistline work together.
The front includes the front waist, front crotch curve, inseam, outseam, knee area, and hem edge.
The back usually has more crotch length and seat room than the front, so it can cover the body when sitting.
The waistband must match the effective waistline after darts and seam allowances are understood.
The crotch curve connects waist, seat, and inner leg. Its length and shape strongly affect comfort.
The inseam runs inside the leg; the outseam runs along the side. Matching lengths help the leg hang correctly.
The hem fold shows where the lower edge turns up. Pants often need a larger hem allowance than regular seams.
Before sewing, compare inseams, side seams, crotch curves, effective waistline, waistband length, dart intake, grainline, and hem allowance.