Wiktionary
a. (context idiomatic of two or more persons or things English) Very similar; possessing many of the same fundamental characteristics. alt. (context idiomatic of two or more persons or things English) Very similar; possessing many of the same fundamental characteristics.
Usage examples of "cut from the same cloth".
He was English to the core, cut from the same cloth that had produced great seamen and officers for over a thousand years.
Of course I realize that many of you might see me as cut from the same cloth as your avowed enemy, but I assure you this is not the case.
The stable staff, two ostlers and a boy, were cut from the same cloth as the postilion.
The two of you are cut from the same cloth where pride is concerned.
Two of them, cut from the same cloth as my companions, responded with equally hoarse cries and interesting gestures of the fingers and hand.
He was a landholder from Northern Ornifal, cut from the same cloth as Lord Waldron though thirty years younger.
It seemed all the men were cut from the same cloth, each about the same height, the same size.
This boy was cut from the same cloth as they, and Beka, too, to her mother's sorrow.
Languages and customs might differ, but the patrons were all cut from the same cloth - bandits, thieves, cut-throats of all stripes, gamblers, whores and drunkards.
Flanking her were two large, brutal-looking men, cut from the same cloth as Barrab's sellswords.